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JULY 1983 / VOLUME 63 NUMBER

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Revised Estimates of the National Income and Product Accounts

ATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE / BUREAU OF ECONOMIC




ANALYSIS

JULY 1983 / VOLUME 63 NUMBER

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
CONTENTS
THE BUSINESS SITUATION

1

Errata: National Income and
Product Accounts

3

The U.S. National Income and Product Accounts
• 1980-82
• First Quarter 1983

5

National Income and Product Accounts Tables

20

^ ^.^ %*

U.S. Department of Commerce
Malcolm Baldrige / Secretary
Robert G. Dederick / Under Secretary
for Economic Affairs
Bureau of Economic Analysis
George Jaszi / Director

1. National Product and Income
2. Personal Income and Outlays
3, Government Receipts and Expenditures
4. Foreign Transactions
5. Saving and Investment
6. Product, Income, and Employment by Industry
7. Implicit Price Deflators and Price Indexes
8. Supplementary Tables
9. Seasonally Unadjusted Estimates

22
34
43
58
62
68
80
91
98

State Personal Income,
1981:1-1983:1

S36

CURRENT BUSINESS STATISTICS
General
SI
Industry
S19
Footnotes S33
Subject Index (Inside Back Cover)

Allan H. Young / Deputy Director
Carol S. Carson / Editor-in-Chief,
Survey of Current Business
Manuscript Editor: Dannelet A. Grosvenor
Managing Editor: Patti A. Trujillo

Staff Contributors to This Issue: Robert Brown,
Carol S. Carson, Edwin J, Coleman, George Jaszi,
Francis G. McFaul, Robert P. Parker, Government
Division, National Income and Wealth Division

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the BUSINESS SITUATION
RE/SAL GNP registered a very strong unusually large increase in the fourth
increase in the second quarter.1 Ac- quarter, are excluded, the remainder
cording to revised estimates presented more nearly reflects the course of ecolater in this issue, real GNP peaked nomic activity. It increased $22 billion
in the third quarter of 1981 and in the fourth quarter of 1982 and
dropped through the fourth quarter of $261/2 billion and $53 billion in the
1982 before turning up in the first first and second quarters of 1983.
quarter of 1983. The first-quarter in- Wage and salary disbursements
crease was 2l/2 percent at an annual strengthened in both the first and
rate and the second-quarter increase second quarters. All of the private
was 8l/2 percent (table 1). The follow- wage and salary components shown in
ing are highlights of the two quarters the table increased more than in the
of increases in terms of personal preceding
quarter.
Proprietors'
income, GNP prices, and components income was up, more in the second
quarter than in the first. In contrast,
of real GNP.
• Personal income, when transfer personal interest income continued to
payments are set aside, strengthened decline, reflecting the course of interin both quarters. Personal income in- est rates.
creased $26 billion in the first quarter
Personal taxes declined in the first
and $57 Va billion in the second, and quarter, when the effects of Federal
had increased $41 billion in the income tax cuts more than offset the
fourth quarter of 1982 (table 2). If effect of increases in the tax base. In
transfer payments, which showed an the second quarter, when the legislative impacts were smaller, personal
taxes increased.
A first-quarter increase in dispos1. The "flash" (minus 15-day) estimates released in
able personal income about matched
June showed an increase at an annual rate of GVfe peran increase in personal outlays, but,
cent in the second quarter. A major factor in raising
in the second quarter, outlays inthe rate of increase was the incorporation of revised
source data on retail sales for April and May.
creased much more than income. As a
The second-quarter GNP estimates prepared in midresult, saving dropped sharply, and
July (plus 15-day estimates) are based on the following
major data sources. For personal consumption expendithe saving rate fell from 5.4 percent
tures (PCE), retail sales and unit auto and truck sales
in the first quarter to 3.9 percent in
through June; for nonresidential fixed investment, the
the second—the lowest since 1950.
same information for autos and trucks as for PCE,
April and May construction put in place, and April
Reflecting developments in income
and May manufacturers' shipments of equipment; for
and
taxes and also in prices, real disresidential investment, April and May construction
put in place, and April and May housing starts; for
posable personal income registered inchange in business inventories, April and May book
creases of 3 percent in both quarters.
values for manufacturing and trade, and unit auto in• Inflation continued at moderate
ventories through June; for net exports of goods and
services, April and May merchandise trade, and fragrates in both quarters. GNP prices as
mentary information on investment income for the
measured by the fixed-weighted price
quarter; for government purchases of goods and servindex increased at annual rates of 3l/z
ices, Federal unified budget outlays for April and
May, State and local construction put in place for
percent and 5 percent, respectively, in
April and May, and State and local employment
the
first and second quarters—similar
through June; and for GNP prices, the Consumer
Price Index for April and May, the Producer Price
to the rates that prevailed in 1982.
Index for April and May, and unit value indexes for
Energy prices held down the firstexports and imports for April and May. Some of the
quarter increase but added to the
source data are subject to revision.
Quarterly estimates in the national income and
second-quarter increase. Excluding
product accounts are expressed at seasonally adjusted
energy prices, GNP prices increased
annual rates, and quarterly changes in them are dif5x/2 percent and 4 percent (table 3).
ferences between these rates.




• Consumer spending accelerated in
the second quarter. In the second
quarter, the increase in real personal
consumption expenditures (PCE) was
extraordinarily large—10 percent at
an annual rate. The first-quarter inTable 1.—Real GNP: Change From Preceding
Quarter
[Percent change at annual rates; based on millions of 1972
dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates]
19 33
II

I
2.6

GNP

Final sales
Personal consumption expenditures
Durables
Motor vehicles and parts
Furniture and household equipment..
Other durables
Nondurables..
Food 1
Energy
Clothing and shoes
Other nondurables
Services 2
Energy
Other services
Gross private domestic fixed investment ..
Nonresidential
Structures
Producers' durable equipment
Autos trucks and buses
Other
Residential

8.7

.6

5.5

2.9

10.0

7.6
27
9.7
15.9

32.4
67.2
15.0
1.1

3.2
40
148
10
-1.0

5.9
2.0
96
187
0

1.4
-15.4
23

6.8
52.5
48

8.8

15.6

-1.5
-13.9
5.0
285
1.3

4.6
-14.0
14.2
12.4
14.5

57.3

61.1

Net exports of goods and services
Exports
Merchandise
Agricultural
Nonagricultural
Other

..

. .

Imports
Merchandise
Petroleum
Nonpetroleum
Other
Government purchases of goods and
services
Federal
National defense
Nondefense
.. .
Commodity Credit Corporation 3
Other
State and local
Change in business inventories

2.4
82
266
3.7
-4.5

12.1
25.0
734
36.6
-11.7
-8.8
-18.0
6.5
-52.6
77

-1.8

-8.7
-9.1
-26.2
-3.8
-8.3
27.2
32.0
174.3
27.1
16.8
-.9
-.6
14.1
-29.4
-.7

-1.0

1. Gasoline and oil, and fuel oil and coal.
2. Electricity and gas.
3. Estimates, in billions of 1972 dollars for the fourth quarter of 1982 through the second quarter of 1983, were: 9.7 1.7,
and -1.2.
NOTE.—Most dollar levels are found in the National Income
and Product Accounts tables, table 1.2.

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
crease was 3 percent, a little higher
than the 2Vz percent that 1982 increases had averaged. Most components accelerated in the second quarter; the major exceptions were food
and gasoline. Most of the $l6l/2, billion
acceleration in PCE was accounted
for by three components: motor vehicles, clothing and shoes, and electricity and natural gas. The pickup in
motor vehicle purchases, which was
largely in sales of new domestic cars,
accounted for about one-half of the acceleration. Purchases of clothing and
shoes increased strongly after several
quarters of little change. Spending on
electricity and natural gas was influenced by the unusually mild winter
and the unusually cool spring in some
parts of the country.
• The slide in business capital
spending leveled out. After a small decline in the first quarter, real nonresidential fixed investment increased in
the second. In both quarters, producers' durable equipment increased and
structures declined. Producers' durable equipment appears to have turned
around following a steep drop that

began in mid-1981. Structures continued a slide that began in late 1981.
There were large declines in both the
first and second quarters in industrial
buildings, which had registered large
declines in some quarters of 1982 as
well, and in office buildings, which in
1982 had declined only in the fourth
quarter. In addition, other large declines were in public utilities in the
first quarter and commercial buildings in the second quarter. Declines
in oil and gas well exploration and
drilling, which earlier had been quite
large, tapered off.
• Residential investment continued
its strong recovery. Real residential investment, after a low in the third
quarter of 1982, continued to increase
at annual rates that exceeded 50 percent. Construction, both of singlefamily and multifamily units, as well
as the sizable "other" component-

Table 3.—Fixed-Weighted Price Indexes:
Change From Preceding Quarter
[Percent change at annual rates; based on index numbers
(1972 = 100), seasonally adjusted]

Table 2.—Personal Income and Its Disposition:
Change From Preceding Quarter
[Billions of dollars; based on seasonally adjusted annual rates]

GNP

3.4

5.2

34

52

3.2
-38

1.5
67

Wage and salary disbursements
Manufacturing
Other commodity-producing
Distributive
Services
Government and government enterprises..

Equals: Final sales to domestic purchasers

2.7

4.4

Personal consumption expenditures
Food
Energy
Other personal consumption expenditures

17 8

16
2.1

56
6.2
77

51

51

46
1
3.8

2.6
10
2.0
35
3.1

Less:1 Exports
Plus Imports

II

24.7
81
10
29
79

38.9
11 3
2.7
8.4

4.7

11.2
5.4

4.4

9.5

Proprietors' income
Farm ..
Nonfarm

-39
83

19
76

Personal interest income

-58

-6

Transfer payments . . .
Other income
Less: Personal contributions for social insurance .
Personal income
Less: Personal tax and nontax payments...
Impact of legislation
Other

-5

4.5

6.6

7.0

37

2.0

25.8

57.3

-2.4
-10.7

10.4
-2.4

83

128

46.9

Less: Personal outlays

27.2

79.3

Equals: Personal saving

.9

-32.4

Addenda: Special
income—

factors

in

personal

Cost-of-living increases in Federal transfer payments
Social security base and rate changes (in
personal contributions for social insurance)
Subsidies to farmers
Federal pay raise .




11 4

4.0

10
2.5
-29
1

1.2

Food components 4
Energy components
GNP less food components
GNP less energy components
GNP less food and energy components

GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT

'

30

10

h

nJ J

n

UQ

,

p

-

-10 -

-

-20 -

-

-30 -

-

0
-10
-20

20 PERSONAL CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES
10
0

-10
-20
20 FIXED INVESTMENT

6.5

0

-19.4

17.2

3.4
5.1

5.1
4.5

-10

5.4

4.2

-20

3.4

-

20

10

Addenda:
Food and energy components of GNP 2 —
3

28.1

Equals: Disposable personal income

Other l ...
Nonresidential structures
Producers' durable equipment
Residential
Government purchases

4U

10

19 33
I

Billion 1972$

20 CHANGE IN BUSINESS INVENTORIES
II

Less* Change in business inventories
Equals' Final sales

Real Products:
Change From Preceding Quarter

-40

19 33
I

which includes additions and alternations, brokers' sales commissions, and
mobile homes—contributed to the increases.
• Inventories contributed to the increases in GNP in both quarters. Inventories continued to be liquidated,
but at progressively slower rates. As a
result, the real change in business inventories contributed positively to the
change in GNP—$7Vfe billion in the

1. Index number levels for the fourth quarter of 1982
through the second quarter of 1983 were: 231.9, 234.5, and
236.0.
2. Inasmuch as GNP is the sum of final products, the food
and energy estimates in this table do not take into account the
effect on the prices of final products of changes in the prices of
the food and energy that are costs of production.
3. Consists of all components for which separate estimates
are prepared. The major component that is not included is
purchases of food by the Federal Government other than
transactions by the Commodity Credit Corporation that are
treated like purchases.
4. Consists of all components for which separate estimates
are prepared. The major components that are not included are
(1) exports of energy; (2) the gasoline and motor oil portions of
inventories of gasoline service stations, and (3) the energy
portions of inventories of businesses that do not produce
energy for sale.
NOTE.—Index number levels are found in the National
Income and Product Accounts Tables, table 7.2.

iiffl

mm I IL
Residential

10 NET EXPORTS

im

0

-10
10 GOVERNMENT PURCHASES
0
Federal -

-10
1980

1981

1982

1983

Based on Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rates
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis

33-7-1

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

first quarter and $11 billion in the
second (chart 1). In combination with
increases in business final sales, the
liquidation brought the constantdollar inventory-sales ratio down
sharply, to 3.07 from 3.27 in mid-1982.
• Net exports continued their slide.
The first and second quarters together added another $13 billion to the
drop in real net exports that has proceeded almost without interruption
since the third quarter of 1980. Imports were up sharply in both quarters. In the first quarter, the increase
was in nonpetroleum goods; in the
second quarter, services and petro-

leum increased as well. Exports, after
a slight increase in the first quarter
largely due to agricultural shipments,
declined in the second quarter; both
goods—agricultural as well as nonagricultural—and services contributed.
• Government purchases declined
in both quarters. Real government
purchases declined substantially in
the first quarter and slightly in the
second. The first-quarter decline, and
the moderation of the decline in the
second quarter, was largely in Federal
purchases. State and local purchases
remained on a moderate downtrend.
In Federal purchases, national de-

fense purchases increased again.
Since the first quarter of 1981, these
purchases have increased 17 MJ percent. In nondefense purchases, purchases by the Commodity Credit Corporation accounted for all of the firstquarter decline of $7% billion and for
all of the second-quarter decline of $3
billion. In the first quarter, smaller
amounts of crops were placed under
loan by farmers, and in the second
quarter, there were net redemptions.
These purchases, which have recently
dominated changes in nondefense
purchases, are now shown separately
in NIPA tables 3.7B and 3.8B.

ERRATA: National Income and Product Accounts
The table below shows corrections to estimates published in The National Income and Product Accounts of the United States, 1929-76: Statistical Tables and in the July 1982 issue of the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS. Additional errata appeared in the SURVEY issues of July and
August 1982.
Table

Title

1968
1.20

1973

1974

1975

1976

1977

1978

1979

1968

1973

1974

1975

1976

1977

1978

1979

77.2

179.8

202.5

227.5

76.9

179.3

202.0

227.0

Nonfarm housing

2

74.4

172.5

194.3

217.8

74.1

172.1

193.8

217.3

Owner-occupied

3

52.2

Tenant-occupied

4

Housing output...

Less: IGS ...

6.15

Corrected

Previously published

Line

Benefits paid by private
pension and welfare
funds.
Group health insurance .




1

6

51.9

10.6

47.8

53.1

57.9

28.2

33.0

37.3

10.3

47.4

52.6

57.4

27.8

32.6

36.8

28

37,993

44,302

50,324

58,732

64,767

74,827

84,029

37,590

44,001

51,944

59,494

67,930

77,069

88,329

30

19,903

23,350

26,580

32,584

34,358

39,628

42,863

19,500

23,049

28,200

33,346

37,521

41,870

47,163

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The U.S. National Income and Product Accounts
1980-82
First Quarter 1983

ESTIMATES of the national income
and product accounts (NIPA's) for the
last 3 years have been revised. The revised estimates for the period including the first quarter of 1980 through
the first quarter of 1983, as well as
preliminary estimates for the second
quarter of 1983, are shown following
this article. (The box on page 7 describes the other forms in which the
revised estimates are available.) Estimates for 1977-79 can be found in the
July 1982 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS and for earlier years in The National Income and Product Accounts
of the United States, 1929-76: Statistical Tables.l
1. Errata for selected series are shown in the July
1982 SURVEY, in the August 1982 SURVEY, and on page
3 of this issue.

As is usually done in July, new
source data have been incorporated
and seasonal factors have been updated. Table 1 shows the most important
new and revised source data along
with the components and years they
affect. One source, the Census Bureau
annual survey of services, is being
used for the first time in making July
revisions. This survey replaces a discontinued monthly survey.
The first section of this article provides an overview of the revisions for
1980-82 in terms of annual estimates
of current-dollar GNP, constant-dollar
GNP and associated price indexes,
charges against GNP, and sector and
saving-investment transactions. The
next section describes in more detail,
from a methodological point of view,
the revisions in several related com-

ponents—the rental income/rental
services and the interest income/financial services groups—and in proprietors' income. The final section examines the estimates to see whether
and to what extent the revisions suggest a new view of quarterly economic
developments. In the new estimates
the characterization of the 1980-82
period as one of poor economic growth
still holds. The cyclical fluctuations
during the period are similar to those
in the previously published estimates,
although the 1980-81 expansion is
stronger and the 1981-82 contraction
is sharper. The course of productivity
change, largely mirroring the cyclical
fluctuations, is also similar. The pattern of slowing inflation is the same
as in the previously published estimates. The personal saving rate in

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Robert P. Parker, Associate Director for National Economic
Accounts, and Gerald F. Donahoe, Chief of the National Income
and Wealth Division were responsible for planning and
carrying through the annual NIPA revision. Richard C. Ziemer
and Joseph C. Wakefield of the Government Division directed
major parts of the work for this project. Norman E. Bakka
developed the computer systems for assembling the data to
produce the tables.
Carol S. Carson and George Jaszi wrote the article describing the
revisions.
BEA staff that made significant contributions to the revisions are
listed below:
Personal consumption expenditures—JAMES C. BYRNES, Clinton
P. McCully, Paul R. Lally, Daniel J. McCarron, Moses J.
Branch, Ellen B. Arroyo.
Investment—JOHN C. HINRICHS. Fixed investment—Jeffrey W.
Crawford, Mary E. Joyce, Stephen P. Baldwin. Inventories—
John Mon, Anthony D. Eckman, John M. Ryan, Mary K.
Osinalde.
Net exports—LEO M. BERNSTEIN, Phyllistine M. Barnes.
Federal government transactions—DAVID T. DOBBS. Transfer
payments and contributions—Kathleen H. Downs. Other
expenditures and receipts—Hermione A. Anglin, Deloris T.
Tolson. Constant-dollar estimates—Karl D. Galbraith, Robert T.
Mangan. Computer services—Arthur A. Morton.



State and local government transactions—DAVID J. LEVIN.
Receipts and expenditures—Henry H. Newman-Santos.
Constant-dollar estimates and computer services—Donald L.
Peters.
Measures of price change—SHELBY W. HERMAN.
Personal income—MARY W. HOOK. Wages and salaries—Martin
Murphy, Pauline M. Cypert, Kathryn A. Comins. Other labor
income—Martin Murphy. Employment—Mary Carol Barren.
Interest. Teresa L. Weadock. Rental income of persons—Teresita
Chan. Other contributors to the personal income estimates
include: George M. Smith, Imogene C. Petersen, Mary V. Pitts,
and Thae S. Park.
Business income—KENNETH A. PETRICK. Corporate profitsWillie J. Abney, Dorothy G. Collins, Jerry L. Stone. Nonfarm
proprietors' income—Susan R. Den Herder.
Capital consumption allowances and adjustments—JOHN A.
GORMAN, John C. Musgrave, Gerald Silverstein, Kathryn A.
Comins.
Industry product—MILO O. PETERSON, Sherlene K. S. Lum,
Vesta Jones, Stephen P. Baldwin, M. Greg Key, Marilyn E.
Baker.
Farm output and income—MARY W. HOOK, Shelby W. Herman.
Table preparation, analysis and review—JEANETTE M. HONSA,
Phyllistine M. Barnes, M. Greg Key, Douglas R. Fox.
Secretarial—EUNICE V. BLUE, Dorothy A. Wilson, Esther M.
Carter, Linda M. Brown.

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
the quarters of 1980 and 1981 is
slightly higher and in the quarters of
1982 is substantially lower. The fiscal
position of the Federal Government
differs little from that shown in the
previously published estimates, but
the fiscal position of State and local
governments (excluding social insurance funds) is improved.

0.1 percentage points, respectively. In
1980, the revisions in the components
shown in the table were small and
partly offsetting. In 1981 and 1982,
large upward revisions in personal
consumption expenditures (PCE) were
accompanied by a large revision in
nonresidential investment in the
same direction in 1981 and a large revision in residential investment in the

Overview
Current-dollar GNP
Current-dollar GNP was revised
down $1.4 billion in 1980, up $16.4 billion in 1981, and up $13.7 billion in
1982 (table 2). The revisions in the
percent changes from the preceding
year were down 0.1, up 0.6, and down

Table 1.—Major New and Revised Source Data for Current-Dollar Estimates

^^-^^^•—•
Source data

GNP
"~~"~

Components
.^^^

PCE

^^^^__
Census Bureau surveys of merchant wholesale and retail trade

Goods

Nonresidential fixed
investment
Services

PDE

1982

Internal Revenue Service tabulations of business tax returns:
Corporations
Sole proprietorships and partnerships

1980
1981

Census Bureau Annual Housing Survey

1981

Services

Federal

State and
local

1980-81 r&
1982

1982

1982
1981

1981

Census Bureau Annual Survey of Manufactures

Bureau of Economic Analysis U.S. international transactions
accounts

Merchandise

1980

1982

.

U.S. Department of Agriculture farm statistics

Government purchases

Net Exports

CBI

1980r&
1981

1980 r &
1981

Census Bureau annual survey of services

Census Bureau value of new construction put in place

Structures

Residential fixed
investment

1980-81r&
1982

1980-81 r&
1982

1980-81r &
1982
1980-82 r

1980-82r

1980-82r

1982

Office of Management and Budget Federal budget data

1980-81

Census Bureau surveys of State and local government..
Bureau of Labor Statistics tabulations of employees covered by
State unemployment insurance

1981 r &
1982

1981r &
1982

Bureau of Economic Analysis capital stock statistics
Charges against GNP
*
Source data

N^^^
Components
^^''^^v^^^

Compensation of
employees
Wages and
salaries

Supplements

Proprietors' income
with IVA and CCAdj
Farm

Nonfarm

Rental
income of
persons
with
CCAdj

Corporate
profits
with IVA
and CCAdj

Capital consumption
allowances with CCAdj

Net
interest

Capital
consumption
allowances

CCAdj

Other
charges

Census Bureau surveys of merchant wholesale and retail trade
Census Bureau annual survey of services
Internal Revenue Service tabulations of business tax returns:
Corporations
Sole proprietorships and partnerships

1980
1981

1981

1980
1981

1980

1980
1981

1980
1981

1980
1981

1981

Census Bureau Annual Housing Survey
Census Bureau value of new construction put in place
Census Bureau Annual Survey of Manufactures

1980-81r &
1982

1980-81 r&
1982

U.S. Department of Agriculture farm statistics
Bureau of Economic Analysis U.S. international transactions
accounts
.
Office of Management and Budget Federal budget data

1980-82 r

1982

Census Bureau surveys of State and local government
Bureau of Labor Statistics tabulations of employees covered by
State unemployment insurance
Bureau of Economic Analysis capital stock statistics

1982

1982

1981-82

1981-82

1981r&
1982
1980-82 T

r
Revised.
PCE Personal consumption expenditures.
PDE Producers' durable equipment.
CBI Change hi business inventories.
IVA Inventory valuation adjustment.
CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment.
NOTE.—Years shown are the years of the estimates into which the new source data are directly incorporated.




1980-82 r

1980-82 r

1980-82 r

1980-82r

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

opposite direction in 1982. Other revisions in 1981 and 1982 were small to
moderate.
Revisions in PCE goods were small,
about $1 billion each year—down in
1980 and up in 1981 and 1982. Durable goods were revised up each year,
and included upward revisions in
motor vehicles. Nondurable goods
were revised down each year, and included downward revisions in gasoline
and oil. In services, the revisions were
up each year—$2.0 billion in 1980,
$13.0 billion in 1981, and $20.0 billion
in 1982. The large upward revisions
in 1981 and 1982 were in housing and
recreation, and, in 1982, in personal
business. The upward revisions in
housing were in rent of tenant- and
owner-occupied dwellings, and are discussed in the next section. The 1982
revision in personal business was concentrated in services rendered without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers (see
the next section).
Revisions in nonresidential fixed investment were negligible in 1980 and
1982, and $6.1 billion in 1981. In 1981,
structures were revised up $3.6 bil-

lion; most of the revision was in petroleum and natural gas well drilling
and exploration. Producers' durable
equipment was revised up $2.5 billion
in that year; most of the revision was
in office, computing, and accounting
machinery.
Residential investment was revised
down each year—by negligible to
small amounts in 1980 and 1981, and
by $5.4 billion in 1982. In 1982, singlefamily nonfarm structures, farm
structures, and an "other" component
that includes mobile homes and brokers' commissions on the sale of
dwellings were each revised down
about $1 billion; nonfarm additions
and alterations were revised down
$2.1 billion.
Revisions in the change in business
inventories were negligible in 1980
and 1982; small downward revisions
in the farm component offset upward
revisions in the nonfarm component.
In 1981, the farm component was revised up to $2 billion and the nonfarm component was revised down $4
billion. The nonfarm revision was
more than accounted for by the
change in book values, for which each

The revised estimates are available for
sale in machine readable form. For further information write to the National
Income and Wealth Division (BE-54),
Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington,
D.C. 20230, or call 202-523-0669.
Alternative estimates of capital consumption and profits of nonfinancial corporations and of the fixed capital stock
are available from the same source and
will be shown in a subsequent issue of
the SURVEY.

of the industry components was revised down.
For net exports, revisions in the
total, in both exports and imports,
and in their components were small
in 1980 and 1981. In 1982, net exports
was revised down $3.1 billion, virtually all due to a downward revision in
exports. In that year, revisions in exports and imports of merchandise
were negligible. In services, however,
there were revisions of $1 billion to $3
billion in profits, interest, and the
"other" components of both exports
and imports; in imports these largely
offset each other. (The revisions in interest are discussed in the next sec-

Table 2.—Gross National Product
1979

1980

Previously
published

Previously
published

1982

1981

Revised

Previously
published

Revision

Revised

Previously
published

Revision

Revised

Revision

Billions of current dollars
Gross National Product

2,417.8

2,633.1

2,631.7

1.4

2,937.7

2,954.1

ie.4

3,059.3

3,073.0

13.7

Personal consumption expenditures
Goods
Services

1,507.2
813.4
693.7

1,667.2
884.7
782.5

1,668.1
883.5
784.5

.9
-1.1
2.0

1,843.2
969.1
874.1

1,857.2
970.0
887.1

14.0
1.0
13.0

1,971.1
1,004.8
966.3

1,991.9
1,005.5
986.4

20.8
.8
20.0

408.8
290.2
118.6

412.4
309.2
103.2

411.7
308.8
102.9

-.7
4
-.3

451.1
346.1
104.9

456.5
352.2
104.3

5.4
6.1
7

444.1
348.0
96.2

439.1
348.3
90.8

-5.1
.4
-5.4

9g

.2

20.5

18.5

-23.8

-24.5

Fixed investment
Nonresidential
Residential

.. .

Change in business inventories

14.3

-10.0

-2.0

Net exports of goods and services
Exports
Imports

13.2
281.4
268.1

25.2
339.2
314.0

23.9
338.8
314.8

-1.2
-.4
.8

26.1
367.3
341.3

26.3
368.8
342.5

.2
1.4
1.2

Government purchases of goods and services ...
Federal
State and local

474.4
168.3
306.0

538.4
197.2
341.2

537.8
197.0
340.8

-.6
-.1
-.4

596.9
228.9
368.0

595.7
229.2
366.5

1,479.4

1,474.0

1,475.0

1.0

1,502.6

Personal consumption expenditures
Goods
Services...

927.6
500.3
427.3

930.5
492.9
437.6

931.8
493.1
438.8

1.4
.2
1.2

947.6
502.4
445.2

Fixed investment
Nonresidential
Residential

229.1
169.9
59.1

213.3
166.1
47.2

212.9
165.8
47.1

-.4
-.3
-.1

-5.0

-4.4

.6

7

20.5
350.8
330.3

17.4
347.6
330.2

-3.1
32
-.1

-1.2
.3
-1.5

647.4
257.9
389.4

649.2
258.7
390.5

1.8
.8
1.1

1,513.8

11.2

1,476.9

1,485.4

8.5

956.8
503.7
453.1

9.1
1.2
7.9

956.9
503.8
453.1

970.2
504.0
466.2

13.3
.3
13.1

216.9
172.0
44.9

219.1
174.4
44.7

2.2
2.4
-.3

206.1
165.7
40.3

203.9
166.1
37.8

2.1
.4
-2.6

9.0

8.5

5

-9.2

-9.4

-.2

-2.9
.8
2.1
.5
.2
.3

Billions of constant (1972) dollars
Gross National Product

Change in business inventories

7.3

Net exports of goods and services
Exports
Imports

37.2
146.2
109.0

50.6
159.2
108.6

50.3
159.1
108.8

-.3
0
.2

42.0
158.5
116.4

43.0
159.7
116.7

1.0
1.3
.3

31.8
148.1
116.3

28.9
147.3
118.4

Government purchases of goods and services ..
Federal
State and local

278.3
102.1
176.2

284.6
106.5
178.1

284.3
106.4
177.9

-.3
-.1
-.2

287.1
110.4
176.7

286.5
110.4
176.1

-.6
0
6

291.3
116.4
174.9

291.8
116.6
175.2

Source: NIPA tables 1.1 and 1.2.




8
tion. A change in methodology for
freight and port charges, which are in
"other" services, was explained in
connection with the revisions in the
U.S. international transactions accounts in the June 1983 SURVEY.)
Government purchases were revised
by small amounts in all years—down
in 1980 and 1981 and up in 1982. Revisions in Federal purchases, and
their national defense and nondefense
components, and in State and local
purchases, and their components,
were all small.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Constant-dollar GNP and associated
price indexes

GNP, and also in the components,
appear as revisions in percent change
in the implicit price deflators (table
3). The revisions in percent change in
the implicit price deflators can be decomposed into two parts: one due to
revisions in the composition of goods
and services, and one due to revisions
in price change. The former can be
seen as the difference between revisions in percent change in implicit
price deflators and in fixed-weighted
price indexes; the latter can be seen
as revisions in percent changes in

In constant (1972) dollars, GNP was
revised up $1.0 billion, $11.2 billion,
and $8.5 billion in 1980, 1981, and
1982, respectively (table 2). The revisions in the percent changes from the
preceding year were up 0.1, up 0.7,
and down 0.2 percentage points, respectively.
The differences between the revisions in percent change in currentdollar GNP and in constant-dollar

Table 3.—Gross National Product, Implicit Price Deflator, and Fixed-Weighted Price Index
[Percent change from preceding year]

1979

1982

1981

1980
Previously
published

Previously
published

Previously
published

Previously
published

Gross national product

11.7

8.9

8.8

11.6

12.2

0.6

4.1

4.0

Personal consumption expenditures
Fixed investment
Nonresidential
Residential ....

11.9
13.5
16.6
6.6

10.6
.9
6.5
-13.0

10.7
.7
6.4
-13.2

.1
-.2
1
-.2

10.6
9.4
12.0
1.7

11.3
10.9
14.1
1.4

.7
1.5
2.1
-.3

6.9
15
.5
-8.3

7.3
-3.8
-1.1
-13.0

.4
23
-1.6
47

Change in business inventories
Net exports of goods and services
Exports
Imports

28.6
22.0

20.6
17.1

20.4
17.4

-.2
.3

8.3
8.7

8.9
8.8

.6
.1

-4.5
32

-5.7
-3.6

-1.2
4

9.8
9.6
9.9

13.5
17.1
11.5

13.4
17.1
11.4

-.1
0
-.1

10.9
16.1
7.9

10.8
16.3
7.5

-.1
.2
-.4

8.4
12.7
5.8

2.8

4

.3

.1

1.9

2.6

.7

-1.7

-1.9

-.2

2.7
3.8
7.3
-5.2

.3
-6.9
-2.2
-20.2

.5
-7.1
-2.4
-20.4

.2
-.2
-.2
-.2

1.8
1.7
3.5
48

2.7
2.9
5.2
-5.2

.9
1.2
1.7
-.4

1.0
-5.0
36
-10.2

1.4
-6.9
47
-15.4

.4
-1.9
1l
-5.2

15.4
6.1

8.9
-.4

8.9
-.2

0
.2

-.4
7.2

.4
7.3

.8
.1

-6.5
2

-7.8
1.4

-1.3
1.6

1.3
1.8
1.1

2.3
4.2
1.1

2.2
4.2
1.0

-.1
0
-.1

.9
3.7
-.8

.8
3.7
-1.0

-.1
0
-.2

1.4
5.4
-1.0

1.8
5.6
-.5

.4
.2
.5

Gross national product

8.6

9.3

9.2

-.1

9.4

9.4

0

6.0

6.0

0

Personal consumption expenditures
Fixed investment
Nonresidential
Residential

9.0
9.4
8.6
12.4

10.3
8.3
9.0
9.0

10.2
8.4
9.0
9.0

-.1
.1
0
0

8.6
7.6
8.1
6.9

8.4
7.8
8.4
6.9

2
.2
.3
0

5.9
3.6
4.3
2.1

5.8
3.3
3.8
2.9

-.1
-.3
-.5
.8

Change in business inventories
Net exports
Exports
Imports

11.5
14.9

10.7
17.5

10.6
17.6

_1

8.8
1.3

8.4
1.4

-.4
.1

2.2
-3.1

2.2
-5.0

8.4
7.7
8.8

11.0
12.4
10.3

11.0
12.4
10.3

0
0
0

9.9
12.0
8.7

9.9
12.1
8.6

0
.1
-.1

6.9
6.9
6.9

7.0
6.9
7.1

Gross national product

9.5

9.9

9.8

Personal consumption expenditures
Fixed investment
Nonresidential
Residential

9.7
11.0
10.1
12.6

11.2
10.1
10.6
9.3

11.1
10.1
10.6
9.3

Change in business inventories
Net exports
Exports
Imports

12.8
16.4

10.9
24.2

10.7
24.5

9.4
9.1
9.5

11.9
13.7
10.8

11.9
13.7
10.7

Revision

Revised

Revised

Revision

Revised

Revision

Current dollars

Government purchases of goods and services
Federal
State and local

-0.1

9.0
12.9
6.6

-0.1

.6
.2
.8

Constant (1972) dollars
Gross national product
Personal consumption expenditures
Fixed investment
Nonresidential
Residential
Change in business inventories
Net exports of goods and services
Exports
Imports
Government purchases of goods and services
Federal
State and local

Implicit price deflator (Index numbers, 1972 = 100)

Government purchases of goods and services
Federal
State and local

!i

0
-1.9
.1
0
.2

Fixed-weighted price index (Index numbers, 1972=100)

Government purchases of goods and services
Federal
State and local
Source: NIPA table 8.1.




j
-.1

9.6

9.5

-.1

6.2

6.4

.2

9.3
8.2
8.9
7.1

9.2
8.3
9.1
7.1

1
.1
.2
0

5.8
4.5
5.7
2.3

5.7
4.7
5.6
3.1

-.1
.2
-.1
.8

2
.3

9.5
5.0

9.1
4.9

-.4
1

2.7
12

2.4
31

-.3
-1.9

0
0
-.1

9.5
11.4
8.2

9.5
11.5
8.1

0
.1
-.1

6.6
7.2
6.1

6.7
7.3
6.3

.1
.1
.2

0
0
0

July 1983

fixed-weighted price indexes. In the
fixed-weighted price indexes, the revisions were generally small, except in
1982 in imports and in residential investment. In imports, revisions in
price reflected the introduction of
annual price data for detailed components of services other than factor
income; for the current quarters, a
single price is used. The revisions in
the price of residential investment
was traceable to its additions and alterations component. The methodology was changed to use data from the
Consumer Price Index; these data are
more closely related to this component than was the single-family home
price previously used.
Charges against GNP
Revisions in total charges against
GNP, as shown in table 4, were similar to those in GNP. As a result, revisions in the statistical discrepancy
were small. The statistical discrepancy, which is GNP less charges against
GNP, arises because they are estimated independently by methodologies
that are subject to error.
In 1980, an upward revision in net
interest and a downward revision in
corporate profits were largely offsetting; other revisions were small. In
1981, large upward revisions in net
interest and in rental income of persons were only partly offset by a
downward revision in proprietors'
income; other revisions were small. In
1982, revisions were moderate to large

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
in most components. Upward revisions in compensation of employees,
rental income of persons, and corporate profits were only partly offset by
downward revisions in proprietors'
income and net interest.
Compensation of employees was revised up by small amounts in 1980
and 1981 and by $9.2 billion in 1982.
In that year, wages and salaries were
revised up $7.4 billion, with equal
amounts in government and government enterprises and in other industries. Supplements to wages and salaries were revised up $1.7 billion. This
revision was more than accounted for
by other labor income; employer contributions for social insurance were
revised down.
Proprietors' income was revised up
by a small amount in 1980 and revised down by $4.5 billion and $11.3
billion in 1981 and 1982. Each year,
farm income was revised up and nonfarm income down, the latter by $1.2
billion in 1980, $11.0 billion in 1981,
and $13.8 billion in 1982. These revisions, and those in rental income of
persons and in net interest, which are
referred to immediately below, are
discussed in the next section.
Rental income of persons, after a
downward revision of $1.4 billion in
1980, was revised up by large
amounts in 1981 and 1982—$7.5 billion and $15.7 billion.
Corporate profits was revised down
$6.2 billion in 1980 and up $1.7 billion
and $3.9 billion in 1981 and 1982.
Profits before tax—that is, book prof-

its—were revised down each year, although by only a small amount in
1982. The two adjustments were revised up—the inventory adjustment
by small amounts and the capital consumption adjustment by moderate to
large amounts.
Net interest was revised up $4.9 billion and $14.2 billion in 1980 and 1981
and down $3.8 billion in 1982.
Revisions in capital consumption allowances with capital consumption
adjustment, indirect business taxes,
and subsidies less the current surplus
of government enterprises were small
to moderate.
Sector and saving-investment transactions
The current-dollar revisions discussed so far are for GNP, charges
against GNP, and their components,
which make up the two sides of the
national income and product account
in the NIPA five-account summary
system (see table A on page 18). This
summary system also includes three
sector accounts—for persons, government, and foreigners in their transactions with the United States—and a
gross saving and investment account.
Many of the transactions in these accounts are the counter-entries to
transactions for which the revisions
have already been discussed. The following discussion is limited to revisions in other transactions and aggregates.
In the personal income and outlay
account, several major aggregates

Table 4.—Charges Against Gross National Product
[Billions of dollars]

1979

Charges against gross national product
Compensation of employees
Wages and salaries
Supplements to wages and salaries

1980

1982

1981

Previously
published

2,419 3

26292

2 629.4

02

2 939.6

2 959.0

19.4

3,057.6

3,072.5

14.9

1 458 1
12374
220.7

1 598 6
1356 1
2425

1 599 6
13566
243.0

10
6
.4

17676
14940
273.6

17692
14932
276.0

16
7
2.4

18565
15606
295.8

1 8657
1,568.1
297.6

92
7.4
1.7

Revised

Previously
published

Previously
published

Previously
published

Revision

Revised

Revision

Revision

Revised

1321

1163

117 4

12

1247

1202

45

1203

1090

Rental income of persons with CCAdj

279

329

315

14

339

41 4

75

341

499

Corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj

1948

1816

1754

62

1906

1923

1.7

160.8

164.8

Net interest

1538

1877

1926

49

2357

2499

142

2649

261.1

Capital consumption allowances with CCAdj

256.0

2932

293.2

0

330.1

329.5

-.6

356.4

359.2

Other charges

1965

2189

219 6

7

257 1

2564

7

2647

2630

— 1.5

39

2.3

— 1.6

— 1.9

—4.9

—3.0

1.7

.5

Proprietors' income with IVA and CCAdj

Statistical discrepancy
IVA Inventory valuation adjustment.
CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment.
Source: NIPA tables 1.7 and 1.11.




-11.3
157
3.9

-3.8
2.8
17

-1.2

July 1983

10

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

were revised substantially. Personal
income was revised up each year—
$4.9 billion in 1980, $19.1 billion in
1981, and $8.7 billion in 1982 (table 5).
Most of the revisions were accounted
for by components that have already
been referred to: wages and salaries,
proprietors' income, rental income of
persons, and personal interest income.
Revisions in components of personal
income not yet referred to—personal
dividend income and transfer payments—were small. Except in 1982,
the revisions in personal tax payments were negligible. In that year,
they were revised up $4.9 billion. Accordingly, revisions in disposable personal income were similar to those in
personal income except in 1982, when
the upward revision was substantially
smaller. The revisions in personal
outlays, which were dominated by
those in PCE, were up in each year—
by a small amount in 1980, $13.4 billion in 1981, and $20.6 billion in 1982.

Except in 1982, the revisions in personal saving were moderate and
upward; in 1982, the revision was
large and downward—$16.8 billion.
In the government account, revisions in Federal receipts and expenditures were generally small both in
total and in the components (table 6).
The deficit on a national income and
product accounts basis was virtually
unrevised in 1980, revised up $2.3 billion in 1981, and revised down $2.5
billion in 1982. Revisions in State and
local receipts and expenditures also
were generally small. Revisions in expenditures included downward revisions in net interest paid in 1980 and
1981. The surplus on a national
income and product accounts basis
was revised up $2.4 billion in 1980
and $3.6 billion in 1981, and revised
down by a small amount in 1982.
In the foreign transactions account,
the revisions in components other
than exports and imports, which were

discussed earlier, were negligible
(table 7). Accordingly, the revisions in
net foreign investment were similar
to those in net exports.
Revisions in the components of
gross saving and investment were all
referred to earlier (table 8). In summary, in 1980, the revisions in gross
saving and investment were small. In
1981, gross saving and investment
were revised up by moderate
amounts. The revision in saving was
largely accounted for by personal
saving, and the revision in investment
by gross private domestic investment.
In 1982, gross saving and investment
were revised down substantially. The
revision in gross saving—$8.2 billion—was more than accounted for by
the revision in personal saving. The
revision in gross investment reflected
the downward revisions in gross private domestic investment, mostly residential investment, and in net foreign
investment.

Table 5.—Personal Income, Outlays, and Saving
[Billions of dollars]

1980

1979

1982

1981

Previously
published

Previously
published

1,951.2

2,160.4

2,165.3

4.9

2,415.8

2,435.0

19.1

2,569.9

2,578.6

12376
1149
132.1
279
508
2187
169.2

1356 1
1272
116.3
329
559
2634
208.5

13567
128.0
117.4
31 5
568
2660
208.9

6
.8
1.2

1,493.2
143.5
120.2
41.4

-.7
3.1

— 1.4

1,493.9
140.4
124.7
33.9

329.0
231.4

341.3
232.6

1,560.7
153.8
120.3
34.1
67.0
371.2
263.0

1,568.1
156.6
109.0
49.9
66.4
366.2
262.5

Less: Personal tax and nontax payments
Equals: Disposable personal income

3010
1,650.2

336.3
1,824.1

336.5
1,828.9

.1
4.8

386.7
2,029.1

387.4
2.047.6

397.2
2,172.7

402.1
2,176.5

4.9
3.8

Less: Personal outlays
Equals: Personal saving

1,553.5
96.7

1,717.9
106.2

1,718.7
110.2

.8
4.0

1,898.9
130.2

1,912.4
135.3

13.4

5.1

2,030.5
142.2

2,051.1
125.4

20.6
-16.8

59

58

60

.2

6.4

6.6

.2

6.5

5.8

-.7

Personal income
Wage and salary disbursements
Other labor income
Proprietors' income with IVA and CCAdj
Rental income of persons with CCAdj
Personal dividend income
Personal interest income
Transfers less personal contributions for social insurance.

Revised

Previously
published

Revision

9
2.5
.3

625

Revised

628

Revision

-4.5

7.5
.3
12.3

1.1
.7

18.5

Previously
published

Revised

Revision

8.7
7.4
2.9
-11.3
15.7

.6
-5.0
_ 4

Addendum:
Personal saving rate (percent)
IVA Inventory valuation adjustment.
CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment.
Source: NIPA table 2.1.

Table 6.—Government Receipts, Expenditures, and Surplus or Deficit
[Billions of dollars]

1979

1982

1981

1980
Previously
published

Previously
published

Previously
published

Previously
published

Federal:
Receipts
Expenditures
Surplus or deficit (— ), national income and product accounts

4936
5097
-16.1

5407
6021
-61.4

5409
6021
-61.2

02
.1

6282
6882
-60.0

6270
6892
-62.2

12
1.1
-2.3

6139
763.4
-149.5

6174
764.4
-147.1

3.5
1.0
2.5

State and local:
Receipts
Expenditures
Surplus or deficit ( — ), national income and product accounts
Social insurance funds
Other funds

3520
3215
30.4
238
66

3859
3578
28.2
273
9

3861
3555
30.6
27 1
35

2
22
2.4
2
2.6

4168
385.0
31.7
318
— .1

4181
382.7
35.3
309
4.4

13
-2.3
3.6
_9
4.5

4372
405.1
32.1
363
-4.1

4391
407.8
31.3
33.2
-1.9

1.8
2.7
-.9
-3.1
2.2

Source: NIPA tables 3.2 and 3.3.




Revised

Revision

o

Revised

Revision

Revised

Revision

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

11

Table 7.—Foreign Transactions
[Billions of dollars]

1979

1980

Previously
published

Previously
published

Net exports of goods and services
Merchandise net
Exports
Imports
Factor income net
Receipts
Payments..
Other services, net
Receipts
Payments

1982

1981

Revised

Previously
published

Revision

Revised

Previously
published

Revision

Revision

Revised

13 2

25 2

23 9

12

26 1

263

02

20 5

17 4

31

302
1792
209 4
42 6
648
222
9
374
365

23 9
2201
244 o
46 1
752
29 1
31
44 0
409

24 1
2201
244 2
453
745
292
28
44 2
414

2

28 5
2326
261 1
49 6
863
367
51
49 8
447

2
g
9
4
2
2

'3
2
5

28 2
2319
260 1
49 2
861
369
52
49 4
442

5
5

354
2094
244 8
47 7
883
406
82
531
449

353
2092
244 5
47 2
865
393
55
519
464

1
2
3
5
-18
13
-27
12
15

15 1

17 3

17 7

4

21 9

22 3

3

25 2

257

18

78

63

15

41

40

1

46

-83

Less: Grants, transfer payments, and interest paid by Government
Equals: Net foreign investment by the United States

o

2
g
7

I

o

6

-3.7

Source: NIPA table 4.1.

Table 8.—Gross Saving and Investment
[Billions of dollars]

1979

Gross saving
Personal saving
Undistributed corporate profits with IV A and CCAdj
Corporate capital consumption allowances with CCAdj
Noncorporate capital consumption allowances with CCAdj
Wage accruals less disbursements
Government surplus or deficit ( — ), national income and
product accounts .
Capital grants received by the United States
Gross investment
Gross private domestic investment
Net foreign investment
Statistical discrepancy

Previously
published

1982

1981

1980

Previously
published

Revised

Revision

Previously
published

Revised

Revision

Previously
published

Revision

Revised

422 7

406 2

4059

04

477 5

4838

6.3

414.0

405.8

967
54.5

106 2
38.9

1102
32.1

40
-6.8

1302
44.4

1353
44.8

51
.5

1422
32.8

125.4
37.0

16.8
4.1

157.5
98.5

181.2
112.0

179.3
113.8

-1.9
1.9

206.2
123.9

202.9
126.6

-3.3
2.7

225.1
131.3
0

222.0
137.2
0

-3.1
5.9
0

143

332

307

25

282

269

13

-117.4

-115.8

1.1

12

1.2

1.1

1.1

421 2

410 2

408 2

20

475 g

4789

4230
18

402 3
78

401 9
63

5
15

4715
41

4749
40

15

39

23

16

19

49

o

o

o

o

0

o

o

o

-8.2

1.6
0

0

0

33

415.7

406.2

9.5

34
1

4203
-4.6

414.5
8.3

5.8
-3.7

3.0

1.7

.5

1.2

0

IVA Inventory valuation adjustment.
CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment.
Source: NIPA table 5.1.

Selected Revisions

ceived by persons. (The income from
the rental of real property of persons
In this section, the large revisions primarily engaged in the real estate
in rental income and in rent of dwell- business is included in nonfarm proings, in interest transactions, and in prietors' income. The imputed net
proprietors' income are discussed. Re- rental income of owner-occupants of
visions for the first two groups of farm dwellings is included in farm
components affected both income and proprietors' income.) As a component
product. In addition, the definitions
NIPA aggregates, rental income is
and methodologies for these compo- of
shown
with the capital consumption
nents are complex. Accordingly, to in- adjustment.
$49.9 billion in 1982
troduce the sources of the revisions, on a revised At
basis, it was about 2 perdefinitions and summary methodolo- cent of the several aggregates—
gies are provided.
charges against GNP, national
income, and personal income—in
Rental income and rent of dwellings
which it is included.
Rental income of persons is the
Annual estimates of the rental
income of persons from the rental of income of persons are prepared as the
real property, except the income of sum of four major components, as
persons primarily engaged in the real shown in table 9: (1) Rental income on
estate business; the imputed net nonfarm housing, which includes both
rental income of owner-occupants of tenant-occupied housing and ownernonfarm dwellings; and royalties re- occupied housing (including mobile




homes) and accounted for almost fourfifths of the total in 1982; (2) rental
income on farms owned by nonoperator (that is, nonfarm) landlords, which
accounted for 4 percent; (3) rental
income on nonfarm nonresidential
properties, which accounted for 7 percent; and (4) royalities, which include
income from patents, copyrights, and
rights to natural resources and accounted for 11 percent. For 1980 and
1981, the years subject to revision for
which these components had been
separately estimated, the revisions in
rental income on nonfarm housing accounted for the preponderant share of
the revisions in the total. Accordingly, the following discussion is of that
component.
The basic approach for estimating
rental income on nonfarm housing is
to multiply the number of occupied
housing units by an average rent. For

12

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

years of the decennial census of housing, information is available on (1) the
number of occupied units, separately
for tenant-occupied and owner-occupied units (and, for the latter, for permanent-site units and mobile homes)
and (2) mean contract rent—that is,
rent including furnishings, utilities,
and services for tenant-occupied
units—arrayed by the market value
of the properties. Mean contract rent
for owner-occupied units is imputed
on the basis of rent charged for
tenant-occupied units of the same
market value. Estimates for the rent
of equipment, such as kitchen appliances, and for utilities furnished
tenant-occupied units are subtracted
from contract rent to arrive at
"space" rent, that is, the rent of the
housing unit itself. These space-rent
estimates appear as components of
housing services in PCE (and make up
the bulk of housing output, shown in
NIPA table 1.20). Estimates of expenses associated with the ownership
of housing units are deducted to
arrive at rental income. These expenses include interest, estimated on
the basis of mortgages outstanding
from the Federal Reserve Board's
flow-of-funds accounts and appropriate interest rates; maintenance and
repairs, from the Census Bureau
survey of residential alterations and
repairs; capital consumption allowances, from the BEA capital stock estimates; and others, based on information from trade sources. For rental
income on tenant-occupied units, an
estimate is made of the share going to
persons, which is the part that is included in rental income of persons,
using ownership data from the census
of housing.

For years other than census years data on mortgages outstanding, the
for which the annual housing survey number of units and average rents
is available, the methods used are from the 1981 Annual Housing
very similar; information on occupied Survey were introduced; the introducunits and average rents from that tion of the average reftts accounted
survey is used to extrapolate esti- for most of the revision. For 1982, the
mates based on the census of housing. revisions in level and in change for
For the most recent year included in rental income on nonfarm housing
a July revision (for this July revision, cannot be shown, because, as noted
1982), when data from the annual earlier, estimates of this component
housing survey are not available, the are not prepared separately for curnumber of units is extrapolated by in- rent quarters. However, given the size
formation on the number of house- of the revisions in total rental income
holds from the current population of persons ($15.9 billion in level and
survey and the average rent is ex- $8.3 billion in change), they are probtrapolated by the rent component of ably large. The source data introthe Consumer Price Index (adjusted duced were the number of households
for quality shifts in units). Expenses from the 1982 Current Population
are estimated using the same sources Survey and a revised adjustment for
as in census years.
quality shifts.
For current quarters (and months),
The new and revised source data
estimates of space rent are prepared that affected PCE on services of nonby extrapolating units, by housing farm tenant- and owner-occupied
completions, and average rents, by dwellings were limited to those that
the rent component of the Consumer affected space rent, that is, the data
Price Index (adjusted for quality on number of units and average rent
shifts). Estimates of rental income from the 1981 Annual Housing
from nonfarm housing for current pe- Survey, the number of households
riods are prepared by extrapolating from the 1982 Current Population
rental income of persons by past Survey, and a revised adjustment for
trends.
quality shifts. In addition, for the
In 1980, rental income on nonfarm rental value of farm dwellings, rehousing was revised down $1.2 billion. vised estimates from the U.S. DepartThe revision reflected the incorpora- ment of Agriculture were introduced.
tion of revised data on mortgages out- The revisions were downward and
standing from the Federal Reserve thus partly offset the revisions in the
Board's flow-of-funds accounts. These nonfarm component.
It has long been recognized that
data affected the estimates of the interest expense item. In 1981, the revi- current estimates of rental income
sion in level was up $6.4 billion, but are among the least reliable NIPA
given the revision in level in the pre- components, because an aggregate exvious year, the revision that can be trapolation of past trend is used. A
attributed to new and revised source project is underway to improve these
information—that is, the revision in estimates by developing a methodolochange from the preceding year—is gy that more closely resembles that
up $7.6 billion. In addition to revised used for the annual estimates.

July 1983

Table 9.—Rental Income of Persons
[Billions of dollars]

1980
1979

Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment
Rental income of persons....
Rental income
Nonfarm housing
Owner occupied
Tenant occupied
Farms owned by nonoperator landlords
Nonfarm nonresidential properties
Royalties
Capital consumption adjustment




Revised

1982

1981

Revision in
level

Revision in
change

-1.4

-1.4

Revised

Revision
in level

Revision in
change

Revised

Revision
in level

Revision
in change

27.9

31.5

41.4

7.5

8.9

49.9

15.7

8.2

562

639

13

13

770

76

89

86.3

15.9

8.3

518
414
295
119

582
480
34 1
139

13
-12
10
1

13
-12
10
1

685
59.1
417
174

59
6.4
35
29

73
7.6
45
31

772
68.0
469
21.1

41

38

5

5

37

12

7

32

64

4

4

57

7

4

60

16

92
.1

-.1

64
44

-283

57

o

o

-32.4

0

0

85

-35.6

16
-.1

0

-36.5

13

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Interest income and financial services
The net interest component of
charges against GNP consists of interest paid by business less interest received by business, plus interest received from abroad less interest paid
to abroad. Interest payments on mortgage and home improvement loans
are counted as interest paid by business, because homeowners are treated
as businesses in the NIPA's. In addition to monetary interest, net interest
includes imputed interest. At $261.1
billion in 1982 on a revised basis, the
net interest component was about 8
percent of charges against GNP.
Net interest is estimated as part of
an accounting for interest flows by
sector and legal form of organization,
separately for monetary and imputed
interest. Annual estimates are shown
in NIPA table 8.7. The last year for
which complete source data are available is 1980; for later periods, the estimates are based on less reliable
source data and thus are subject to increasing margins of error. Table 10 is
an arrangement of these interest estimates designed to highlight the
sources of revision.
For years for which source data are
complete, estimates of net monetary
interest paid by business are derived
mainly from tax return tabulations
prepared by the Internal Revenue
Service of interest paid and received
by corporations, sole proprietors, and

partnerships. Tabulations for corporations become available with a 3-year
lag, and those for sole proprietors and
partnerships with a 2-year lag. For
years when these tabulations are not
available, estimates are prepared
using a different breakdown. For financial corporations, data from regulatory agencies (for example, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,
Federal Home Loan Bank Board, and
the National Credit Union Administration) and trade sources are used.
For nonfinancial corporations, estimates are prepared by extrapolating
interest paid by the product of debt
outstanding for several kinds of debt
(largely from the Fedral Reserve
Board's flow-of-funds accounts) and
appropriate interest rates, and by extrapolating interest received using a
similar procedure. Interest paid and
received by partnerships and proprietorships are extrapolated by past
trends. For all years, interest payments by homeowners on mortgage
and home improvement loans are estimated using data on mortgages outstanding from the flow-of-funds accounts along with appropriate interest rates. For current quarters, estimates of net business interest are derived as a residual, as will be explained in connection with personal
interest income.
Imputed interest is paid by two
kinds of financial intermediaries:

banks and other depository institutions, and life insurance carriers and
private noninsured pension funds. For
the former, imputed interest is estimated as the property income earned
on investment of deposits less monetary interest paid on deposits (less
profits, in the case of mutual depositories). For the latter, it is estimated
as the property income earned less
profits of life insurance carriers. The
sources and methods used in estimating imputed interest are similar to
those used in estimating monetary interest of financial corporations for
years when tax return tabulations are
not available.
Net interest paid by the rest of the
world is estimated as part of the U.S.
international transactions accounts.
The basic approach for estimating
both receipts and payments is to multiply the amount outstanding in various asset categories by an appropriate interest rate. (For a description of
recent refinements to this approach,
see the Technical Notes in "U.S. International
Transactions, Second
Quarter 1983," in the June 1983
SURVEY.
In 1980, net interest was revised up
$4.9 billion. The revision mainly reflected the incorporation of data from
corporate tax return tabulations. In
1981, the upward revision in level was

Table 10.—Interest
[Billions of dollars]

Net interest
Net interest paid by business
Monetary ....
Paid
Received
Imputed
Paid
Of which: To government
To persons . . .
By banks, etc
By life insurance carriers etc
Received
Net interest paid by the rest of the world
Paid
Received
Personal interest income
Monetary interest received...
Imputed interest received
Net interest

.. .

Revised

1982

1981

1980
1979

Revision in
level

Revision in
change

Revised

Revision in
level

Revision in
change

Revised

153 8

192 6

49

49

249 9

14 2

93

261.1

1418

1772

52

53

2239

146

94

235.4

647
3908
3261

91 1
5068
4157

60
120
60

60
120
60

129 6
6701
5405

15 9
210
51

99
90
9

1259
713.0
587 1

77 1
984
37
733
36.2
37 1
213

861
1108
37
823
378
44 5
247

7
7

5
5

7
-3
5
1

7
-.3
5

943
1243
35
909
35.5
553
300

12
-1.5
3
1

4
-1.2
g
0

1095
1419
3.8
1057
41.7
640
324

120
264
144

155
35 5
200

3
2
1

3
2
1

260
536
276

4
3
2

_l
1

2187
1454
733

266 0
1837
823

25
_7

25
33
_7

341 3
2504
90.9

12 3
135
-12

o

g
7

oo

o
o

13
12

o

Revision
in level

Revision
in change

3.8

-18.0

4.7

6.2

256
592
336

-4.1
28
13

-4.0
28
1.2

98
102
-.4

3662
260.4
105.7

5.0
-5.4
.5

-17.3
-15.6
-1.7

-3.8

0

o

18.0

1538

1926

49

49

2499

142

9.3

261.1

Interest paid by government to persons and business

59 8

74 1

9

9

98 6

3

11

1194

15

12

Less: Interest received by government

403

503

12

12

61 5

13

1

725

2.2

.9

Interest paid by consumers to business

455

496

3

3

543

9

5

581

-5

.4




14

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

$14.2 billion and the revision in
change from the preceding year was
$9.3 billion. Tabulations of tax returns for sole proprietorships and
partnerships, revised data on assets
and debts of nonfinancial corporations
from the Federal Reserve Board's
flow-of-funds accounts, and revised interest rates were introduced. For
1982, the downward revision in level
was $3.8 billion and the downward revision in change was $18.0 billion. A
full breakdown of these revisions by
component cannot be shown, because,
as noted earlier, they are not prepared separately for current quarters.
Only the revisions for net interest
paid by the rest of the world are
shown, and they accounted for about
$4 billion of the downward revisions
in level and in change. (In GNP, the
counterpart of the revisions in net interest paid by the rest of the world is
in net exports.) The remainder of the
revision in change for net interest reflected the substitution of the methodology used for annual estimates,
which was just described, for the
methodology used for estimates in
current quarters, which is explained
immediately below in connection with
personal interest income.
The other major interest aggregate
in the NIPA's is personal interest
income. It is defined as interest
income of persons from all sources.
Monetary interest received by proprietors of nonfinancial businesses is included in this aggregate (rather than
in proprietors' income). Although life
insurance carriers and private noninsured pension funds are not counted
as persons, the property income they
earn on behalf of beneficiaries is imputed to persons.
Personal interest income cannot be
estimated reliably on the basis of information either about persons' interest receipts or about the portions of
interest payments by business and
other sectors that go to persons. It,
too, is estimated as part of the overall
accounting for interest flows. The formula used for annual estimates of
personal interest income is shown in
table 10: net interest (the component
of charges against GNP) plus interest
paid by government to persons and
business less interest received by government plus interest paid by consumers to business. (For an algebraic

derivation, see the "Special Note.—
Personal Interest Income" in the September 1981 SURVEY.
For current quarters, this formula
cannot be implemented because there
are no data with which to estimate
the portion of net interest that consists of the net monetary and imputed
interest paid by business. The procedure that is used is, in effect, to apply
in reverse the formula for the annual
estimates: to estimate directly personal interest income, interest paid and
received by government, and interest
paid by consumers to business to
derive net interest. Personal interest
income is estimated in two parts:
Monetary interest is extrapolated
using flow-of-funds information on
assets held by persons and appropriate interest rates; imputed interest received is extrapolated by past trends.
Federal Government interest is estimated largely on the basis of Treasury Department reports; State and
local government is estimated by extrapolation of past trends. Interest
paid by consumers to business is extrapolated on the basis of Federal Reserve Board information on consumer
debt outstanding and appropriate interest rates.
Most of the revisions in personal interest income in 1980 and 1981—up
$2.5 billion and $12.3 billion—reflect
those in net interest. The revision in
personal interest income in 1982—
down $5.0 billion—cannot be attributed to the revision in net interest. The
revision in that year reflects the replacement of the direct estimate by
an estimate prepared by applying the
formula for annual estimates. In addition, there were revisions in government interest, largely in interest paid
and received by State and local governments. These revisions largely reflect the incorporation, for 1980 and
1981, of data from the Census Bureau's Governmental Finances.
Table 10 shows, under imputed interest paid by business, the portions
that are paid to government and to
persons. The part paid to government
is paid by banks and depository institutions. That part and the part paid
by banks and depository institutions
to persons are the counterparts of the
services furnished without payment
by financial intermediaries except life
insurance carriers in PCE and gov-




July 1983

ernment purchases. The services are
viewed as checking, bookkeeping, and
investment services in connection
with the handling of deposits. These
components are estimated separately
for current quarters because they are
needed to complete the GNP estimates. Accordingly, the revisions in
them can be shown through 1982. For
the PCE services part, the revisions in
1982 were large—$4.7 billion revision
in level and $6.2 billion in change.
They reflected the introduction of information on income and expenses of
banks and other financial corporations. The portion of imputed interest
paid to persons by life insurance carriers and private noninsured pension
funds does not have a product counterpart. It is the property income
earned on behalf of beneficiaries
noted earlier.
In the last several revisions of the
NIPA's, revisions of interest estimates
generally have been uncomfortably
large. The procedures used before
source data are complete are unreliable because of rapid changes in the
structure of interest rates and debt
and in the extent of overseas activities of U.S. banks, and because of
mergers and acquisitions involving financial institutions. Some progress
has been made in improving these
preliminary procedures, mainly by
the development of extrapolators for
component detail. This work is continuing.

Proprietors9 income

Proprietors' income is the income,
including income in kind, of proprietorships and partnerships and of taxexempt cooperatives. Dividends and
monetary interest received by proprietors of nonfinancial businesses and
rental income received by persons not
primarily engaged in the real estate
business are excluded; these incomes
are included in dividends, net interest, and rental income of persons, respectively. As a component of NIPA
aggregates, proprietors' income is
shown with the inventory valuation
and capital consumption adjustments.
At $109.0 billion in 1982 on a revised
basis, it is about 4 percent of charges
against GNP and personal income.

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

15

Proprietors' income is estimated in schedules. An inventory valuation adtwo parts—farm and nonfarm. Farm justment is not necessary because the
proprietors' income is based on net inventory change mentioned above is
farm income prepared by the U.S. De- prepared on the needed replacement
partment of Agriculture. Basically, cost basis.
the Department of Agriculture's proNonfarm proprietors' income is
cedure is to estimate gross earnings
based
largely on tabulations of tax re(cash receipts from marketings, inventory change, government payments, turns for sole proprietors and partnerother cash income, and nonmoney ships from the Internal Revenue Servincome) and subtract production ex- ice for years for which they are availpenses (including capital consumption able. These data are adjusted to corallowances). Most of the elements for rect for coverage deficiencies and to
the calculation are obtained from an conform to NIPA concepts (see NIPA
extensive reporting system, although table 8.10). The largest adjustment,
adequate information on inventories prepared on the basis of audit studies,
and production expenses is not availa- is for understatement of income on
ble quarterly. BEA adjusts this meas- tax returns. The tax return tabulaure by subtracting its estimates of tions are available with a 2-year lag.
corporate farm profits and salaries When they are not available, monthly
paid to corporate officers and by sub- estimates are prepared as the sum of
stituting a NIPA capital consumption separate industry estimates, which
allowance with capital consumption are interpolations and extrapolations
adjustment to obtain farm propri- of annual estimates. For some indusetors' income (see NIPA table 8.11). tries, indicators of economic activity
Net farm income is prepared by the are used: for construction, housing
Department of Agriculture and is ad- put in place; for retail trade, retail
justed by BEA in the same way for sales of firms operating less than 11
years and for quarters. Monthly esti- establishments; for wholesale trade,
mates of farm proprietors' income are wholesale sales; and for most services,
prepared by interpolating between corresponding components of PCE.
the adjusted measures and by ex- For most of the remaining nonfarm
trapolating past trends modified for industries, past trends are used. Estimates for quarters are the sum of
unusual changes in prices, subsidy months.
payments, or crop yields and for natural disasters. The capital consumption
The capital consumption adjustadjustment for farm proprietors' ment is defined as the tax-return
income consists only of the calcula- based capital consumption allowtion needed to put capital consump- ance—that is, depreciation charges
tion allowances on a replacement cost and accidental damage to fixed busibasis; the second part of the adjust- ness capital—less capital consumption
ment is not necessary because the allowances based on economic service
capital consumption allowances on lives, straight-line depreciation, and
farm capital are prepared using con- replacement cost. For nonfarm proprisistent service lives and depreciation etorships and partnerships, depreci-

ation charges are as reported on tax
returns, with adjustments, when
these data are available; accidental
damage is added by BEA (see NIPA
table 8.9). When the tax return tabulations are not available, estimates of
tax-return based capital consumption
allowances are prepared by extrapolating past trends. Estimates of the
replacement cost measure on a consistent basis are calculated by BEA
from capital stock estimates prepared
using
the
perpetual-inventory
method.
As shown in table 11, farm proprietors' income was revised up $2.4 billion in 1980, $6.5 billion in 1981, and
$2.5 billion in 1982. These revisions
reflected the incorporation of revised
estimates from the U.S. Department
of Agriculture, primarily of inventories and production expenses. Nonfarm proprietor's income was revised
down $1.2 billion in 1980. This revision was more than accounted for by
a revision in the capital consumption
adjustment; the BEA estimate of capital consumption allowances based on
replacement cost and consistent accounting was revised as part of the revision of the capital stock estimates.
In 1981, there was a downward revision in level of $11.0 billion, mainly
attributable to the introduction of tax
return tabulations for 1981, and a revision in change from the preceding
year of $9.8 billion. In 1982, when the
level was revised down $13.8 billion,
the revision in change was $2.8 billion. Most of it was in the capital consumption adjustment, which was revised for all years to reflect an updated allocation of fixed investment to
noncorporate business.

Table 11.—Proprietors' Income
[Billions of dollars]

Revised
Proprietors' income
Farm
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment
Nonfarm
Proprietors' income
Construction
Other commodity producing
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Services
Other
Inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment




1982

1981

1980
1979

Revision in
level

Revision in
change

Revised

Revision in
level

Revision in
change

Revised

Revision
in level

Revision
in change

-11.3

-6.8

132.1

117 4

12

1.2

1202

4.5

5.7

109.0

31 9
37.8
59

21 8
28.9
71

24
2.5
1

24
2.5
1

30 5
38.4
80

65
6.6
1

41
4.1

215
29.9
84

25
2.8
3

1002
103 2
149
71
66
147
40 4
13 1
29
-^

956
100 3
142
65
80
144
478
95
31
15

12
4
2
5
6

12
4
2
5
6

897
90 1
127
22
60
140
493
60
15
11

110
102
7
46
15
-6
5
20

98
105
5
41
21
-6
6
24

874
842

-13.8
103

-2.8
— 2

9

7

6
39

1
-34

1
-25

o

o

1
4

16

o

o

1
4

16

o

o

o

-4.0
-3.8

1

16

Some
Economic
Implications
This section briefly discusses the
impact of the revisions on trends and
cyclical fluctuations; on productivity;
on inflation; on personal income, outlays, and saving; and on the fiscal position of government.
Trends and cyclical fluctuations
The 1980-82 period has been characterized as one of poor growth performance. This characterization continues to hold in the revised estimates. The previously published estimates showed that real GNP was 0.8
percent lower in the fourth quarter of
1982 than in the fourth quarter of
1979, the last unrevised quarter. The
revised estimates put the shortfall at
0.6 percent. Although there was not
much difference in the performance
of GNP over the period, PCE—all in
services—is stronger in the revised estimates; the offsets are in residential
investment, change in business inventories, and net exports.
The cyclical fluctuations in real
GNP shown in the revised estimates
are, in general, similar to those in the
previously published estimates (chart
2). The one-quarter recession in 1980
is of about the same magnitude and
composition in the two sets of estimates. The subsequent recovery and
expansion in 1980-81 is stronger in
the revised estimates and clearly extends to the third quarter of 1981. In
particular, PCE (the services component) and nonresidential fixed investment were stronger. The difference in
the strengths of the expansions is
traceable to the second and third
quarters of 1981. In the previously
published estimates, there was a decline in the second quarter and an increase in the third that put the third
quarter barely above the first. In the
revised estimates, there are increases
in both the second and third quarters.
The 1981-82 recession—that is, the
drop from the third quarter of 1981 to
the fourth of 1982—is sharper in the




SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

revised estimates. The sharper drop is
traceable to all types of investment
and to net exports. In the previously
published estimates, the low was in
the first quarter of 1982; it was followed by increases in the second and
third quarters and then a final quarter of decline. In the revised estimates, the fourth quarter is the low,
and the recession is interrupted by an
increase only in the second quarter of
1982.

CHART 2

Real Gross National Product
Billion 1972$
1550

'LEVELS

Revised

1525

1500

1475

Productivity
Table 12 shows estimates of the
changes in real product, hours, and
compensation for the nonfarm business economy other than housing. For
real gross product per hour, a measure of productivity, revised annual
rates of change for 1980-82 differ by
only 0.1 or 0.2 percentage points.
Thus, the picture of decline in 1980,
increase in 1981, and little change in
1982 holds in both sets of estimates.
On a quarterly basis, the differences
tend to be larger. The largest difference is in the third quarter of 1981,
when, mainly due to the upward revision in real product in that quarter,
the revised estimate of productivity
change is 3.9 percentage points
higher. Setting aside this difference,
the quarterly pattern, which largely
mirrors the cyclical fluctuations, is
quite similar.

145QI i
Percent

.

i

I

-5 -

-10

1980

1981

1982

1983

Seasonally Adjusted at Annual Rates
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis

33-7-2

Table 12.—Real Gross Product, Hours, and Compensation in the Business Economy Other Than
Farm and Housing: Change From Preceding Period
[Percent change; quarters are percent change at annual rates, based on seasonally adjusted estimates]
1980

Previously
published
Real gross product
Hours
Compensation

Revised

-1.6
-.8
9.4

Real gross product per
hour
Compensation per
hour
Unit labor cost

1981

Revision

Previously
published

1982

Revised

Revision

Previously
published

0.3
.2
.1

-2.6
-2.6
4.5

-2.9
-2.8
4.9

0

-.2

2

7.9
8.1

.6
.8

-1.5
-.5
9.6

0.1
.3
.2

8

9

-.1

1.6

1.8

.2

10.2
11.2

10.1
11.2

-.1
0

9.8
8.1

9.7
7.7

-.1
_4

2.6
.8
10.6

2.3
.6
10.5

1980
I

II

Revised

7.3
7.3

1981
III

IV

I

II

Revision
-0.3
-.2
.4

1982
III

IV

I

II

III

IV

Real gross product
Hours
Compensation

.8
1.5
11.9

-11.3
-7.8
3.0

1.5
-1.4
8.6

6.4
5.0
15.5

7.9
2.3
14.2

.7
1.0
7.8

4.3
.5
10.2

-8.6
-4.5
3.3

-6.4
-5.9
3.1

.8
.7
7.1

-.7
-3.0
4.1

-4.3
50
.1

Real gross product per
hour
Compensation per hour..
Unit labor cost

6
10.3
11.0

38
11.7
16.1

2.9
10.1
7.0

1.3
9.9
8.5

5.5
11.7
5.8

-.3
6.7
7.0

3.8
9.6
5.7

-4.3
8.1
13.0

-.5
9.5
10.1

0
6.3
6.3

2.3
7.2
4.8

.8
5.4
4.6

NOTE.—Quarterly estimates are the revised estimates.

July 1983

•••••••••••••

Inflation
Over the period from the fourth
quarter of 1979 to the fourth quarter
of 1982, inflation as measured by the
GNP fixed-weighted price index is virtually the same in the revised estimates as in the previously published
ones. With the index (1972=100) for
the fourth quarter of 1982 only 0.1
point higher in the revised estimates,
prices increased at an average annual
rate of 8.0 percent in both estimates.
For major GNP components, the only
revised indexes that deviated as much
as 1 percent from the previously published levels were nonresidential
structures, down 1.3 percent, residential investment, up 1.0 percent, and
imports, down 2.6 percent.
On a quarterly basis, the GNP
fixed-weighted price index is lower in
the revised estimates from the first
quarter of 1980 to the first quarter of
1982—although never by more than
0.4 index points—and thereafter it is
higher—although never by more than
0.2 points. Accordingly, the annual
rates of increase differ little: rates in
the range of 9x/2 to 11 percent in 1980
and the first quarter of 1981; deceleration to rates of 8 to 9 percent in
the rest of 1981; and further deceleration in 1982 to rates of 4Vk to 6 percent (chart 3).

CHART 3

GNP Fixed-Weighted Price Index
Index, 1972=100

250

LEVELS

225

Previous

200
Revised

175

150 I .

, i

I , i

. I . . .




substantially higher outlays each
quarter and disposable personal
income that is either higher, but not
as much higher as outlays or, as in
the third quarter, lower. (The higher
outlays are traceable to higher PCE,
which accounts for the preponderant
part of outlays.) Disposable personal
income, in turn, reflects higher personal taxes each quarter in combination with higher personal income,
except in the third quarter.

I . . i

Percent
15 PERCENT CHANGES
| Previous

10

D Revised

1980

1981

1982

1983

Seasonally Adjusted at Annual Rates
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis

33-7-3

CHART 4

Personal Saving Rate
Percent
Revised

Personal income, outlays, and saving
As shown in chart 4, through the
fourth quarter of 1981, the personal
saving rate in the revised estimates
does not show a significantly different
pattern from that in the previously
published estimates. It is higher or
unchanged in seven out of the eight
quarters, and it averages 6.3 percent
compared with 6.1 percent in the previously published estimates. In 1982,
the saving rate in the revised esti1
mates does show a different pattern.
It is lower each quarter, and averages
5.7 percent compared with 6.5 percent.

17

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

1980

1981

1982

1983

Note _personai saving as a percentage of disposable personal income:
based on seasonally adjusted annual rates.
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis

83-7-4

The lower saving rate in 1982 in
the revised estimates reflects the combination of lower saving each quarter,
particularly in the third, and higher
disposable personal income, except in
the third. The lower saving reflects

Government fiscal positions
The fiscal position of the Federal
Government on a NIPA basis in the
revised estimates differs little from
that shown in the previously published estimates. The deficit is smaller in 5 of the 12 quarters of 1980-82,
by an average of about $5 billion; it is
larger in the other quarters, by an
average of about $4 billion. The pattern of changes in the deficit is not
significantly different: the deficit increases substantially in the second
quarter of 1980, when there is a decline in corporate profits tax accruals,
reflecting a substantial decline in
profits before tax; declines sharply in
the first quarter of 1981 due to a
social security tax rate and base increase; increases in the third quarter
of 1981 due to the social security
benefit increase; increases in the
fourth quarter of 1981 in part due to
the tax cut under the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 (ERTA); increases in the third quarter of 1982
due to the second installment of the
tax cut under ERTA and a social security benefit increase; and increases
further in the fourth quarter.
The fiscal position of State and
local governments on a NIPA basis
for all other funds—that is, for the
total less social insurance funds—is
improved in the revised estimates.
The surpluses are higher or deficits
are lower in all quarters. However,
the quarterly changes are similar.

18

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

TABLE A.—SUMMARY NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT ACCOUNTS, 1982
Account 1.—National Income and Product Account
[Billions of dollars]
Line

Line

1 Compensation of employees
2
Wages and salaries
3
Disbursements (2-7)
4
Wage accruals less disbursements (3—12) and (5 4)
5
Supplements to wages and salaries
6
Employer contributions for social insurance (3 20)
7
Other labor income (2-8)

1,865 7
1 5681
1 568 1

o

297.6
1409
1566

g Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments (2-9).
9 Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment (2-10)
10 Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments....
11
Profits before tax
12
Profits tax liability (3-17)
...
13
Profits after tax
14
Dividends (2-12)
15
Undistributed profits (5-6)
16
Inventory valuation adjustment (5-7)
17
Capital consumption adjustment (5-8)
18 Net interest (2-15)

...

19 National income

.

261 1

23 Charges against net national product

GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT

31 Gross private domestic investment (5—1)
Fixed investment
32
33
Nonresidentia^
34
Structures
35
Producers' durable equipment
36
Residential
37
Change in business inventories

4145
439.1
3483
141.9
206.4
908
-24.5

38 Net exports of goods and services
Exports (4-1)
39
40
Imports (4-3)

174
347.6
3302

41 Government purchases of goods and services (3—1)
42
Federal
43
National defense
44
Nondefense
45
State and local ....

6492
2587
1794
79.3
3905

14 1
258.3
95

2,713 3

?A Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment (5-9)

26 Statistical discrepancy (5-12)

49.9
164.8
174.2
59.2
1151
68.7
464
84
-1.1

1,991.9
244.5
... . 7610
986.4

2,450.4

20 Business transfer payments (2-20) .
21 Indirect business tax and nontax liability (3-18)
22 Less: Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises (3-11)

25 Charges against gross national product

1090

27 Personal consumption expenditure (2-3)
28
Durable goods
29
Nondurable goods
Services
30

359.2
3,072.5

5
3 073 0

GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT

3,073.0

Account 2.—Personal Income and Outlay Account

Personal tax and nontax payments (3-16)
Personal outlays
Personal consumption expenditures (1-27)
Interest paid by consumers to business (2-18)
Personal transfer payments to foreigners (net) (4-5)..
Personal saving (5-3)

402.1
2,051.1
1,991.9
58.1
1.1
125.4

Wage and salary disbursements (1-3)

156.6

Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments(l-8)

109.0

Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment (1-9)

49.9

Personal dividend income
Dividends (1-14)
Less: Dividends received by government (3-10)..

66.4
68.7
2.3

Personal interest income
Net interest (1-18)
Interest paid by government to persons and business (3-7)
Less: Interest received by government (3-9)
Interest paid by consumers to business (2-4)

366.2
261.1
119.4
72.5
58.1

Transfer payments to persons
From business (1-20)
From government (3-3)

374.5
14.1
360.4

Less: Personal contributions for social insurance (3-21)
PERSONAL TAXES, OUTLAYS, AND SAVING




2,578.6

1,568.1

Other labor income (1-7)

PERSONAL INCOME

112.0
2,578.6

19

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

TABLE A.—SUMMARY NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT ACCOUNTS, 1982—Continued
Account 3.—Government Receipts and Expenditures Account
[Billions of dollars]
Line

Line

402.1

1 Purchases of goods and services (1-41)

6492

16 Personal tax and nontax payments (2 1)

2 Transfer payments
3
To persons (2-21)
4
To foreigners (net) (4-6)

3667
3604
63

17 Corporate profits tax liability (1-12)
18 Indirect business tax and nontax liability (1—21)

258.3

5 Net interest paid
6
Interest paid
7
To persons and business (2-16)
8
To foreigners (4-7)
9
Less: Interest received by government (2-17)

652
1376
1194
182
72.5

19 Contributions for social insurance
20
Employer (16)
21
Personal (2-22)

253.0
140.9
112.0

GOVERNMENT RECEIPTS

972.5

..

..

. . .

10 Less: Dividends received by government (2-13)

2.3

11 Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises (1-22)

9.5

59.2

0

1?, Less: Wage accruals less disbursements (1-4)
13 Surplus or deficit ( ) national income and product accounts (5 10)
14
Federal
15
State and local
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES AND SURPLUS

.

1158
147 1
313
972 5

Account 4.—Foreign Transactions Account

Exports of goods and services (1-39)
Capital grants received by the United States (net) (5-11)

347.6
0

330.2

Imports of foods and services (1-40)

7.5
1.1
6.3

Transfer payments to foreigners (net)..
From persons (net) (2-5)
From government (net) (3-4)
Interest paid by government to foreigners (3-8)..

RECEIPTS FROM FOREIGNERS

347.6

18.2

Net foreign investment (5-2)

-8.3

PAYMENTS TO FOREIGNERS

347.6

Account 5.—Gross Saving and Investment Account

1

Gross private domestic investment (1-31)

2 Net foreign investment (4-8) . . .

414 5
83

3 Personal saving (2—6)
4 Wage accurals less disbursements (1—4)

125.4
.

5 Undistributed corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption
adjustments.
g
7
Inventory valuation adjustment (1 16)
8
Capital consumption adjustment (1—17)
9 Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment (1—24)
10 Government surplus or deficit (-), national income and product accounts (3-13)
11 Capital grants received by the United States (net) (4-2)
12 Statistical discrepancy (1-26)
GROSS INVESTMENT

4062

GROSS SAVING AND STATISTICAL DISCREPANCY

0

37.0
46.4
-8.4
-1.1
359.2
-115.8

0
.5
406.2

Note.—Numbers in parentheses indicate accounts and items of counterentry in the accounts. For example, the counterentry for wage and salary disbursements, (2-7), is in account 2, line 7.




National Income and Product Accounts Tables
Estimates from 1980 through the second quarter of 1983 are shown in
the tables that follow. Estimates for 1977-79 appear in the July 1982
SURVEY and estimates for 1929-76 appear in The National Income and
Product Accounts of the United States, 1929-76: Statistical Tables. (See
also errata in the SURVEY issues of July 1982 (pages 130-133) and August
1. National Product and Income
1.1
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
1.6
1.7
1.8
1.9

1.10
1.11
1.12
1.13

1.14
1.15
1.16
1.17
1.18
1.19
1.20
1.21

Gross National Product: QA
Gross National Product in Constant Dollars: QA
Gross National Product by Major Type of Product: QA
Gross National Product by Major Type of Product in
Constant Dollars: QA.
Gross National Product By Sector: QA
Gross National Product by Sector in Consant Dollars:
QA.
Relation of Gross National Product, Net National Product, National Income, and Personal Income: QA.
Relation of Gross National Product, Net National Product, and National Income in Constant Dollars: QA.
Net National Product and National Income by Sector:
A.
Net National Product and National Income by Sector in
Constant Dollars: A.
National Income by Type of Income: QA
National Income by Sector, Legal Form of Organization,
and Type of Income: A.
Gross Domestic Product of Corporate Business in Current Dollars and Gross Domestic Product of Nonfinancial Corporate Business in Current and Constant
Dollars: QA.
Auto Output: QA
Auto Output in Constant Dollars: QA
Truck Output: QA
Truck Output in Constant Dollars: QA
Farm Output, Gross Product, and Income: A
Farm Output, Gross Product, and Income in Constant
Dollars: A.
Housing Output, Gross Product, and Income: A
Housing Output, Gross Product, and Income in Constant Dollars: A.

1982 (page 9) and on page 3 in this issue.)
The tables contain only quarterly estimates, unless indicated as follows: A
Only annual estimates.
MA Monthly and annual estimates.
QA Quarterly and annual estimates.

Page
22
23
23
24

3.9
3.10
3.11
3.12

24
25

3.13
3.14

25

3.15
3.16

26
27
27
27
29
30

3.17
3.18B
3.19
3.20

31
31
32
32
32
32

4.1
4.2

33
33

4.4

2.3
2.4
2.5
2.6
2.7
2.8
2.9

Personal Income and Its Disposition: QA
Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of
Product: QA.
Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of
Product in Constant Dollars: QA.
Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Expenditure: A.
Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product
in Constant Dollars: A.
Personal Income by Type of Income: MA
Personal Income and Its Disposition: MA
Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of
Product: MA.
Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of
Product in Constant Dollars: MA.

4.3

4.5

34
35
36

39
40
41
42

3. Government Receipts and Expenditures
3.1
3.2
3.3

Government Receipts and Expenditures: A
Federal Government Receipts and Expenditures: QA
State and Local Government Receipts and Expenditures: QA.
3.4
Personal Tax and Nontax Receipts: A
3.5
Indirect Business Tax and Nontax Accruals: A
3.6
Contributions for Social Insurance: A
3.7B
Government Purchases of Goods and Services by Type:
QA.
3.8B
Government Purchases of Goods and Services by Type
in Constant Dollars: QA.



5.1
5.2

5.3

5.4
5.5
5.6
5.7

43
43
45
46
46
46
47

50
51
51
52
54
56
57
57

Foreign Transactions in the NIPA's: QA
Exports and Imports of Goods and Services in Constant
Dollars: QA.
Merchandise Exports and Imports by Type of Product
and by End-Use Category: QA.
Merchandise Exports and Imports by Type of Product
and by End-Use Category in Constant Dollars: QA.
Relation of Foreign Transactions in the NIPA's to the
Corresponding Items in the Balance of Payments
Accounts: A.

58
58
59
60
61

5. Saving and Investment

36
38

Page
48
49
50
50

4. Foreign Transactions

2. Personal Income and Outlays
2.1
2.2

National Defense Purchases: *
National Defense Purchases in Constant Dollars:J
Government Transfer Payments to Persons: A
Subsidies Less Current Surplus of Government Enterprises: A.
Social Insurance Funds Receipts and Expenditures: A
State and Local Government Social Insurance Funds
Receipts and Expenditures: QA.
Government Expenditures by Function: A
Federal Government Expenditures by Type and Function: A.
State and Local Government Expenditures by Type and
Function: A.
Relation of Federal Government Receipts and Expenditures in the NIPA's to the Unified Budget, Fiscal
Years: QA, Quarterly Totals Not Seasonally Adjusted.
Relation of State and Local Government Receipts and
Expenditures in the NIPA's to Bureau of Census
Governmental Finances Data, Fiscal Years: A.
Relation of Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) Expenditures in the NIPA's to CCC Outlays in the
Unified Budget: A.

5.8
5.9

5.10
5.11

Gross Saving and Investment: QA
Gross Private Domestic Investment, Capital Consumption Allowances With Capital Consumption Adjustment, and Net Private Domestic Investment by Major
Type of Investment: A.
Gross Private Domestic Investment, Capital Consumption Allowances With Capital Consumption Adjustment, and Net Private Domestic Investment by Major
Type of Investment in Constant Dollars: A.
Purchases of Structures by Type: A
Purchases of Structures by Type in Constant Dollars: A...
Private Purchases of Producers' Durable Equipment by
Type: A.
Private Purchases of Producers' Durable Equipment by
Type in Constant Dollars: A.
Change in Business Inventories by Industry: QA
Change in Business Inventories by Industry in Constant
Dollars: QA.
Inventories and Final Sales of Business: Seasonally
Adjusted Quarterly Totals.
Inventories and Final Sales of Business in Constant
Dollars: Seasonally Adjusted Quarterly Totals.

62
63

63

64
64
65
65
65
66
67
67

6. Product, Income, and Employment by Industry
48
6.1

Gross National Product by Industry: A

68

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

6.2

6.3B
6.4

6.5B
6.6B
6.7B
6.8B
6.9B
6.10B
6. 1 IB
6.12
6.13
6.14
6.15
6.16B
6.17B
6.18B
6.19B
6.20B
6.21B
6.22B
6.23B
6.24B
6.25B
6.26B

Page
68
Gross National Product by Industry in Constant Dollars: A.
69
National Income Without Capital Consumption Adjustment by Industry: A.
National Income Without Capital Consumption Adjust70
ment by Industry: QA.
Compensation of Employees by Industry: A ........................ 71
Wages and Salaries by Industry: A ....................................... 71
Full-Time and Part-Time Employees by Industry: A ......... 72
Full-Time Equivalent Employees by Industry: A ............... 72
Wages and Salaries per Full-Time Equivalent Employee
73
by Industry: A.
Self-Employed Persons by Industry: A .................................. 73
Persons Engaged in Production by Industry: A .................. 74
Hours Worked by Full-Time and Part-Time Employees
by Industry: 2.
Hours Worked by Persons Engaged in Production by
Industry: 2.
74
Employer Contributions for Social Insurance by Industry: A.
Other Labor Income by Industry and by Type: A ............... 74
Nonfarm Proprietors' Income by Industry: A ..................... 75
75
Noncorporate Capital Consumption Allowances by Industry: A.
75
Inventory Valuation Adjustment to Nonfarm Incomes
by Legal Form of Organization and Industry: A.
Net Interest by Industry: A .................................................... 75
Corporate Profits by Industry: QA ......................................... 76
Corporate Profits Before Tax by Industry: A ...................... 77
77
Federal, State, and Local Corporate Profits Tax Liability by Industry: A.
Corporate Profits After Tax by Indusry: A .......................... 78
Net Corporate Dividend Payments by Industry: A ............ 78
Undistributed Corporate Profits by Industry: A ................. 79
79
Corporate Capital Consumption Allowances by Industry: A.

7.16
7.17
7.18

7.19
7.20
7.21
7.22

8.1
8.2

8.3

8.4
8.5
8.6
8.7
8.8
8.9

8.10

7.3
7.4
7.5

7.6
7.7
7.8
7.9
7.10

7.11
7.12
7.13
7.14B
7.15

Implicit Price Deflators for Gross National Product: QA .
Fixed-Weighted Price Indexes for Gross National Product, 1972 Weights: QA.
Implicit Price Deflators for Gross National Product by
Major Type of Product: QA.
Implicit Price Deflators for Gross National Product by
Sector: QA.
Implicit Price Deflators for the Relation of Gross National Product, Net National Product, and National
Income: QA.
Implicit Price Deflators for Net National Product and
National Income by Sector: A.
Current-Dollar Cost and Profit Per Unit of ConstantDollar Gross Domestic Product of Nonfinancial Corporate Business: QA.
Implicit Price Deflators for Auto Output: QA .....................
Implicit Price Deflators for Truck Output: QA ....................
Implicit Price Deflators for Total Farm Output, Gross
Product, and Income: A.
Implicit Price Deflators for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product: QA.
Implicit Price Deflators for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product: A.
Implicit Price Deflators for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product: MA.
Implicit Price Deflators for Government Purchases of
Goods and Services by Type: QA.
Implicit Price Deflators for National Defense Purchases: 1.




80
80
81
81

Implicit Price Deflators for Exports and Imports of
Goods and Services: QA.
Implicit Price Deflators for Merchandise Exports and
Imports by Type of Product and by End-Use Category:
QA.
Implicit Price Deflators for Gross Private Domestic
Investment, Capital Consumption Allowances With
Capital Consumption Adjustment, and Net Private
Domestic Investment by Major Type of Investment: A.
Implicit Price Deflators for Purchases of Structures by
Type: A.
Implicit Price Deflators for Private Purchases of Producers' Durable Equipment by Type: A.
Implicit Price Deflators for Inventories and Final Sales
of Business: Quarterly Seasonally Adjusted.
Implicit Price Deflators for Gross National Product by
Industry: A.

Page
87

89
89
90
90

8. Supplementary Tables

7. Implicit Price Deflators and Price Indexes
7.1
7.2

21

8.11
8.12
8.13

81

Percent Change From Preceding Period in Gross National Product in Current and Constant Dollars, Implicit Price Deflators, and Price Indexes: QA.
Selected Per Capita Income and Product Series in Current and Constant Dollars and Population of the
United States: A.
Capital Consumption Adjustment by Legal Form of
Organization and Type of Adjustment: A.
Supplements to Wages and Salaries by Type: A
Rental Income of Persons by Type: A
Dividends Paid and Received: A
Interest Paid and Received: A
Imputations in the National Income and Product Accounts: A.
Relation of Capital Consumption Allowances in the
NIPA's to Depreciation and Amortization as Published by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS): A.
Relation of Nonfarm Proprietors' Income in the NIPA's
to Corresponding Totals as Published by the IRS: A.
Relation of Net Farm Income in the NIPA's to Farm
Operators' Income as Published by the U.S. Department of Agriculture: A.
Relation of Corporate Profits, Taxes, and Dividends in
the NIPA's to Corresponding Totals as Published by
the IRS: A.
Comparison of Personal Income in the NIPA's With
Adjusted Gross Income as Published by the IRS: A.

91
93
94
94
94
94
95
95
96
96
96
97
97

9. Seasonally Unadjusted Estimates
82

9.1

82

9.2
9.3

83

83
84

9.4
9.5

84
85

86
87
87

9.6

Gross National Product: Quarterly Totals Not Seasonally Adjusted.
Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of
Product: Quarterly Totals Not Seasonally Adjusted.
Federal Government Receipts and Expenditures: Quarterly Totals Not Seasonally Adjusted.
State and Local Government Receipts and Expenditures: Quarterly Totals Not Seasonally Adjusted.
Foreign Transactions in the National Income and Product Accounts: Quarterly Totals Not Seasonally Adjusted.
Corporate Profits With Inventory Valuation Adjustment and Without Capital Consumption Adjustment:
Quarterly Totals Not Seasonally Adjusted.

98
98
99
99
100
100

NIPA's National Income and Product Accounts.
1. Tables 3.9, 3.10, and 7.15 now contain quarterly estimates. Quarterly
estimates back to 1977 appear in the November 1982 SURVEY.
2. These tables have been discontinued pending the availability of
recent data on hours of work by industry.

22

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

1. National Product and Income
Table 1.1.—Gross National Product
Millions of dollars

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

Line

1979

Gross national product .. .
Personal consumption expenditures
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Gross private domestic investment
Fixed investment
Non residential
Structures
Producers' durable equipment
Residential
...
Nonfarm structures
Farm structures
Producers' durable equipment
Change in business inventories
Nonfarm
Farm

»

Net exports of goods and services
Exports
Imports

'

Government purchases of goods and services
Federal
National defense
Nondefense
State and local

1979

1981

1980

1980

1982
IV

I

II

III

IV

1

2,417,759

2,631,688

2,954,069

3,072,989

2,502.9

2,572.9

2,578.8

2,639.1

2,736.0

2

1,507,165

1,668,059

1,857,180

1,991,861

1,578.0

1,620.5

1,626.4

1,683.4

1,741.9

3
4
5

213,441
600,028
693,696

214,731
668,814
784,514

236,142
733,903
887,135

244,459
761,014
986,388

216.6
635.5
725.9

220.7
651.4
748.3

200.8
658.2
767.5

213.8
671.9
797.6

223.6
693.7
824.6

6

423,030

401,873

474,916

414,514

416.8

422.0

394.3

379.5

411.7

7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17

408,769
290,200
98,291
191,909
118,569
113,993
1,707
2,869
14,261
8,592
5,669

411,662
308,794
110,940
197,854
102,868
98,075
1,762
3,031
9789
-4,466
5323

456,464
352,203
133,354
218,849
104,261
99,785
1,254
3,222
18,452
10,859
7,593

439,058
348,308
141,889
206,419
90,750
85,974
1,532
3,244
24544
-23,124
-1,420

419.4
301.6
107.1
194.5
117.8
112.3
2.5
3.0
-2.6
-7.8
5.1

423.6
311.1
110.5
200.6
112.5
106.4
3.1
3.0
-1.6
1.2
28

391.3
299.3
108.4
190.9
92.0
87.4
1.6
3.0
3.0
7.4
-4.4

404.9
307.5
110.3
197.2
97.5
93.5
.9
3.0
-25.4
160
-9.4

426.8
317.3
114.6
202.7
109.5
105.0
1.4
3.1
-15.1
104
-4.8

18

13,213

23,949

26,262

17,412

10.5

12.8

22.5

37.1

23.3

19
20

281,358
268,145

338,771
314,822

368,753
342,491

347,614
330,202

310.5
300.0

335.3
322.5

336.8
314.2

337.6
300.5

345.4
322.0

21

474,351

537,807

595,711

649,202

497.6

517.6

535.5

539.1

559.0

22
23
24
25

168,343
111,839
56,504
306,008

197,048
131,190
65,858
340,759

229,235
154,031
75,204
366,476

258,707
179,417
79,290
390,495

177.8
119.0
58.7
319.8

188.1
125.9
62.2
329.6

199.0
129.1
69.9
336.5

194.5
130.8
63.8
344.6

206.6
139.1
67.6
352.4

I

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1982

1981

Line
I

II

III

IV

I

1983

II

III

IV

II

Gross national product

1

2,866.6

2,912.5

3,004.9

3,032.2

3,021.4

3,070.2

3,090.7

3,109.6

3,171.5

3,273.7

Personal consumption expenditures

2

1,802.8

1,835.8

1,886.1

1,904.1

1,938.9

1,972.8

2,008.8

2,046.9

2,073.0

2,151.3

3
4
5

236.9
716.3
849.6

233.4
730.6
871.8

243.5
741.1
901.5

230.8
747.7
925.6

239.4
749.7
949.7

242.9
754.7
975.2

243.4
766.6
998.9

252.1
773.0
1,021.8

258.5
777.1
1,037.4

278.1
799.8
1,073.4

6

455.5

472.1

495.8

476.2

422.9

432.5

425.3

377.4

404.1

451.5

7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17

444.7
333.1
121.6
211.5
111.6
107.5
.9
3.2
10.9
8.1
2.8

457.1
347.6
129.4
218.3
109.5
105.2
1.1
3.2
15.0
5.0
10.1

462.2
360.6
137.0
223.6
101.7
97.0
1.5
3.2
33.6
24.1
9.5

461.8
367.6
145.5
222.1
94.3
89.5
1.6
3.3
14.3
6.2
8.1

448.6
361.3
144.7
216.5
87.3
83.2
.9
3.2
-25.7
-27.6
1.9

443.7
352.7
144.2
208.5
91.0
86.1
1.6
3.3
-11.2
-8.8
-2.4

430.2
342.3
140.0
202.2
87.9
83.4
1.3
3.3
-4.9
-2.3
-2.6

433.8
337.0
138.6
198.4
96.8
91.2
2.3
3.3
-56.4
-53.7
-2.7

443.5
332.1
132.9
199.3
111.3
106.7
1.3
3.4
-39.4
-39.0
-.4

462.1
335.3
127.7
207.6
126.8
121.8
1.5
3.5
-10.6
-8.6
-2.0

Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Gross private domestic investment
Fixed investment
Nonresidential
. .
Structures
Producers' durable equipment
Residential
Nonfarm structures
Farm structures
Producers' durable equipment
Change in business inventories
Nonfarm
Farm
Net exports of goods and services
Exports
Imports
Government purchases of goods and services
Federal
National defense
Nondefense
State and local

.

18

31.9

21.1

22.8

29.2

29.9

33.3

.9

5.6

17.0

12.5

19
20

367.3
335.4

369.2
348.1

367.5
344.7

371.0
341.7

358.4
328.5

364.5
331.2

346.0
345.0

321.6
316.1

326.9
309.9

321.7
334.3

21

576.3

583.5

600.3

622.8

629.8

631.6

655.7

679.7

677.4

683.3

22
23
24
25

215.7
143.3
72.4
360.5

220.4
151.2
69.2
363.2

232.4
154.9
77.5
367.9

248.5
166.7
81.8
374.3

249.7
168.1
81.7
380.0

244.1
175.2
68.9
387.5

261.7
183.6
78.1
394.0

279.2
190.8
88.5
400.5

273.5
194.4
79.1
404.0

274.8
201.9
72.8
408.6

NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1.




SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

23

Table 1.2.—Gross National Product in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

1980
I

II

IV

I

II

1983

1982

1981
III

III

IV

I

II

III

IV

I

II

Gross national product

1

Personal consumption expenditures

2

927.6

931.8

956.8

970.2

938.6

938.3

919.6

929.4

940.0

953.6

954.7

962.9

955.7

961.4

968.8

971.0

979.6

986.7 1,010.5

3
4
5

147.2
353.1
427.3

137.5
355.6
438.8

141.2
362.5
453.1

139.8
364.2
466.2

146.3
359.8
432.6

145.2
358.5
434.5

130.0
354.2
435.4

135.6
353.5
440.3

139.0
356.2
444.7

145.4
359.8
448.3

140.5
362.7
451.5

143.9
363.6
455.5

134.8
363.8
457.1

138.5
362.6
460.4

139.5
363.5
465.7

138.2
364.7
468.2

143.2
366.0
470.4

145.8
368.9
472.0

156.4
374.3
479.8

Gross private domestic investment ..

6

236.3

208.5

227.6

194.5

225.3

224.3

202.4

197.4

210.0

222.7

229.5

236.3

221.7

199.7

201.4

198.4

178.4

190.0

208.5

Fixed investment
Nonresidential
Structures
Producers' durable equipment
Residential ..
Nonfarm structures
Farm structures
Producers' durable equipment
Change in business inventories
Nonfarm
Farm

7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17

229.1
169.9
49.1
120.8
59.1
56.3
.8
2.0
7.3
4.9
2.4

212.9
165.8
48.8
117.0
47.1
44.2
.8
2.0
-4.4
-2.0
-2.3

219.1
174.4
52.5
121.9
44.7
42.1
.5
2.0
8.5
5.1
3.4

203.9
166.1
53.4
112.7
37.8
35.2
.6
1.9
-9.4
--8.6
g

227.6
170.9
51.2
119.7
56.7
53.4
12
2.1
-2.3
-4.4
2.1

224.8
171.8
50.9
120.9
53.0
49.5
14
2.1
-.5
.6
1i

204.5 207.5
162.2 163.6
48.4
47.5
113.7 116.1
42.4
44.0
39.6
41.5
7
4
2.0
2.0
-2.1 -10.1
-.1 -5.9
2o
43

214.7
165.7
48.3
117.4
49.0
46.4
6
2.0
-4.7
-2.8
19

219.7
170.9
50.1
120.8
48.8
46.3
4
2.1
3.0
2.1
.9

220.7
173.4
51.6
121.7
47.3
44.8
5
2.0
8.9
4.5
4.4

220.2
177.0
53.5
123.5
43.1
40.5
6
2.0
16.1
11.8
4.3

215.7 209.9
176.3 173.6
54.3
54.6
121.8 119.3
39.4
36.3
36.8
33.9
7
4
2.0
1.9
6.0 -10.2
2.1 -11.1
3.8
.9

204.9
167.1
54.0
113.1
37.8
35.2
7
1.9
-3.4
-2.2
-1.2

199.8 201.1 205.4
163.3 160.5 159.9
50.3
53.0
52.2
110.3 108.3 109.6
45.5
36.5
40.6
34.1
37.8
43.0
.5
.5
.9
2.0
1.9
1.9
-1.3 -22.7 -15.4
.1 -21.1 -15.1
-.3
1 4 -1.6

213.0
161.8
48.5
113.3
51.2
48.6
.6
2.0
-4.5
34
-1.0

Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services

Net exports of goods and services
Exports
Imports
Government purchases of goods and
services.
Federal
National defense.
Nondefense
State and local

1,479.4 1,475.0 1,513.8 1,485.4 1,489.3 1,496.4 1,461.4 1,464.2 1,477.9 1,510.1 1,512.5 1,525.8 1,506.9 1,485.8 1,489.3 1,485.7 1,480.7 1,490.1 1,521.4

18

37.2

50.3

43.0

28.9

44.2

49.8

52.6

53.4

45.4

48.3

44.1

39.8

39.9

35.2

33.4

24.0

23.0

20.5

10.2

19
20

146.2
109.0

159.1
108.8

159.7
116.7

147.3
118.4

156.4
112.2

164.4
114.5

161.0
108.4

156.4
102.9

154.7
109.3

160.6
112.4

160.7
116.6

159.0
119.1

158.7
118.8

151.8
116.6

154.5
121.1

146.4
122.4

136.5
113.5

137.3
116.8

134.2
124.0

21

278.3

284.3

286.5

291.8

281.2

284.0

286.8

284.0

282.5

285.6

284.1

286.8

289.6

289.4

285.8

292.2

299.7

292.9

292.2

22
23
24
25

102.1
67.4
34.8
176.2

106.4
70.0
36.4
177.9

110.4
73.6
36.8
176.1

116.6
78.8
37.8
175.2

103.4
68.2
35.2
177.8

105.8
69.9
35.9
178.1

109.3
70.1
39.3
177.5

106.2
70.0
36.1
177.8

104.2
69.9
34.3
178.3

107.3
71.0
36.3
178.3

107.9
73.3
34.6
176.2

111.8
74.4
37.4
175.0

114.5
75.7
38.7
175.1

114.5
75.5
39.1
174.9

110.3
77.8
32.5
175.4

116.9
80.4
36.5
175.3

124.4
81.4
43.0
175.2

118.4
82.7
35.7
174.5

118.2
85.5
32.7
174.0

III

IV

NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1.

Table 1.3.—Gross National Product by Major Type of Product
[Billions of dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

1980
I

II

IV

I

II

1983

1982

1981
III

III

IV

I

II

I

II

Gross national product

1

2,417.8 2,631.7 2,954.1 3,073.0 2,502.9 2,572.9 2,578.8 2,639.1 2,736.0 2,866.6 2,912.5 3,004.9 3,032.2 3,021.4 3,070.2 3,090.7 3,109.6 3,171.5 3,273.7

Final sales
Change in business inventories

2
3

2,403.5 2,641.5 2,935.6 3,097.5 2,505.5 2,574.5 2,575.7 2,664.5 2,751.1 2,855.7 2,897.5 2,971.4 3,017.9 3,047.1 3,081.4 3,095.6 3,165.9 3,210.9 3,284.2
49
25 4
56 4 -39.4 -10.6
14.3 -25.7 -11.2
14.3 -9.8
33.6
18.5 -24.5
-2.6
10.9
15.0
16
3.0
15 1

4

1,065.6 1,140.6 1,291.8 1,280.9 1,089.8 1,124.5 1,121.7 1,134.9 1,181.2 1,260.8 1,273.9 1,325.2 1,307.5 1,281.1 1,290.8 1,286.6 1,264.8 1,292.2 1,347.7

5
6

1,051.3 1,150.4 1,273.4 1,305.4 1,092.4 1,126.1 1,118.7 1,160.4 1,196.3 1,249.9 1,258.8 1,291.6 1,293.2 1,306.8 1,302.0 1,291.5 1,321.2 1,331.6 1,358.3
112 -4.9 -56.4 -39.4 -10.6
98
14.3 -25.7
14.3
18.5 -24.5
33.6
-2.6
10.9
15.0
-1.6
3.0 -25.4 -15.1

Goods
Final sales
Change in business inventories
Durable goods
Final sales ..
Change in business inventories

l

Nondurable goods
Final sales
Change in business inventories 1

7
8
9

464.8
454.3
10.5

477.9
482.0
-4.1

528.0 500.8
524.3 516.3
3.6 -15.5

462.4
464.7
-2.3

481.0
487.8
-6.8

457.4 471.4
462.5 481.6
-5.0 -10.1

501.6
496.0
5.6

519.0
520.4
-1.4

533.8
525.6
8.1

549.7
535.7
14.0

509.4 496.4
515.6 517.2
-6.3 -20.8

10
11
12

600.8
597.0
3.8

662.7
668.4
--5.7

763.9
749.1
14.8

627.4
627.7
-.3

643.5
638.3
5.2

664.3 663.5 679.6
656.2 678.8 700.4
8.1 -15.3
-20.8

741.8
729.6
12.3

740.1
733.2
6.9

775.4
755.9
19.6

798.2
777.6
20.6

Services

13

Structures .

14

780.1
789.1
-9.1

784.7
789.6
-4.9

514.3
516.8
-2.5

518.4 474.0 482.7
512.0 519.0 520.9
6.4 -45.0 -38.2

535.1
545.0
-9.9

809.5
810.6
-1.2

812.6
813.3
-.7

776.5 768.3 790.8
785.2 779.5 802.2
-11.4
-8.7 -11.3

1,089.7 1,225.2 1,374.2 1,511.1 1,139.5 1,173.7 1,204.9 1,243.5 1,278.6 1,319.2 1,349.7 1,392.5 1,435.5 1,460.6 1,496.4 1,527.2 1,560.5 1,588.4 1,626.7
262.5

265.9

288.0

281.0

273.6

274.7

252.2

260.7

276.2

286.5

288.9

287.3

289.2

279.7

283.0

276.9

284.3

290.9

299.2

Addenda:
Gross domestic purchases 2
Final sales to domestic purchasers 2
1
2

15
16

2,404.5 2,607.7 2,927.8 3,055.6 2,492.3 2,560.1 2,556.2 2,602.0 2,712.6 2,834.6 2,891.4 2,982.2 3,003.0 2,991.5 3,037.0 3,089.8 3,104.0 3,154.6 3,286.2
2,390.3 2,617.5 2,909.4 3,080.1 2,495.0 2,561.7 2,553.2 2,627.4 2,727.8 2,823.8 2,876.4 2,948.6 2,988.7 3,017.2 3,048.2 3,094.7 3,160.4 3,193.9 3,296.8

Prior to 1959, inventories held by construction establishments are included in line 12.
Gross domestic purchases equals gross national product less exports plus imports; final sales to domestic purchasers equals final sales less exports plus imports.
NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1.




24

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 1.4.—Gross National Product by Major Type of Product in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

1980
I

II

IV

I

III

II

1983

1982

1981
III

IV

I

II

III

IV

I

II

Gross national product

1

1,479.4 1,475.0 1,513.8 1,485.4 1,489.3 1,496.4 1,461.4 1,464.2 1,477.9 1,510.1 1,512.5 1,525.8 1,506.9 1,485.8 1,489.3 1,485.7 1,480.7 1,490.1 1,521.4

Final sales
Change in business inventories

2
3

1,472.2 1,479.4 1,505.3 1,494.8 1,491.6 1,496.9 1,463.6 1,474.4 1,482.5 1,507.0 1,503.6 1,509.7 1,500.9 1,495.9 1,492.7 1,487.0 1,503.4 1,505.5 1,525.9
-4.5
-22.7 -15.4
6.0 -10.2
-3.4
-1.3
7.3 -4.4
-2.3
-.5 -2.1 -10.1
-4.7
3.0
16.1
8.5 -9.4
8.9

Goods

4

677.7

668.1

692.6

661.6

678.7

684.6

661.2

658.7

668.0

691.2

692.3

703.2

683.7

668.1

664.6

661.6

656.9

679.2

Final sales
Change in business inventories

5
6

670.4
7.3

672.5
-4.4

684.1
8.5

671.0
-9.4

681.0
-2.3

685.1
-.5

663.3
-2.1

668.9
-10.1

672.6
-4.7

688.2
3.0

683.4
8.9

687.1
16.1

677.7 678.3
6.0 -10.2

668.1
-3.4

663.0
-1.3

674.8 672.3
-22.7 -15.4

683.7
-4.5

Durable goods
Final sales
Change in business inventories 1

7
8
9

305.3
299.1
6.2

288.6
290.4
-1.9

294.0
292.5
1.6

269.6
276.1
-6.5

298.3
299.3
-1.0

302.2
303.8
-1.7

276.9
280.3
-3.5

282.4
287.3
-4.8

292.8
290.3
2.5

297.3
298.9
-1.5

299.2
294.8
4.4

300.9
295.1
5.8

278.8
281.2
-2.4

271.7
280.9
-9.1

275.4
276.5
-1.1

274.9 256.4 261.3
271.6 275.3 277.0
-15.7
3.2 -18.9

285.0
289.5
-4.5

Nondurable goods
Final sales
Change in business inventories l

10
11
12

372.4
371.3
1.1

379.6
382.1
-2.5

398.6
391.7
6.9

392.0
394.9
-2.9

380.4
381.7
-1.3

382.5 . 384.3
381.3 383.0
1.3
1.2

376.3
381.6
-5.3

375.1
382.3
-7.2

393.9
389.4
4.5

393.1
388.7
4.5

402.4
392.0
10.3

405.0
396.5
8.4

396.4
397.4
-1.0

389.3
391.6
-2.3

386.7
391.3
-4.6

395.6
399.4
-3.8

395.6
395.2
.3

394.2
394.1
0

Services

13

670.7

687.7

702.7

712.2

679.4

684.1

686.3

690.7

689.9

696.9

700.0

705.4

708.5

707.1

712.8

713.9

715.0

717.8

723.8

Structures

14

131.0

119.1

118.5

111.6

131.2

127.7

113.9

114.8

120.0

121.9

120.3

117.2

114.7

110.6

111.9

110.2

113.6

115.4

118.4

652.1

Addenda:
Gross domestic purchases 2
Final sales to domestic purchasers 2

15
16

1,442.2 1,424.7 1,470.8 1,456.5 1,445.1 1,446.6 1,408.8 1,410.8 1,432.4 1,461.8 1,468.4 1,486.0 1,467.0 1,450.6 1,455.9 1,461.7 1,457.7 1,469.6 1,511.2
1,435.0 1,429.0 1,462.3 1,465.9 1,447.4 1,447.0 1,411.0 1,420.9 1,437.1 1,458.8 1,459.5 1,469.9 1,461.0 1,460.7 1,459.4 1,463.0 1,480.4 1,485.0 1,515.7

1
Prior to 1959, inventories held by construction establishments are included in line 12.
2
Gross domestic purchases equals gross national product less exports plus imports; final sales to domestic purchasers equals final sales less exports plus imports.
NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1.

Table 1.5.—Gross National Product by Sector
[Billions of dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

1980
I

II

IV

I

II

1983

1982

1981
III

III

IV

I

II

III

IV

I

II

1

2,417.8 2,631.7 2,954.1 3,073.0 2,502.9 2,572.9 2,578.8 2,639.1 2,736.0 2,866.6 2,912.5 3,004.9 3,032.2 3,021.4 3,070.2 3,090.7 3,109.6 3,171.5 3,273.7

2

2,375.2 2,586.4 2,904.5 3,025.7 2,455.9 2,524.7 2,532.4 2,593.6 2,694.9 2,819.0 2,865.9 2,955.2 2,977.9 2,974.5 3,020.6 3,044.2 3,063.5 3,127.2 3,230.2

Business
Nonfarm
Nonfarm less housing
Housing
Farm
Statistical discrepancy

3
4
5
6
7
8

2,052.1 2,228.1 2,509.0 2,594.6 2,120.2 2,180.4 2,179.3 2,232.9 2,319.9 2,434.8 2,475.5 2,558.4 2,567.2 2,555.2 2,593.8 2,610.1 2,619.1 2,675.5 2,772.0
1,982.1 2,158.2 2,432.8 2,520.0 2,042.2 2,104.4 2,115.3 2,162.5 2,250.4 2,354.4 2,399.8 2,483.9 2,493.1 2,482.4 2,521.8 2,536.6 2,539.1 2,601.8 2,697.3
1,799.0 1,950.0 2,193.7 2,252.6 1,850.6 1,907.2 1,911.5 1,951.0 2,030.4 2,127.1 2,165.2 2,240.9 2,241.5 2,224.8 2,258.7 2,265.9 2,261.0 2,317.9 2,406.9
183.1 208.1 239.1 267.4 191.6
197.2 203.8 211.6 220.0 227.3 234.6 243.0 251.6 257.6 263.1 270.7 278.1 284.0 290.5
75.8
75.8
74.9
71.6
67.7
82.5
79.5
70.3
70.9
81.1
74.1
86.6
71.2
66.5
63.3
75.4
79.8
69.3
71.6
-1.2
4.2 -1.2
2.5
-1.5
2.3 -4.9
-8.5
-6.7
1.7
.5
6.8
9.5
.6
1.1 -2.1
5.1 -4.2 -12.0

Households and institutions
Private households
Nonprofit institutions

9
10
11

75.6
6.5
69.1

85.3
6.6
78.7

96.2
7.0
89.2

107.0
7.6
99.4

79.0
6.6
72.4

81.5
6.5
75.0

83.9
6.5
77.3

86.4
6.5
79.9

89.4
6.8
82.6

92.7
7.0
85.7

94.9
6.9
88.0

97.2
7.1
90.1

100.2
7.2
93.0

103.3
7.4
95.9

105.6
7.6
98.0

108.5
7.7
100.8

110.8
7.8
102.9

112.2
8.0
104.2

114.2
8.1
106.1

Government
Federal
State and local

12
13
14

247.4
75.7
171.8

273.0
82.9
190.0

299.3
92.8
206.5

324.1
101.1
223.0

256.7
78.9
177.8

262.7
79.8
182.9

269.3
81.4
187.8

274.2
81.7
192.5

285.7
88.9
196.8

291.5
90.2
201.3

295.5
90.8
204.7

299.6
91.5
208.1

310.5
98.5
212.0

316.0
99.5
216.5

321.2
100.1
221.1

325.7
100.7
225.0

333.7
104.2
229.5

339.5
105.6
233.8

344.1
106.0
238.1

15

42.6

45.3

49.6

47.3

47.0

48.3

46.4

45.5

41.1

47.6

46.6

49.8

54.3

46.9

49.6

46.6

46.0

44.3

43.4

Gross national product
Gross domestic product

Rest of the world
Addendum:
Gross domestic business product less
housing.

16

1,861.9 2,012.5 2,261.7 2,318.4

NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1.




July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

25

Table 1.6.—Gross National Product by Sector in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979

1980

IV

Gross national productGross domestic product

1981
III

IV

1982
III

1983
III

IV

IV

1,479.4 1,475.0 1,513.8 1,485.4 1,489.3 1,496.4 1,461.4 1,464.2 1,477.9 1,510.1 1,512.5 1,525.8 1,506.9 1,485.8 1,489.3 1,485.7 1,480.7 1,490.1 1,521.4
1,453.2 1,449.3 1,488.2 1,462.3 1,461.1 1,468.0 1,434.8 1,438.7 1,455.5 1,484.8 1,488.0 1,500.3 1,479.6 1,462.5 1,465.0 1,463.1 1,458.6 1,469.2 1,501.1

Business
Nonfarm
Nonfarm less housingHousing
Farm
Statistical discrepancy
Households and institutions....
Private households
Nonprofit institutions
Government
Federal
State and local
Rest of the world

1,255.6 1,248.2 1,285.8 1,259.6 1,262.4 1,268.2 1,233.8 1,236.9 1,253.9 1,282.3 1,285.7 1,298.1 1,277.2 1,259.9 1,262.1 1,260.4 1,255.9 1,266.1 1,297.7
1,222.4 1,211.9 1,247.7 1,220.4 1,223.7 1,227.2 1,196.5 1,202.4 1,221.1 1,243.9 1,247.7 1,261.2 1,237.9 1,220.8 1,224.0 1,223.4 1,213.2 1,227.5 1,258.0
1,098.5 1,082.5 1,110.9 1,078.3 1,098.3 1,100.6 1,068.2 1,072.2 1,088.9 1,109.8 1,111.8 1,123.5 1,098.5 1,080.6 1,082.7 1,080.7 1,068.9 1,081.9 1,110.6
128.3 130.2 132.2 134.1 135.9 137.7 139.4 140.2
123.9 129.3 136.8 142.1 125.4 126.7
144.3
145.6 147.3
141.3 142.7
34.2
40.6
39.0
34.7
35.4
36.9
33.8
35.0
33.9
35.8
40.1
43.1
42.4
35.7
40.6
39.2
40.3
43.5
37.3
.4
.2
4.0
5.5
2.7 -2.2
2.0
-1.1
-6.1
-4.2
-3.3
1.2
-.6
-1.0
1.3 -2.5
44.6
3.6
41.0

45.5
3.2
42.3

46.4
3.1
43.3

46.7
3.3
43.4

45.0
3.6
41.4

45.2
3.4
41.8

45.2
3.3
41.9

45.7
3.2
42.6

45.9
3.2
42.7

46.4
3.2
43.2

46.4
3.1
43.2

46.3
3.1
43.2

46.6
3.1
43.5

46.6
3.2
43.4

46.6
3.2
43.4

46.8
3.3
43.5

46.9
3.3
43.5

47.1
3.4
43.7

47.3
3.4
44.0

153.0
49.0
104.1

155.6
49.6
106.0

156.0
50.0
106.0

156.1
50.5
105.6

153.7
48.8
104.9

154.6
49.1
105.5

155.9
49.9
106.0

156.1
49.9
106.2

155.6
49.4
106.2

156.1
49.8
106.3

156.0
49.9
106.1

155.9
50.1
105.7

155.9
50.1
105.8

156.1
50.2
105.9

156.3
50.3
106.0

156.0
50.5
105.4

155.8
50.7
105.1

155.9
50.8
105.1

156.0
50.9
105.1

22.4

25.3

24.5

25.5

27.3

23.3

24.3

22.6

22.1

21.0

20.3

26.3

26.6

25.6

Addendum:
Gross domestic business product less 16
housing.

1,129.8 1,117.3 1,147.6 1,116.2

NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1.

Table 1.7.—Relation of Gross National Product, Net National Product, National Income, and Personal Income
Millions of dollars
Line

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates
1979

1979

1980

1981

1980

1982
IV

I

II

III

IV

1

2,417,759

2,631,688

2,954,069

3,072,989

2,502.9

2,572.9

2,578.8

2,639.1

2,736.0

Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption 2
adjustment.
Capital consumption allowances without capital consump- 3
tion adjustment.
Less: Capital consumption adjustment
4

256,042

293,160

329,511

359,177

268.9

278.9

289.2

298.3

306.2

203,560

231,697

271,646

312,568

213.1

220.9

228.1

234.8

-52,482

-61,463

-57,865

-46,609

-55.7

-57.9

-61.2

-63.6

-63.2

Gross national product

243.0

Equals: Net national product

5

2,161,717

2,338,528

2,624,558

2,713,812

2,234.0

2,294.1

2,289.6

2,340.8

2,429.7

Less: Indirect business tax and nontax liability
Business transfer payments
Statistical discrepancy

6
7
8

189,578
10,269
-1,487

213,387
11,677
2,291

249,961
12,911
-4,903

258,330
14,147
462

195.5
10.7
6.8

201.2
11.1
9.5

209.5
11.5
.6

217.5
11.9
1.1

225.4
12.2
-2.1

Plus: Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises

9

3,353

5,471

6,437

9,524

3.5

4.0

4.6

7.4

5.8

Equals: National income

10

1,966,710

2,116,644

2,373,026

2,450,397

2,024.5

2,076.2

2,072.5

2,117.7

2,200.1

Less: Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital con- 11
sumption adjustments.
Net interest
12
Contributions for social insurance
13
Wage accruals less disbursements
14

194,794

175,429

192,334

164,775

183.1

187.3

168.3

170.6

175.6

153,773
186,898
-181

192,624
203,661
-40

249,893
237,018

261,110
252,970
-4

166.4
192.5
.2

181.2
199.5
-.2

187.6
200.3
0

193.5
204.2
.5

208.2
210.7
-.5

Plus: Government transfer payments to persons
Personal interest income
Personal dividend income
Business transfer payments

15
16
17
18

239,991
218,727
50,757
10,269

285,893
265,968
56,807
11,677

324,264
341,289
62,802
12,911

360,399
366,164
66,366
14,147

254.2
235.3
51.9
10.7

263.5
253.5
55.6
11.1

271.6
261.9
56.8
11.5

301.9
266.0
57.2
11.9

306.6
282.4
57.7
12.2

Equals: Personal income

19

1,951,170

2,165,315

2,434,988

2,578,622

2,034.4

2,092.1

2,118.2

2,186.0

2,265.0




26

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 1.7.—Relation of Gross National Product, Net National Product, National Income, and Personal Income—Continued
Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1981

Line
I

1982

II

III

IV

I

1983

II

III

IV

I

II

1

2,866.6

2,912.5

3,004.9

3,032.2

3,021.4

3,070.2

3,090.7

3,109.6

3,171.5

Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption 2
adjustment.
Capital consumption allowances without capital consump- 3
tion adjustment.
4

314.8

324.2

334.4

344.6

349.3

356.1

363.0

368.3

370.8

374.4

256.0

266.4

276.8

287.4

296.6

306.7

317.5

329.5

341.8

356.7

58 8

57 8

57 7

57 2

527

49 4

-45.5

-38.8

-29.1

-17.7

Equals* Net national product

5

2,551.7

2,588.4

2,670.5

2,687.6

2,672.1

2,714.1

2,727.7

2,741.3

2,800.7

2,899.3

Less* Indirect business tax and nontax liability
Business transfer payments
Statistical discrepancy

6
7
8

244.0
12.5
5.1

249.1
12.8
-4.2

252.4
13.1
-12.0

254.3
13.4
85

252.6
13.7
67

256.0
14.0
1.7

259.9
14.3
2.5

264.8
14.7
4.2

270.6
15.0
-1.2

285.1
15.3

Plus' Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises

9

11.2

Equals* National income

10

Less: Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments.
Net interest
Contributions for social insurance
Wage accruals less disbursements

11

194.7

185.0

197.6

192.0

162.0

166.8

168.5

161.9

181.8

12
13
14

223.7
231.7
0

242.6
234.8
0

268.0
239.0
.3

265.3
242.5
0

265.0
249.9
-.1

268.3
252.4
0

256.4
254.3
0

254.7
255.4
0

248.3
265.4
0

244.4
270.0
-1.3

Plus* Government transfer payments to persons
Personal interest income
Personal dividend income
Business transfer payments

15
16
17
18

311.9
308.7
59.6
12.5

314.9
329.8
61.9
12.8

332.8
361.9
64.5
13.1

337.4
364.7
65.3
13.4

340.9
364.9
65.6
13.7

350.3
371.9
65.6
14.0

366.1
364.8
66.4
14.3

384.3
363.1
67.9
14.7

383.6
357.2
68.8
15.0

387.7
356.7
69.3
15.3

19

2,338.3

2,394.2

2,490.9

2,516.6

2,528.1

2,563.2

2,591.3

2,632.0

2,657.7

2,715.0

Gross national product

....

Equals* Personal income

5.6

6.5

6.4

7.2

7.2

6.4

8.0

16.6

12.3

2,295.8

2,337.2

2,423.4

2,435.6

2,419.7

2,448.9

2,458.9

2,474.0

2,528.5

3,273.7

Table 1.8.—Relation of Gross National Product, Net National Product, and National Income in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

IV

Gross national product

1

Less: Capital consumption allowances 2
with capital consumption adjustment.
Equals: Net national product

3

Less: Indirect business tax and nontax 4
liability plus business transfer payments less subsidies plus current surplus of government enterprises.
Statistical discrepancy
Equals: National income




5
6

1980

1979
II

I

1981
III

IV

I

II

1982
III

IV

I

II

1983
III

IV

I

II

1,479.4 1,475.0 1,513.8 1,485.4 1,489.3 1,496.4 1,461.4 1,464.2 1,477.9 1,510.1 1,512.5 1,525.8 1,506.9 1,485.8 1,489.3 1,485.7 1,480.7 1,490.1 1,521.4
143.0

149.8

155.9

162.5

145.3

147.2

149.2

150.6

152.3

153.7

155.1

156.6

158.2

159.7

161.6

163.1

165.5

166.3

167.8

1,336.4 1,325.2 1,357.9 1,322.9 1,344.0 1,349.2 1,312.3 1,313.6 1,325.6 1,356.4 1,357.4 1,369.2 1,348.7 1,326.0 1,327.7 1,322.6 1,315.2 1,323.9 1,353.6
142.6

-1.0

142.2

1.3

147.8

-2.5

147.3

143.7

142.4

140.5

141.5

.2

4.0

5.5

.4

.6

144.4

-1.1

146.9

2.7

147.9

148.8

147.6

147.1

-2.2

-6.1

-4.2

-3.3

147.8

147.5

146.9

150.3

.8

1.2

2.0

-.6

1,194.8 1,181.6 1,212.6 1,175.4 1,196.3 1,201.2 1,171.4 1,171.4 1,182.3 1,206.8 1,211.7 1,226.5 1,205.3 1,182.2 1,179.1 1,173.9 1,166.2 1,174.2

154.3

July 1983

27

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Table 1.10.—Net National Product and National Income by Sector in
Constant Dollars

Table 1.9.—Net National Product and National Income by Sector
[Billions of dollars]

[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

2,161.7

2,338.5

2,624.6

2,713.8

2,119.1

2,293.2

2,575.0

2,666.5

Line
Net national product..
Net domestic product
Business

1,796.1

Nonfarm
Nonfarm less housing..
Housing
Farm
Statistical discrepancy

Business
Nonfarm
Nonfarm less housing..
Housing
Farm

2,235.4

1,883.9
1,734.5
149.4
48.8
2.3

2,124.0
1,949.0
175.0
60.4
-4.9

2,182.7
1,982.4
200.3
52.2
.5

75.6
247.4

85.3
273.0

96.2
299.3

107.0
324.1

42.6

45.3

49.6

47.3

1,966.7

2,116.6

2,373.0

2,450.4

Rest of the world
National income.

2,179.5

1,742.3
1,611.7
130.7
55.3
-1.5

Households and institutionsGovernment

Domestic income

1,935.0

1,924.1

2,071.3

2,323.4

2,403.1

1,601.1

1,713.1

1,927.9

1,972.0

1,547.7
1,449.3
98.4
53.4

1,666.5
1,550.8
115.7
46.6

1,869.1
1,730.6
138.5
58.9

1,919.9
1,760.6
159.4
52.0

75.6
247.4

85.3
273.0

96.2
299.3

107.0
324.1

42.6

45.3

49.6

47.3

Households and institutionsGovernment
Rest of the world

Net domestic business product less housing
Domestic business income less housing

22

1,660.2
1,497.8

1,780.2
1,592.3

1,998.5
1,783.8

2,028.5
1,806.4

1981

1982

1,336.4

1,325.2

1,357.9

1,322.9

1,310.1

1,299.5

1,332.3

1,299.8

1,112.5

1,098.4

1,129.9

1,097.1

Nonfarm
Nonfarm less housing....
Housing
Farm
Statistical discrepancy

1,088.0
990.7
97.3
25.5
-1.0

1,071.0
968.9
102.1
26.0
1.3

1,100.8
991.8
109.0
31.6
-2.5

1,066.9
953.2
113.7
30.0
.2

Households and institutionsGovernment

44.6
153.0

45.5
155.6

46.4
156.0

46.7
156.1

Net national product..
Net domestic product
Business

26.3

25.7

25.6

23.1

1,194.8

1,181.6

1,212.6

1,175.4

1,168.5

1,155.9

1,187.0

1,152.3

970.9

954.8

984.6

949.5

Nonfarm
Nonfarm less housing..
Housing
Farm

943.4
877.3
66.1
27.6

926.2
857.0
69.2
28.6

951.2
877.6
73.6
33.4

917.9
841.0
77.0
31.6

Households and institutions..
Government

44.6
153.0

45.5
155.6

46.4
156.0

46.7
156.1

26.3

25.7

25.6

Rest of the world
National income
Domestic income
Business

Rest of the world

Addenda:

1980

1979

Addenda:
995.6
885.1

1,014.2
903.9

Net domestic business product less housing
Domestic business income less housing

1,020.5
910.5

983.1
872.3

Table 1.11.—National Income by Type of Income
Millions of dollars
Line

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates
1979

1979

1981

1982

1980

IV

III

IV

National income

1

1,966,710

2,116,644

2,373,026

2,450,397

2,024.5

2,076.2

2,072.5

2,117.7

2,200.1

Compensation of employees

2

1,458,139

1,599,630

1,769,248

1,865,656

1,513.6

1,555.6

1,574.8

1,604.5

1,663.6

Wages and salaries
Government and government enterprises
Other

3
4
5

1,237,436
236,004
1,001,432

1,356,645
260,254
1,096,391

1,493,241
284,456
1,208,785

1,568,091
305,973
1,262,118

1,284.7
244.6
1,040.1

1,319.8
250.1
1,069.7

1,335.1
256.5
1,078.6

1,360.1
261.8
1,098.3

1,411.6
272.6
1,139.0

Supplements to wages and salaries
Employer contributions for social insurance
Other labor income

6
7
8

220,703
105,791
114,912

242,985
114,984
128,001

276,007
132,466
143,541

297,565
140,944
156,621

228.9
109.2
119.7

235.8
112.4
123.4

239.8
113.5
126.3

244.4
115.1
129.3

252.0
119.0
133.0

Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital con- 9
sumption adjustments.

132,095

117,446

120,166

108,975

132.2

111.7

116.7

118.3

Farm
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment

10
11
12

31,925
37,780
-5,855

21,812
28,940
-7,128

30,466
38,439
-7,973

21,527
29,886
-8,359

29.5
35.7
-6.3

22.3
29.0
-6.7

17.9
24.9
-7.1

22.7
30.0
-7.3

24.3
31.8
-7.5

Nonfarm
Proprietors' income
Inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment

13
14
15
16

100,170
103,186
-2,907
-109

95,634
100,254
-3,104
-1,516

89,700
90,122
-1,545
1,123

87,448
84,159
-601
3,890

102.7
106.1
-3.3
-.1

100.7
106.1
-4.3
-1.1

93.8
97.4
-2.0
-1.6

94.0
98.9
-3.1
-1.8

94.0
98.6
-3.1
-1.6

17

27,909

31,515

41,385

49,881

29.2

29.0

30.1

32.5

34.4

18
19

56,232
-28,323

63,931
-32,416

76,967
-35,582

86,341
-36,460

59.0
-29.8

60.2
-31.2

62.3
-32.2

65.6
-33.0

67.7
-33.3

Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consump- 20
tion adjustments.

194,794

175,429

192,334

164,775

183.1

187.3

168.3

170.6

175.6

Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment
Rental income of persons
Capital consumption adjustment

21

209,566

191,742

203,339

165,855

199.2

202.4

184.6

187.8

192.2

Profits before tax
Profits tax liability
Profits after tax
Dividends
Undistributed profits

22
23
24
25
26

252,676
87,597
165,079
52,670
112,409

234,614
84,785
149,829
58,589
91,240

226,959
82,842
144,117
64,658
79,459

174,205
59,155
115,050
68,666
46,384

249.2
84.2
165.0
53.9
111.0

260.9
94.7
166.2
57.5
108.7

214.3
74.8
139.4
58.6

228.9
82.0
146.9
58.9
88.1

234.4
87.6
146.7
59.4
87.3

Inventory valuation adjustment

27

-43,110

-42,872

-23,620

-8,350

-50.1

-58.5

-29.7

-41.1

-42.2

28

-14,772

-16,313

-11,005

-1,080

-16.0

-15.1

-16.3

-17.2

-16.6

29

153,773

192,624

249,893

261,110

166.4

181.2

187.6

193.5

Corporate profits after tax with inventory valuation and capital 30
consumption adjustments.
Dividends
31
Undistributed profits with inventory valuation and capital 32
consumption adjustments.

107,197

90,644

109,492

105,620

98.9

92.6

93.5

52,670
54,527

58,589
32,055

53.9
45.0

57.5
35.1

58.6
34.9

Corporate profits with inventory valuation adjustment

Capital consumption adjustment
Net interest

208.2

Addenda:




64,658
44,834

68,666
36,954

87.9
58.9
29.7

59.4
28.5

28

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 1.11.—National Income by Type of Income—Continued
Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1981

Line

1982
III

IV

1983
III

IV

National income

1

2,295.8

2,337.2

2,423.4

2,435.6

2,419.7

2,448.9

2,458.9

2,474.0

2,528.5

Compensation of employees

2

1,718.8

1,750.9

1,791.7

1,815.6

1,834.2

1,859.9

1,879.5

1,889.0

1,923.7

1,969.9

Wages and salaries
Government and government enterprises
Other

3
4
5

1,451.7
277.4
1,174.3

1,478.1
280.8
1,197.3

1,512.6
285.4
1,227.2

1,530.6
294.2
1,236.3

1,542.7
298.6
1,244.1

1,563.9
303.1
1,260.8

1,579.8
307.7
1,272.1

1,586.0
314.5
1,271.5

1,610.6
319.2
1,291.5

1,648.3
323.3
1,325.0

Supplements to wages and salaries
Employer contributions for social insurance
Other labor income

7

267.1
129.5
137.6

272.8
131.3
141.5

279.2
133.4
145.7

285.0
135.7
149.4

291.6
139.1
152.4

296.0
140.6
155.4

299.7
141.5
158.2

302.9
142.5
160.4

313.1
148.8
164.3

321.6
151.5
170.1

111.2

104.9

103.6

116.2

120.6

130.1

Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments.
Farm
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment

10
11
12

26.5
34.1
-7.7

29.1
37.0
-7.9

35.0
43.1
-8.1

31.3
39.6
-8.2

27.4
35.7
-8.2

16.8
25.1
-8.3

15.8
24.2
-8.4

26.0
34.6
-8.6

22.2
30.6
-8.4

24.1
32.5
-8.4

Nonfarm
Proprietors' income
Inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment

13
14
15
16

94.7
97.4
-2.6
-.1

90.3
-1.4
.9

88.5
88.0
-1.2
1.6

85.8
84.7
-1.0
2.1

83.7
80.8
-.1
3.0

88.1
85.3
-.8
3.6

87.8
84.5
-.7
4.1

90.2
86.0
-.8
4.9

98.4
91.0
-.2
7.6

106.0
96.4
-.8
10.4

17

37.4

39.9

42.7

45.6

47.4

49.0

50.9

52.3

54.1

54.8

18
19

71.7
-34.3

74.8
-34.9

78.7
-36.0

82.6
-37.1

84.7
-37.3

85.7
-36.7

87.6
-36.7

87.4
-35.2

91.6
-37.5

93.0
-38.2

162.0

166.8

168.5

161.9

181.8

Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment
Rental income of persons
Capital consumption adjustment
Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments.
Corporate profits with inventory valuation adjustment
Profits before tax
Profits tax liability
Profits after tax
Dividends
Undistributed profits
Inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment
Net interest

197.6

20

207.1

196.4

208.3

201.5

167.7

170.3

168.3

157.2

168.0

243.9
91.7
152.2
61.3
90.9

219.0
80.4
138.6
63.7
74.9

227.7
83.7
144.0
66.4
77.6

217.2
75.6
141.7
67.3
74.4

173.2
60.3
112.9
67.7
45.2

178.8
61.4
117.4
67.8
49.5

177.3
60.8
116.5
68.8
47.7

167.5
54.0
113.5
70.4
43.1

169.7
61.5
108.2
71.4
36.7

-9.0

-36.7

-22.6

-19.4

-15.7

-5.5

-8.5

-12.4

-11.4

-10.7

-9.5

-5.6

-3.5

-10.3

.1

4.7

-1.7

72.0
-8.5

13.9

23.0
244.4

223.7

242.6

268.0

265.3

265.0

268.3

256.4

254.7

248.3

103.1

104.6

113.8

116.5

101.7

105.3

107.6

107.9

120.3

61.3
41.8

63.7
40.9

66.4
47.5

67.3
49.2

67.7
34.0

67.8
37.5

70.4
37.5

71.4
48.9

Addenda:
Corporate profits after tax with inventory valuation and capital
consumption adjustments.
Dividends
Undistributed profits with inventory valuation and capital
consumption adjustments.




72.0

29

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 1.12.—National Income by Sector, Legal Form of Organization, and Type of Income
[Millions of dollars]
Line
National income

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

1,966,710

2,116,644

2,373,026

2,450,397

2

1,601,095

1,713,084

1,927,942

1,971,960

Corporate business
Compensation of employees
Wages and salaries
Supplements to wages and salaries
Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments
Profits before tax
Inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment
Net interest

3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11

1,210,908
1,015,175
852,303
162,872
164,188
222,070
-43,110
-14,772
31,545

1,303,146
1,111,944
933,282
178,662
145,544
204,729
-42,872
-16,313
45,658

1,466,893
1,230,161
1,027,658
202,503
168,674
203,299
-23,620
-11,005
68,058

1,487,496
1,282,240
1,065,837
216,403
142,974
152,404
-8,350
-1,080
62,282

Sole proprietorships and partnerships
Compensation of employees
Wages and salaries
Supplements to wages and salaries
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments
Farm
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment
Nonfarm
Proprietors' income
Inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment
Net interest

12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24

242,247
83,445
74,388
9,057
130,449
31,925
37,780
-5,855
98,524
101,308
-2,907
123
28,353

239,214
88,432
78,903
9,529
115,648
21,812
28,940
-7,128
98,177
-3,104
-1,237
35,134

260,856
97,634
86,606
11,028
118,128
30,466
38,439
-7,973
87,662
87,783
-1,545
1,424
45,094

260,322
103,718
91,701
12,017
106,770
21,527
29,886
-8,359
85,243
81,640
-601
4,204
49,834

Other private business
Compensation of employees
Wages and salaries
Supplements to wages and salaries
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment
Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment
Rental income of persons
Capital consumption adjustment
Net interest

25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35

118,324
6,897
6,259
638
1,646
1,878
-232
27,909
56,232
-28,323
81,872

137,343
7,695
6,982
713
1,798
2,077
-279
31,515
63,931
-32,416
96,335

162,725
8,522
7,703
819
2,038
2,339
-301
41,385
76,967
-35,582
110,780

184,768
9,252
8,325
927
2,205
2,519
-314
49,881
86,341
-36,460
123,430

Government enterprises
Compensation of employees
Wages and salaries
Supplements to wages and salaries

36
37
38
39

29,616
29,616
25,029
4,587

33,381
33,381
28,251
5,130

37,468
37,468
31,663
5,805

39,374
39,374
32,921
6,453

Households and institutions
Compensation of employees
Wages and salaries
Supplements to wages and salaries

40
41
42
43

75,599
75,599
68,519
7,080

85,288
85,288
77,296
7,992

96,231
96,231
86,853

107,030
107,030
96,344
10,686

Government
Compensation of employees
Wages and salaries
Supplements to wages and salaries

44
45
46
47

247,444
247,444
210,975
36,469

272,962
272,962
232,003
40,959

299,267
299,267
252,793
46,474

324,131
324,131
273,052
51,079

Rest of the world
Compensation of employees
Corporate profits
Net interest

48
49
50
51

42,572
-37
30,606
12,003

45,310
-72
29,885
15,497

49,586
-35
23,660
25,961

47,276
-89
21,801
25,564

Domestic business




30

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 1.13.—Gross Domestic Product of Corporate Business in Current Dollars and Gross Domestic Product of Nonfinancial Corporate Business in
Current and Constant Dollars
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1980

1979
IV

I

II

1981
IV

III

I

II

1982
III

IV

I

II

1983
III

IV

I

II

Billions of dollars
Gross domestic product of corporate business.

1

Capital consumption allowances with 2
capital consumption adjustment.
Net domestic product
Indirect business tax and nontax liability plus business transfer payments less subsidies.
Domestic income
Compensation of employees .
Wages and salaries
Supplements to wages and salaries .
Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption
adjustments.
Profits before tax
Profits tax liability
Profits after tax
Dividends
Undistributed profits
Inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment
Net interest

157.5

179.3

202.9

222.0

165.7

170.6

176.8

182.4

187.6

193.2

199.6

206.2

212.6

215.6

220.2

228.3

230.1

3
4

1,347.8 1,458.7 1,651.7 1,675.1 1,378.4 1,425.2 1,427.7 1,460.4 1,521.5 1,600.7 1,631.9 1,690.3 1,683.8 1,661.7 1,678.4 1,684.9 1,675.4 1,725.9
136.9 155.5 184.8 187.6 141.3 145.7 152.4 158.9 165.2 180.6 184.5 186.8 187.2 184.5 186.3 188.4 191.4 195.6

206.6

5
6
7
8
9

1,210.9 1,303.1 1,466.9 1,487.5 1,237.1 1,279.5 1,275.3 1,301.4 1,356.4 1,420.1 1,447.4 1,503.5 1,496.6 1,477.2 1,492.2 1,496.5 1,484.0 1,530.3
1,015.2 1,111.9 1,230.2 1,282.2 1,053.3 1,084.3 1,093.9 1,114.1 1,155.5 1,195.4 1,219.6 1,248.6 1,257.0 1,266.8 1,282.2 1,290.8 1,289.2 1,313.6 1,348.4
852.3 933.3 1,027.7 1,065.8 884.6 910.5 917.6 934.6 970.5 999.3 1,019.3 1,043.5 1,048.5 1,053.9 1,066.3 1,072.9 1,070.3 1,086.9 1,115.0
162.9 178.7 202.5 216.4 168.7 173.8 176.3 179.5 185.1 196.1 200.3 205.1 208.5 212.9 215.9 217.9 218.9 226.7 233.5
164.2 145.5 168.7 143.0 148.8 152.5 136.5 141.0 152.1 170.1 163.6 175.8 165.2 141.4 145.0 147.8 137.8 161.6

10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17

Gross domestic product of financial corporate business.

18

Gross domestic product of nonfinancial corporate business.

19

Capital consumption allowances with 20
capital consumption adjustment.
Net domestic product
Indirect business tax and nontax liability plus business transfer payments less subsidies.
Domestic income
Compensation of employees....
Wages and salaries
Supplements to wages and salaries .
Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption
adjustments.
Profits before tax
Profits tax liability
Profits after tax
Dividends
Undistributed profits
Inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment
Net interest

1,505.3 1,638.0 1,854.5 1,897.1 1,544.1 1,595.8 1,604.4 1,642.8 1,709.1 1,793.8 1,831.5 1,896.5 1,896.4 1,877.3 1,898.7 1,909.4 1,903.2 1,954.2

222.1 204.7 203.3
84.8
82.8
87.6
134.5 119.9 120.5
50.3
37.6
40.4
70.2
96.9
79.5
-43.1 -42.9 -23.6
-14.8 -16.3 -11.0
45.7
31.5
68.1

88.5

97.3

114.6

152.4 214.9 226.1 182.5 199.4 210.9 219.2 197.6 205.9 190.4
82.0
84.2
94.7
74.8
91.7
80.4
83.7
75.6
59.2
87.6
93.2 130.6 131.5 107.7 117.4 123.3 127.6 117.2 122.2 114.8
37.2
40.6
40.9
52.4
54.4
37.6
42.6
46.6
48.9
53.2
93.4
67.1
76.5
38.8
93.9
80.6
68.3
69.9
61.6
80.9
-8.4 -50.1 -58.5 -29.7 -41.1 -42.2 -36.7 -22.6 -19.4 -15.7
-16.3 -17.2 -16.6 -12.4 -11.4 -10.7
-1.1 -16.0 -15.1
-9.5
35.1
42.7
46.3
79.0
62.3
44.8
48.8
54.5
64.2
74.5
120.4

91.4

93.7

94.6

96.8

104.2

110.6

112.6

117.9

117.4

224.5

227.7

152.5
60.3
92.2
52.2
40.0
-5.5
-5.6
69.1

157.1
61.4
95.6
53.3
42.3
-8.5
-3.5
65.0

156.6 143.4
60.8
54.0
95.8
89.4
55.5
56.7
40.3
32.6
-9.0 -10.3
.1
4.7
58.0
57.1

149.5
61.5
88.0
60.6
27.4
-1.7
13.9
55.1

112.4

118.4

122.6

136.5

128.2

57.7
-8.5
23.0
53.9

1,416.8 1,540.7 1,739.9 1,776.7 1,452.7 1,502.1 1,509.8 1,546.0 1,604.9 1,683.3 1,718.8 1,778.6 1,778.9 1,764.9 1,780.2 1,786.8 1,775.0 1,817.6
149.6

170.0

192.2

210.0

157.2

161.8

167.7

172.9

177.8

183.0

189.1

195.3

201.3

204.0

208.4

212.3

215.1

215.3

216.8

21
22

1,267.3 1,370.7 1,547.7 1,566.8 1,295.5 1,340.3 1,342.2 1,373.1 1,427.1 1,500.2 1,529.7 1,583.3 1,577.7 1,560.8 1,571.8 1,574.5 1,559.8 1,602.3
130.5 147.6 176.5 179.0 134.8 138.2 144.5 150.8 157.0 172.1 176.2 178.6 179.0 176.2 177.7 179.6 182.4 186.4 ""l96"9

23
24
25
26
27

1,136.7 1,223.0 1,371.2 1,387.8 1,160.7 1,202.1 1,197.7 1,222.2 1,270.2 1,328.1 1,353.5 1,404.6 1,398.7 1,384.6 1,394.1 1,394.9 1,377.4 1,415.9
958.1 1,046.5 1,155.8 1,198.6 993.3 1,022.3 1,029.6 1,047.7 1,086.4 1,123.7 1,146.4 1,173.2 1,179.7 1,187.7 1,199.7 1,205.6 1,201.2 1,222.4 1,254.7
805.0 878.9 966.1 997.3 834.9 858.9 864.2 879.4 913.0 940.0 958.7 981.1 984.5 989.0 998.7 1,003.1 998.2 1,012.0 1,038.1
153.0 167.6 189.7 201.3 158.4 163.4 165.5 168.3 173.4 183.7 187.7 192.1 195.2 198.7 201.0 202.6 203.0 210.4 216.7
118.2 128.0 148.1 145.1 158.8 149.0 127.7 126.5 127.5 114.3 133.9
134.7 120.3 150.2 124.0 119.6 123.8 111.1

28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35

191.8 177.8 183.0
69.2
67.0
65.5
122.5 110.8 117.5
43.7
39.8
53.5
67.1
82.8
64.0
-43.1 -42.9 -23.6
-13.9
-14.7
-9.1
43.9
56.3
65.2

131.5 184.8 196.2 155.6 174.6 184.8 195.3 177.2 187.1 172.2
67.5
59.9
65.4
75.7
65.5
70.1
71.7
63.0
41.2
56.8
90.3 119.3 120.5
98.8 109.1 114.7 123.6 114.2 119.6 112.4
55.2
44.5
52.2
56.3
57.2
39.8
40.2
44.0
46.2
50.2
56.1
62.0
64.5
79.6
80.3
54.7
64.6
68.5
73.4
33.1
-8.4 -50.1 -58.5 -29.7 -41.1 -42.2 -36.7 -22.6 -19.4 -15.7
-8.8
-7.6
.8 -15.1 -13.9 -14.8 -15.4 -14.6 -10.5
-9.6
72.6
56.4
70.0
47.8
56.0
56.3
62.1
65.2
56.9
55.8

137.0
45.7
91.4
55.2
36.2
-5.5
-3.8
69.2

136.6
43.6
93.0
55.7
37.3
-8.5
-1.6
67.9

134.4 117.9
42.0
33.6
92.4
84.4
58.5
59.2
33.9
25.1
-9.0 -10.3
2.1
6.7
61.8
61.9

119.7
41.8
77.9
63.3
6'6"5
14.5 ...._
-1.7
15.9
24.9
59.7
58.4

Billions of 1972 dollars
Gross domestic product of non- 36
financial corporate business.

876.1

859.5

887.5

857.7

874.7

870.9

847.7

853.9

865.6

883.7

888.7

898.6

878.9

864.3

860.5

859.5

846.4

856.0

Capital consumption allowances with 37
capital consumption adjustment.

85.7

89.4

93.2

96.8

87.2

88.1

89.0

89.8

90.8

91.7

92.7

93.7

94.6

95.5

96.4

97.2

98.2

98.9

99.8

38
Net domestic product
Indirect business tax and nontax lia- 39
bility plus business transfer payments less subsidies.
40
Domestic income

790.4
92.7

770.1
92.6

794.3
95.0

760.9
94.2

787.5
93.2

782.8
93.3

758.7
91.5

764.1
92.1

774.8
93.5

792.0
94.8

796.0
95.1

804.9
95.8

784.3
94.1

768.8
94.4

764.1
94.7

762.3
94.0

748.2
93.9

757.2
96.4

98.8

697.7

677.5

699.3

666.6

694.3

689.5

667.2

672.0

681.3

697.2

700.9

709.1

690.2

674.4

669.5

668.3

654.3

660.8




SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

31

Table 1.14.—Auto Output
[Billions of dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979

1980

IV

Auto output

1

Final sales
Personal consumption expenditures
New autos
Net purchases of used autos
Producers' durable equipment
New autos

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Net exports
9
10
Exports
11
Imports
Government purchases of goods and 12
services.

Change in business inventories of new
and used autos.
New
Used

13

68.0

60.8

70.4

66.6

61.5

I

II

64.3

53.0

1981
III

IV

57.8

68.0

I

II

69.9

75.4

1982
III

73.1

IV

63.3

I

II

56.3

70.5

1983
III

73.7

IV

66.0

I

II

71.8

81.9

69.1
61.5
69.9
69.9
65.4
70.3
51.9
59.2
64.5
75.7
66.7
67.0
76.6
60.5
67.1
69.6
75.9
76.3
87.5
63.2
64.8
61.8
69.3
73.9
68.3
52.6
61.0
73.2
66.4
70.4
71.4
65.1
73.7
64.0
74.0
79.7
80.7
92.5
49.1
46.3
50.6
52.9
48.6
52.2
38.5
46.3
48.1
55.4
44.7
48.1
54.1
50.6
51.5
51.0
66.7
58.5
57.5
15.7
18.8
21.0
14.6
16.1
14.1
14.7
15.5
17.0
18.3
20.0
17.8
19.6
19.3
19.8
23.0
21.2
23.2
25.9
13.4
11.5
13.3
12.4
12.3
10.1
11.6
12.0
13.6
13.2
12.3
11.8
14.8
12.3
12.9
13.4
11.7
12.9
11.9
22.5
21.0
24.6
24.9
20.1
21.9
18.2
21.0
22.9
25.5
23.4
27.2
22.2
23.6
24.2
26.2
25.7
27.4
28.6
12 6
91
95
11 3
83
96
81
94
109
11 8
10 3 -12.4 -10.5 -11.7 -11.8 -13.3 -13.5 -14.5 -15.2
-10.1 -12.8 -13.8 -17.4 -10.5 -11.3 -11.8 -14.5 -13.7 -12.2 -13.8 -13.0 -16.1 -16.3 -17.6 -18.4 -17.1 -18.5 -19.5
4.7
4.0
4.0
2.9
5.0
4.7
3.9
3.5
4.0
4.2
4.2
4.8
2.8
2.6
3.3
3.5
2.4
3.9
4.0
14.8
16.8
17.8
20.3
15.5
16.0
15.6
17.9
17.7
16.3
18.0
17.8
18.9
18.9
20.9
21.8
19.5
22.3
23.5
1.0
.9
.9
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.1
.9
1.0
1.0
1.1
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.1
1.0
1.1
1.1
-.7

.5

-3.3

-3.9

-6.0

1.1

-1.3

3.5

-5.9

8.7

-3.4

2.8 -10.7

3.3

14
15

-1.1
-.9
2

-.1
6

.5
0

-3.3
0

-3.4
-.5

-4.9
10

2.1
10

-1.2
1

3.7
2

-6.8
.9

9.5
-.8

-4.2
.8

3.6 -10.8
.1
-.8

3.6
-.3

16
17

57.9
19.3

49.4
21.8

24:8

56.0

50.6
27.9

50.6
19.9

52.1
23.1

42.1
18.8

47.2
21.8

56.4
23.5

55.8
24.7

61.7
24.5

59.2
24.9

47.5
25.1

54.7
26.3

4.1

-9.8

5.2 -11.1
-1.1
1.3

-4.5

-5.6

-4.8
.3

-5.3
-.3

57.4
29.8

63.2
32.6

Addenda:
Domestic output of new autos *
Sales of imported new autos 2
1
2

40.4
27.0

58.0
28.0

49.4
30.3

Consists of final sales and change in business inventories of new autos produced in the United States.
Consists of personal consumption expenditures, producers' durable equipment, and government purchases.

Table 1.15.—Auto Output in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

1980
I

II

1981
III

IV

I

II

1983

1982
III

IV

I

II

III

IV

I

II

1

47.0

39.4

42.6

38.5

41.5

42.6

34.4

37.4

43.1

44.0

45.9

43.4

37.2

33.1

40.5

42.0

38.3

41.3

45.9

Final sales
Personal consumption expenditures
New autos
Net purchases of used autos
Producers' durable equipment
New autos
Net purchases of used autos
Net exports
Exports
Imports
Government purchases of goods and
services.

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12

47.5
41.0
32.9
8.1
10.1
15.1
-5.0
-4.3
3.2
7.6
7

39.9
36.6
28.7
7.8
8.0
13.0
50
-5.3
2.5
7.9
7

42.1
37.2
29.6
7.6
9.5
14.4
49
-5.3
2.3
7.6
7

40.3
37.1
29.8
7.3
9.3
14.0
47
-6.8
1.6
8.4
7

44.2
39.4
31.8
7.6
8.5
13.1
46
-4.4
3.3
7.8
7

46.3
41.7
33.3
8.4
8.7
14.0
53
-4.8
3.1
7.8
7

34.0
31.4
24.1
7.4
6.9
11.4
45
-4.9
2.5
7.4
6

38.5
35.9
28.4
7.6
7.8
12.8
50
-5.9
2.1
8.0
7

40.7
37.1
29.2
8.0
8.6
13.9
53
-5.7
2.4
8.2
7

47.3
41.3
33.5
7.9
9.9
15.4
55
-4.6
2.5
7.1
7

40.4
35.9
28.2
7.7
9.1
13.7
46
-5.4
2.5
7.8
7

45.2
38.9
31.2
7.7
10.5
15.7
-5.2
-5.0
2.7
7.7
7

35.6
32.7
25.5
7.2
8.5
12.7
-4.2
-6.2
1.6
7.8
6

39.2
36.0
28.7
7.3
8.9
13.4
-4.5
63
1.4
7.8
7

39.0
36.1
29.1
7.0
9.2
13.6
-4.5
70
1.8
8.8
7

39.6
36.4
28.5
7.9
9.7
14.6
-4.9
73
1.9
9.1
.7

43.4
39.9
32.7
7.2
9.5
14.4
-4.9
67
1.3
8.0
.7

43.3
39.6
31.8
7.8
10.0
15.2
-5.1
-7.1
2.1
9.1
.7

48.9
45.3
36.8
8.5
10.3
15.6
-5.3
-7.4
2.2
9.6
.7

Change in business inventories of new
and used autos.
New
Used

13

-.5

-.5

.5

-1.8

-2.7

-3.7

.3

-1.1

2.4

-3.4

5.5

-1.8

1.5

-6.1

1.5

2.5

-5.2

-2.1

-2.9

14
15

-.4
-.1

-.2
-.3

.4
0

-1.8
0

-2.4
-3

-3.1
6

.9
5

-1.0

1

2.5
1

-3.8
4

5.9
4

-2.1
3

1.8
3

-6.2
1

1.7
-1

2.8
-4

56
.5

22
.1

28
-.1

16
17

38.9
12.9

30.7
13.5

32.8
14.5

28.5
15.7

33.1
13.1

33.3
14.7

26.4
11.7

28.9
13.4

34.3
14.2

33.7
14.9

36.2
14.4

34.2
14.4

27.1
14.3

23.0
15.3

30.9
14.9

32.3
15.6

27.7
16.9

31.7
16.5

34.6
18.0

Auto output

Addenda:
Domestic output of new autos2 * ..
Sales of imported new autos
1
2

Consists of final sales and change in business inventories of new autos produced in the United States.
Consists of personal consumption expenditures, producers' durable equipment, and government purchases.




32

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
Table 1.16.—Truck Output
[Billions of dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1980

1979

1981

1982

IV

I

II

III

IV

I

II

1983

1982

1981

1980

1979

III

I

IV

II

IV

III

I

II

1

39.2

26.2

29.3

30.4

33.5

28.6

24.1

24.1

28.0

27.7

31.3

28.5

29.8

31.2

33.4

30.7

26.4

30.5

34.9

Final sales
Personal consumption expenditures
Producers' durable equipment
Net exports
Exports
.
Imports
Government purchases of goods and
services.

2
3
4
5
6
7
8

39.1
11.7
24.7
-.4
3.3
3.8
3.2

28.2
7.5
18.0
-1.0
3.1
4.1
3.7

29.2
8.7
17.9
-1.6
3.3
4.9
4.1

30.8
11.8
16.6
-2.7
2.5
5.2
5.2

37.3
11.3
22.7
-.1
3.5
3.7
3.5

31.3
8.6
19.9
-.7
3.0
3.7
3.5

26.5
7.1
17.1
-1.0
2.9
3.9
3.3

28.0
7.5
18.0
-1.4
3.1
4.5
3.9

27.1
7.0
17.1
-1.0
3.2
4.2
4.0

28.3
7.6
17.5
-.8
3.5
4.3
4.0

30.6
8.8
18.7
-1.2
3.4
4.7
4.4

29.8
9.7
17.9
-2.1
3.2
5.3
4.3

28.0
8.7
17.5
-2.2
3.0
5.2
3.9

33.1
12.4
19.0
-2.7
2.9
5.5
4.3

30.9
11.9
17.4
-3.4
2.7
6.1
4.9

28.4
11.1
15.2
-3.3
2.0
5.4
5.5

30.8
11.6
14.9
-1.6
2.3
3.9
6.0

31.3
12.7
16.5
-3.0
1.8
4.9
5.1

34.5
16.2
17.2
-4.1
1.9
6.0
5.2

Change in business inventories

9

.1

.2

-.4

-3.8

-2.7

.9

-.6

.7

2.6

2.2

-4.4

-.8

.5

IV

I

II

Truck output *

1

-2.0

-3.9

2.4

-1.3

1.8

-1.8

Includes new trucks only.

Table 1.17.—Truck Output in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1982

1981

1980

1979
IV

I

II

1981
III

IV

I

II

1982
III

IV

I

II

1983
III

1

23.2

13.9

14.2

14.3

19.2

15.6

13.0

12.6

14.4

13.8

15.2

13.6

13.9

14.8

15.8

14.2

12.4

14.1

16.4

Final sales
Personal consumption expenditures
Producers' durable equipment
Net exports
Exports
Imports
Government purchases of goods and
services.

2
3
4
5
6
7
8

23.1
7.8
13.9
-.4
1.9
2.3
1.8

15.0
4.7
9.2
8
1.6
2.3
1.9

14.0
5.1
8.1
-1.0
1.5
2.5
1.9

14.4
6.6
7.1
-1.4
1.1
2.5
2.2

21.4
7.4
12.4
-.3
2.0
2.2
1.9

17.1
5.5
10.4
-.6
1.5
2.1
1.8

14.3
4.4
8.9
-.7
1.5
2.2
1.7

14.6
4.6
9.1
-1.0
1.6
2.6
2.0

13.9
4.3
8.4
.7
1.6
2.3
1.9

14.1
4.6
8.3
-.6
1.7
2.3
1.9

14.8
5.2
8.5
-.8
1.6
2.4
2.0

14.2
5.6
7.9
-1.2
1.4
2.7
1.9

13.0
5.0
7.5
-1.3
1.3
2.6
, 1.7

15.6
7.1
8.2
-1.5
1.2
2.7
1.9

14.5
6.7
7.4
-1.7
1.2
2.9
2.1

13.2
6.2
6.4
-1.7
.9
2.5
2.3

14.4
6.5
6.3
-.9
1.0
1.8
2.5

14.4
7.0
6.8
-1.5
.8
2.3
2.1

16.1
8.9
7.1
-2.0
.8
2.8
2.2

Change in business inventories

9

.1

.1

-.1

.6

-.3

.4

-.6

1.0

-.8

1.3

1.0

-.3

.2

Truck output *

-1.1

-2.1

-1.5

Table 1.18.—Farm Output, Gross Product, and Income

Farm output

1

Cash receipts from farm marketings and net 2
Commodity Credit Corporation loans.
3
Crops
4
Livestock
5
Gross rental value of farm housing
6
Farm products consumed on farms
7
Other farm income
8
Change in farm inventories
9
Crops
Livestock
10

1979

1980

1981

1982

149,944

149,005

165 195

158,746

131,655

140,487

63,071
68584
9,752
1,321
1,547
5669
4,813
856

72,692
67795
11,117
1,143
1,581
5323
-6,662
1 339

73 113
69202
12205
1,126
1 956
7593
7,307
286

73920
70 199
12916
1,059
2,072
1 420
-669
751

142,315

144,119

Less: Intermediate goods and services purchased
Intermediate goods and services, other
than rent.
Rent paid to nonoperator landlords

11
12

78,366
70,242

81,326
73,512

84,106
76,386

84,617
77,764

13

8,124

7,814

7,720

6,853

Equals: Gross farm product

14

71,578

67,679

81 089

18,869

[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

74.4

71.9

761

753

Cash receipts from farm marketings and net 2
Commodity Credit Corporation loans.
3
Crops
4
Livestock
Gross rental value of farm housing
5
6
Farm products consumed on farms .
7
Other farm income
8
Change in farm inventories
9
Crops
Livestock
10

67.9

70.6

69.2

73.0

318
36 1
2.6
7
8
24
21
3

342
363
24
6
7
23
23

o

320
372
21
6
8
34
33
1

355
374
19
5
8
8
5
3

40.3
36.5

36.9
33.6

35.5
32.4

36.4
33.4

Farm output

11
12

74,129

13

37

33

31

29

20,709

21,900

Equals: Gross farm product

14

34.2

35.0

40.6

39.0

Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital
consumption adjustment.
Indirect business tax and nontax liability
Plus: Subsidies to operators

15

8.7

9.0

9.0

9.0

16
17

2.1
43

2.1
47

2.6
44

3.2
48

Equals* Income

18

27 6

28 6

33 4

31 6

Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital
consumption adjustment.
Indirect business tax and nontax liability
Plus: Subsidies to operators

15
16
17

3,018
1,206

3,389
1,186

3,344
1,821

3,500
3,312

Equals: Income

18

53,444

46,607

58857

52,041

19
20
21
22

10,112
8,902
1,210
31,925

11,090
9,760
1,330
21,812

11,578
10109
1,469
30,466

11,922
10,467
1,455
21,527

23

892

87

86

192

24

10,515

13,618

16727

18400




-2.1

Less: Intermediate goods and services purchased
Intermediate goods and services, other
than rent.
Rent paid to nonoperator landlords

16,322

Compensation of employees
Wages and salaries
Supplements to wages and salaries
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments.
Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments.
Net interest

-2.0

Table 1.19.—Farm Output, Gross Product, and Income in Constant
Dollars

[Millions of dollars]
Line

-1.3

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 1.20.—Housing Output, Gross Product, and Income

Table 1.21.—Housing Output, Gross Product, and Income in Constant
Dollars

[Billions of dollars]
Line
Housing output 1
Nonfarm housing
Owner-occupied
Tenant-occupied
Farm housing

1
2
3
4
5

1979

1980

[Billions of 1972 dollars]

1982

1981

33

Line
227.0
217.3
1599
57.4
9.8

256.3
245.1
181 4
63.7
11.1

290.9
278.7
2063
72.4
12.2

1979

1980

1981

1982

322.4
309.5
229 1
80.4
12.9

Housing output

1

Nonfarm housing
Owner-occupied
Tenant-occupied
Farm housing

1

149.6

1548

161 5

166.4

2
3
4
5

1470
108.2
388
2.6

1524
112.8
396
2.4

1594
118.0
41 4
2.1

164.5
121.8
427
1.9

Less: Intermediate goods and services consumed 2 ... 6

36.8

40.6

43.5

46.3

7

190.3

215.6

247.3

276.1

Less: Intermediate goods and services consumed 2 ... 6

23.8

23.8

23.3

23.0

8
9
10
11

183.1
135.4
47.7
7.2

208.1
155.2
52.9
7.5

239.1
178.6
60.5
8.2

267.4
199.8
67.6
8.7

Equals: Gross housing product

7

125.8

131.0

138.2

143.4

8
9
10
11

123.9
916
32.3
19

129.3
965
32.9
16

136.8
1022
34.6
14

142.1
1062
35.9
13

Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital
consumption adjustment.
Indirect business tax and nontax liability
plus business transfer payments.
Plus: Subsidies less current surplus of government
enterprises.

12

27.5

28.1

28.7

29.4

13

33.4

35.2

37.7

39.1

14

2.0

2.1

2.3

2.4

Equals: Income

15

67.0

69.8

74.1

77.3

Equals: Gross housing product
Nonfarm housing
Owner-occupied
Tenant-occupied
Farm housing
Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital
consumption adjustment.
Capital consumption allowances
Less: Capital consumption adjustment
Indirect business tax and nontax liability
plus business transfer payments.
Plus: Subsidies less current surplus of government
enterprises.

12

54.3

60.8

66.3

69.3

13
14
15

23.3
-31.0
36.4

25.3
-35.5
38.7

27.2
-39.1
42.5

29.1
-40.2
48.1

16

3.8

4.7

5.7

6.8

Equals: Income

17

103.3

120.8

144.2

165.5

18
19

4.2
3.9

4.8
4.0

5.4
4.9

5.8
6.0

20

14.6

17.3

25.3

33.3

21

.1

.1

.3

.5

22

80.5

94.7

108.3

119.9

Compensation of employees
Proprietors' income with inventory
valuation and capital consumption
adjustments.
Rental income of persons with capital
consumption adjustment.
Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments.
Net interest
1

Equals personal consumption expenditures for housing less expenditures for other housing
as 2shown in table 2.4.
Equals intermediate goods and services consumed less the value of losses incurred by
lenders due to mortgage defaults.




Nonfarm housing
Owner-occupied
Tenant-occupied
Farm housing

1

Equals personal consumption expenditures for housing less expenditures for other housing
as 2shown in table 2.5.
Equals intermediate goods and services consumed lei ss the value of losses incurred by
lenders due to mortgage defaults.

34

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

2. Personal Income and Outlays
Table 2.1.—Personal Income and Its Disposition
Millions of dollars
Line

1979

1980

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates
1979

1981

1980

1982
IV

Personal income

III

IV

1

1,951,170

2,165,315

2,434,988

2,578,622

2,034.4

2,092.1

2,118.2

2,186.0

2,265.0

2

1,237,617

1,356,685

1,493,182

1,568,095

1,284.6

1,320.0

1,335.1

1,359.6

1,412.1

3
4
5
6
7

438,400
333,880
303,351
259,681
236,185

468,120
354,579
330,711
297,560
260,294

509,509
361,553
337,723
284,397

509,224
383,820
378,781
374,113
305,977

451.4
341.9
315.0
273.6
244.5

462.8
350.3
323.0
283.8
250.3

460.1
348.3
325.8
292.7
256.5

464.9
352.2
331.7
301.2
261.8

484.7
367.5
342.3
312.5
272.6

8

114,912

128,001

143,541

156,621

119.7

123.4

126.3

129.3

133.0

Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital con- 9
sumption adjustments.

132,095

117,446

120,166

108,975

132.2

123.1

111.7

116.7

118.3

10
11

31,925
100,170

21,812
95,634

30,466
89,700

21,527
87,448

29.5
102.7

22.3
100.7

17.9

22.7
94.0

24.3
94.0

Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment... 12
Personal dividend income
13
Personal interest income
14
Transfer payments
15

27,909
50,757
218,727
250,260

31,515
56,807
265,968
297,570

41,385
62,802
341,289
337,175

49,881
66,366
366,164
374,546

29.2
51.9
235.3
264.9

29.0
55.6
253.5
274.7

30.1
56.8
261.9
283.1

32.5
57.2
266.0
313.8

34.4
57.7
282.4
318.7

131,819
9,777
14,439
36,904
57,321
10,999
46,322

154,168
16,071
15,011
43,014
69,306
12,409
56,897

181,954
15,591
16,093
49,318
74,219
13,460
60,759

204,531
24,797
16,367
54,233
74,618
13,372
61,246

139.6
10.8
14.7
39.1
60.7
11.4
49.3

142.1
12.0
14.8
40.1
65.6
11.7
53.9

144.6
15.7
14.6
42.3
65.9
12.1
53.8

163.5
18.7
14.9
43.5
73.2
12.8
60.5

166.5
17.9
15.7
46.2
72.5
13.0
59.4

89.1

91.7

328.4

340.0

357.0

Wage and salary disbursements
Commodity—producing industries
Manufacturing
Distributive industries
Service industries
Government and government enterprises
Other labor income

Farm
Nonfarm

Old-age, survivors, disability, and health insurance benefits
Government unemployment insurance benefits
Veterans benefits
Government employees retirement benefits
Other transfer payments
Aid to families with dependent children
Other
Less: Personal contributions for social insurance
Less: Personal tax and nontax payments

16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23

81,107

88,677

104,552

112,026

83.4

87.0

24

301,015

336,461

387,367

402,085

319.5

320.4

Equals: Disposable personal income

25

1,650,155

1,828,854

2,047,621

2,176,537

1,714.9

1,771.7

1,789.8

1,846.0

1,908.0

Less: Personal outlays

26

1,553,465

1,718,663

1,912,351

2,051,098

1,627.5

1,671.0

1,676.6

1,733.7

1,793.4

27
28
29

1,507,165
45,468
832

1,668,059
49,560
1,044

1,857,180
54,253
918

1,991,861
58,109
1,128

1,578.0
48.5
1.1

1,620.5
49.5
1.0

1,626.4
49.1
1.0

1,683.4
49.3
1.1

1,741.9
50.3
1.1

30

96,690

110,191

135,270

125,439

87.3

100.8

113.2

112.2

Personal consumption expenditures
Interest paid by consumers to business
Personal transfer payments to foreigners (net)
Equals: Personal saving
Addenda:
Disposable personal income:
Total, billions of 1972 dollars
Per capita:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Population (mid-period, thousands)

31

1,015.5

1,021.6

1,054.7

1,060.2

1,020.1

1,025.8

1,012.0

1,019.2

1,029.6

32
33
34

7,331
4,512
225,106

8,032
4,487
227,694

8,906
4,587
229,916

9,377
4,567
232,118

7,584
4,511
226,117

7,814
4,524
226,733

7,871
4,451
227,376

8,095
4,469
228,033

8,345
4,503
228,631

Personal saving as percentage of disposable personal income

35

6.0

6.6

5.8

5.1

5.7

6.3

6.1

6.0




SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

35

Table 2.1.—Personal Income and Its Disposition^ Continued
Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1981

Line

1982
III

IV

1983
III

IV

1

2,338.3

2,394.2

2,490.9

2,516.6

2,528.1

2,563.2

2,591.3

2,632.0

2,657.7

2,715.0

2

1,451.7

1,478.1

1,512.3

1,530.6

1,542.8

1,563.8

1,579.8

1,586.0

1,610.7

1,649.6

3
4
5
6
7

497.5
375.9
351.5
325.3
277.4

506.9
386.1
359.4
331.1
280.8

518.2
391.6
366.9
342.1
285.1

515.5
387.5
368.4
352.4
294.2

514.8
386.2
371.6
357.6
298.7

513.7
386.8
378.1
369.1
303.0

508.9
384.8
381.9
381.2
307.7

499.5
377.4
383.5
388.5
314.5

508.6
385.4
386.4
396.4
319.2

522.6
396.9
394.9
407.5
324.6

8

137.6

141.5

145.7

149.4

152.4

155.4

158.2

160.4

164.3

170.1

Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital con- 9
sumption adjustments.

121.1

118.9

123.5

117.1

111.2

104.9

103.6

116.2

120.6

130.1

10
11

26.5
94.7

29.1
89.8

35.0
88.5

31.3
85.8

27.4
83.7

16.8
88.1

15.8
87.8

26.0
90.2

22.2
98.4

24.1
106.0

Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment... 12
Personal dividend income
13
Personal interest income
14
Transfer payments
15

37.4
59.6
308.7
324.4

39.9
61.9
329.8
327.7

42.7
64.5
361.9
345.9

45.6
65.3
364.7
350.7

47.4
65.6
364.9
354.6

49.0
65.6
371.9
364.2

50.9
66.4
364.8
380.4

52.3
67.9
363.1
399.0

54.1
68.8
357.2
398.5

54.8
69.3
356.7
403.0

171.0
16.1
16.0
47.4
73.9
13.3
60.6

173.4
15.0
15.9
49.2
74.1
13.5
60.6

190.5
14.4
16.0
49.8
75.2
13.6
61.6

192.8
16.8
16.4
50.9
73.8
13.5
60.3

195.0
19.0
16.4
51.5
72.7
13.3
59.4

197.3
23.2
16.2
54.5
73.0
13.4
59.7

209.3
24.9
16.3
55.1
74.9
13.3
61.6

216.5
32.2
16.6
55.8
77.9
13.5
64.3

217.4
29.0
16.9
56.6
78.7
14.1
64.5

220.8
27.9
16.5
58.3
79.6
14.5
65.1

23

102.2

103.6

105.6

24

370.7

Personal income
Wage and salary disbursements
Commodity—producing industries
Manufacturing
Distributive industries
Service industries
Government and government enterprises
Other labor income

Farm
Nonfarm

Old-age, survivors, disability, and health insurance benefits
Government unemployment insurance benefits
Veterans benefits
Government employees retirement benefits
Other transfer payments
Aid to families with dependent children
Other
Less: Personal contributions for social insurance
Less: Personal tax and nontax payments

16
17
.-. 18
19
20
21
22

106.8

110.7

111.7

112.7

112.9

116.5

118.6

396.1

400.2

404.2

399.8

404.1

401.8

412.2
2,302.8

Equals: Disposable personal income

25

1,967.6

2,010.4

2,092.0

2,120.5

2,127.9

2,159.0

2,191.5

2,227.8

2,255.9

Less: Personal outlays

26

1,855.3

1,890.2

1,942.3

1,961.5

1,997.0

2,031.9

2,068.4

2,107.0

2,134.2

2,213.5

27
28
29

1,802.8
51.7
.8

1,835.8
53.5
1.0

1,886.1
55.3
.9

1,904.1
56.5
1.0

1,938.9
57.0
1.1

1,972.8
57.8
1.3

2,008.8
58.5
1.1

2,046.9
59.1
1.0

2,073.0
60.2
1.0

2,151.3
61.0
1.1

30

112.2

120.2

159.0

130.8

123.0

120.8

121.7

89.4

31

Personal consumption expenditures
Interest paid by consumers to business
Personal transfer payments to foreigners (net)
Equals: Personal saving
Addenda:
Disposable personal income:
Total, billions of 1972 dollars
Per capita:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Population (mid-period, thousands)

1,040.7

1,045.6

1,068.1

1,064.3

1,055.1

1,060.2

1,059.3

1,066.1

1,073.8

1,081.6

32
33
34

4,543
229,097

8,757
4,554
229,580

9,088
4,640
230,187

9,188
4,612
230,797

9,199
4,562
231,304

9,315
4,574
231,790

9,430
4,558
232,387

9,562
4,576
232,990

9,661
4,599
233,501

9,842
4,623
233,978

Personal saving as percentage of disposable personal income

35

5.7

6.0

7.2

7.5

6.1

5.9

5.6

5.4

5.4

3.9

NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1.

Table 2.2.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product
[Billions of dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979

1980

IV

Personal
tures.

consumption

expendi-

Durable goods...
Motor vehicles and parts
Furniture and household equipment
Other
Nondurable goods
Food
Clothing and shoes
Gasoline and oil
Other nondurable goods
Fuel oil and coal
Other
Services..
Housing
Household operation...
Electricity and gas..
Other
Transportation
Other




1982

1981
III

III

IV

IV

1983
III

IV

1,507.2 1,668.1 1,857.2 1,991.9 1,578.0 1,620.5 1,626.4 1,683.4 1,741.9 1,802.8 1,835.8 1,886.1 1,904.1 1,938.9 1,972.8 2,008.8 2,046.9 2,073.0 2,151.3
213.4

214.7

236.1

244.5

216.6

220.7

96.6
81.8
35.1

90.7
86.3
37.7

101.6
93.3
41.2

109.9
93.5
41.1

94.9
85.2
36.5

97.9
85.7
37.2

600.0

668.8

733.9

761.0

635.5

651.4

658.2

311.6
99.1
66.6
122.8
16.1
106.6

345.1
104.6
84.8
134.3
18.6
115.7

375.9
115.3
94.6
148.1
20.7
127.4

396.9
119.0
91.5
153.5
20.0
133.5

103.0
75.9
129.7
18.3
111.5

335.9
102.7
80.7
132.1
18.6
113.5

339.3
102.5
84.4
132.0
18.2
113.8

693.7

784.5

887.1

986.4

725.9

748.3

767.5

236.0
99.3
47.8
51.5
56.3
302.0

266.2
113.0
57.6
55.4
61.1
344.3

302.0
128.4
66.8
61.6
65.5
391.3

334.1
144.3
76.3
68.0
68.4
439.6

248.1
103.2
50.2
53.0
59.3
315.3

254.6
106.3
52.0
54.4
59.5
327.9

260.9
110.3
55.9
54.4
59.4

80.6
83.8
36.4

223.6

236.9

233.4

230.8

239.4

242.9

243.4

252.1

258.5

278.1

94.3
89.7
39.6

103.9
92.7
40.3

98.5
93.3
41.5

107.7
93.8
42.0

96.5
93.4
40.9

106.4
91.7
41.3

107.6
93.9
41.4

109.4
93.5
40.5

116.1
94.9
41.0

118.4
97.3
42.9

134.5
100.5
43.1

671.9

693.7

716.3

730.6

741.1

747.7

749.7

754.7

766.6

773.0

777.1

799.8

347.8
104.7
85.1
134.3
18.7
115.6

357.6
108.4
88.9
138.9
18.8
120.1

367.7
112.1
93.1
143.4
20.3
123.1

373.7
115.0
94.8
147.1
20.7
126.4

378.9
116.8
95.1
150.2
21.1
129.2

383.2
117.2
95.6
151.7
20.9
130.8

388.1
118.4
94.0
149.2
19.4
129.8

394.7
119.0
89.6
151.5
19.6
131.9

400.4
119.2
91.3
155.6
20.9
134.8

404.5
119.6
91.1
157.9
20.2
137.7

411.7
120.0
87.3
158.1
17.7
140.4

420.1
126.3
90.9
162.6
20.6
142.0

797.6

824.6

849.6

871.8

901.5

925.6

949.7

975.2

998.9 1,021.8 1,037.4 1,073.4

269.6
116.8
61.0
55.8
61.8
349.5

279.6
118.5
61.4
57.1
63.7
362.9

288.0
121.7
62.9
58.8
65.4
374.5

297.0
125.8
65.1
60.7
64.5
384.5

306.6
130.5
68.2
62.3
66.0

316.5
135.5
71.0
64.5
65.9
407.7

323.8
140.2
74.9
65.3
66.5
419.2

329.7
144.6
77.2
67.4
68.0
432.9

337.8
145.2
76.2
69.0
69.8
446.1

90.1
86.1
37.6

345.2
147.1
76.8
70.3
69.2
460.3

352.6
145.9
74.1
71.8
70.1
468.8

361.0
157.2
84.3
73.0
73.1
482.1

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

36

July 1983

Table 2.3.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1980

1979
IV

Personal consumption expenditures.

927.6

Nondurable goods..
Food
Clothing and shoes
Gasoline and oil
Other nondurable goods
Fuel oil and coal
Other
Services..
Housing
Household operation
Electricity and gas
Other
Transportation
Other

956.8

IV

938.6

938.3

919.6

929.4

940.0

1982
III

IV

954.7

955.7

961.4

1983
III

IV

968.8

971.0

979.6

986.7 1,010.5

137.5

141.2

139.8

146.3

145.2

130.0

135.6

139.0

145.4

140.5

143.9

134.8

139.5

138.2

143.2

145.8

156.4

62.6
60.4
24.2

54.4
60.2
22.8

56.0
61.7
23.5

57.4
59.7
22.7

60.2
61.8
24.2

60.5
61.1
23.6

48.9
58.8
22.2

53.7
59.5
22.4

54.7
61.2
23.1

59.6
62.5
23.3

54.7
62.0
23.8

58.5
61.5
23.9

51.2
60.7
22.9

56.4
59.1
23.0

56.5
60.1
22.9

56.4
59.6
22.3

60.5
60.2
22.5

60.9
61.7
23.3

69.2
63.8
23.4

353.1

355.6

362.5

364.2

359.8

358.5

354.2

353.5

356.2

359.8

362.7

363.6

363.8

362.6

363.5

364.7

366.0

368.9

374.3

176.1
76.7
27.4
72.9
4.7
68.2

181.0
77.9
25.1
71.7
3.9
67.8

181.8
83.2
25.2
72.3
3.6
68.7

184.0
84.4
25.6
70.2
3.5
66.6

180.4
78.8
26.7
73.9
4.5
69.5

183.4
77.3
24.8
73.1
4.2
68.9

181.4
76.8
24.8
71.2
3.9
67.3

179.8
77.8
25.0
70.8
3.9
66.8

179.2
79.5
25.7
71.9
3.8
68.1

180.9
81.8
25.1
72.0
3.7
68.3

181.9
83.3
25.2
72.3
3.6
68.7

181.7
83.8
25.5
72.6
3.7
69.0

182.7
83.9
25.1
72.2
3.6
68.6

182.1
84.4
25.8
70.1
3.4
66.7

182.9
84.4
26.2
70.0
3.6
66.5

184.8
84.1
25.3
70.6
3.7
66.9

186.4
84.5
25.2
70.0
3.4
66.6

188.2
84.7
26.3
69.7
3.3
66.4

189.1
88.4
26.4
70.4
3.9
66.4

427.3

438.8

453.1

466.2

432.6

434.5

435.4

440.3

444.7

448.3

451.5

455.5

457.1

460.4

465.7

468.2

470.4

472.0

479.8

154.8
60.1
23.5
36.7
35.0
177.3

159.8
62.3
24.3
38.0
33.2
183.5

166.7
63.0
24.8
38.2
32.3
191.1

171.3
63.5
24.9
38.6
31.7
199.6

157.0
60.6
23.4
37.2
35.1
179.9

158.0
61.2
23.4
37.8
34.1
181.2

158.8
62.0
24.0
38.0
32.9
181.7

160.3
63.2
25.3
37.9
33.0
183.8

162.2
62.7
24.6
38.1
32.7
187.2

164.0
62.7
24.5
38.2
32.9
188.7

165.9
63.1
24.7
38.4
32.2
190.2

167.7
62.8
24.7
38.1
32.3
192.6

169.2
63.2
25.1
38.2
31.9
192.8

170.2
63.4
25.4
38.1
31.7
195.1

171.0
64.2
25.6
38.5
31.9
198.7

171.7
63.5
24.7
38.8
32.0
201.0

172.4
63.0
23.9
39.1
31.4
203.5

174.0
61.9
23.0
39.0
31.2
204.8

176.1
64.7
25.5
39.2
31.9
207.1

Durable goods
Motor vehicles and parts
Furniture and household equipment
Other

931.8

1981
III

Table 2.4.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Expenditure
[Millions of dollars]
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

1,507,165

1,668,059

1,857,180

1,991,861

2

330,830

365,773

398,918

421,887

Food purchased for off-premise consumption
(n.d.)
Purchased meals and beverages 1 (n.d.)
Food furnished employees (including military) (n.d.)
Food produced and consumed on farms (n.d.)
Tobacco products (n.d.)

3
4
5
6
7

223,360
82,475
4,494
1,243
19,258

248,668
90,368
5,042
1,066
20,629

270,285
98,921
5,622
1,046
23,044

282,595
107,152
6,202
978
24,960

Addenda: Food excluding alcoholic beverages (n.d.)
Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-premise consumption (n.d.)
Other alcoholic beverages (n.d.)

8
9
10

272,246
24,814
14,512

301,243
27,742
16,159

328,443
29,862
17,569

347,840
30,761
18,326

Personal consumption expenditures
Food and tobacco

Clothing, accessories, and jewelry
Shoes and other footwear (n.d.)
Clothing and accessories except footwear 2
Women's and children's (n.d.)
Men's and boys' (n.d.)
Standard clothing issued to military personnel (n.d)
Cleaning, storage, and repair of clothing and shoes (s.)
Jewelry3 and watches (d.)
Other (s.)
Personal care
Toilet articles and preparations (n.d.)
Barbershops, beauty parlors, baths, and health clubs (s.)

11

116,341

124,157

136,518

140,746

12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19

16,291
82,744
54,088
28,656
94
5,634
9,537
2,041

17,405
87,051
56,909
30,142
125
6,126
11,145
2,305

19,395
95,778
62,779
32,999
111
6,505
12,172
2,557

20,276
98,637
64,908
33,729
132
6,708
12,186
2,807

20

21,141

22,854

24,689

25,732

21
22

13,600
7,541

14,664
8,190

16,115
8,574

16,898
8,834

23

236,050

266,183

302,034

334,116

24
25
26
27

159,904
57,368
9,752
9,026

181,447
63,686
11,117
9,933

206,303
72,354
12,205
11,172

229,086
80,413
12,916
11,701

28

207,914

255,882

272,291

Furniture, including mattresses and bedsprings
(d.)
29
Kitchen and other household appliances 7 (d.)
30
China, glassware, tableware, and 8utensils (d.)
31
Other durable house furnishings9 (d.)
32
Semidurable house furnishings (n.d.)
33
Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper 34
products (n.d.).
Stationery and writing supplies (n.d.)
35
Household utilities
36
Electricity (s.)
37
Gas(s.)
38
Water and other sanitary services (s.)
39
Fuel oil and coal (n.d.)
40
Telephone and telegraph (s.)
41
Domestic
service
(s.)
42
Other 10 (s.)
43

18,236
16,837
7,888
17,978
8,926
17,639

18,640
18,048
8,560

19,853
19,508
9,388
20,192
10,453
21,267

19,151
19,557
9,554
20,642
10,697
22,348

4,983
72,336
31,329
16,509
8,393
16,105
25,152
6,461
11,478

5,593
85,645
19,471
9,485
18,591
26,985
6,585
12,346

6,115
98,284
45,246
21,552
10,746
20,740
30,101
7,042
13,679

6,067
108,206
49,709
26,582
11,916
19,999
33,917
7,626
14,526

44

144,193

166,787

197,388

221,333

45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54

15,754
4,311
36,580
12,891
4,778
60,095
9,784
4,498
2,347
2,939

17,003
4,658
43,141
14,772
5,538
70,584
11,091
4,694
3,000
3,397

18,765
5,022
51,228
17,673
7,144
84,286
13,270
6,117
3,500
3,653

19,945
4,762
57,114
19,096
8,294
97,260
14,862
7,482
3,643
3,737

Housing
Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings—space 5rent 4 (s.)
Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings —rent (s.)
Rental 6 value of farm dwellings (s.)
Other (s.)
Household operation

Medical care
Drug preparations and sundries X 1 (n.d.)
Opthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (d.)
Physicians (s.)
Dentists (s.)
Other professional services 12 (s.)
Privately controlled hospitals and sanitariums 13 (s.)
Health insurance
Medical care15and hospitalization 14 (s.)
Income loss (s.)
Workers' compensation 16 (s.)




9,550
19,517

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

37

Table 2.4.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Expenditure—Continued
[Millions of dollars]
Line
Personal business

1979

1982

1981

1980

55

83,720

93,826

99,620

113,046

Brokerage charges and investment counseling (s.)
56
Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (s.)
57
Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance 58
carriers (s.).
Expense of handling life insurance 17 (s.)
59
Legal services (s.)
60
Funeral and burial expenses (s.)
61
Other 18 (s.)
62

5,344
4,680
36,197

7,473
5,590
37,836

7,337
6,791
35,539

8,865
7,997
41,725

15,821
12,166
3,794

22,218
15,602
4,908
7,225

23,800
17,476
5,559
7,624

5,718

18,817
13,318
4,324
6,468

63

219,446

236,590

261,738

269,756

64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81

203,984
49,107
15,702
14,877
16,866
31,194
66,576

684

218,504
46,288
15,478
10,060
18,899
32,299
84,765
970
9,745
5,783
2,629
2,857
297
12,303
465
1,021
10,003
814

241,810
50,557
18,763
11,410
20,916
35,280
94,642
1,041
9,201
6,506
3,202
2,936
368
13,422
553
1,107
10,821
941

249,440
52,892
20,976
14,360
21,645
37,542
91,495
1,100
9,430
6,756
3,516
2,903
337
13,560
571
1,085
10,832
1,072

82

98,850

107,119

121,003

126,700

Books and maps (d.)
83
Magazines, newspapers, and sheet music (n.d.)
84
Nondurable toys and sport supplies (n.d.)
85
Wheel goods, durable toys, sports equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (d.)
86
Radio and television receivers, records, and musical instruments (d.)
87
Radio and television repair (s.)
88
Flowers, seeds, and potted plants (n.d.)
89
Admissions to specified spectator amusements
90
Motion picture theaters (s.)
91
Legitimate theaters and opera, and entertainments of nonprofit institutions (except 92
athletic) (s.). 20
Spectator sports
(s.)
93
Clubs and fraternal organizations except insurance 21 (s.)
94
Commercial participant amusements 22 (s.)
95
Parimutuel net receipts (s.)
96
Other 23 (s.)
,
97

6,107

6,562
8,581
13,795
15,333
22,221
3,343
4,871
6,438
2,750
1,431

7,316
9,108
15,188
16,686
24,359
3,676
5,406
6,919
2,966
1,641

7,767
9,279
15,620
16,363
24,604
3,923
4,995
7,642
3,450
1,717

13,172

2,257
2,278
6,076
1,859
15,762

2,312
2,521
7,490
2,184
20,150

2,475
2,751
8,296
2,313
23,147

Transportation
User-operated transportation
New autos (d.)
Net purchases of used autos (d.)
Other motor vehicles (d.)
Tires, tubes, accessories, and other parts (d.)
Repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, and rental (s.)
Gasoline and oil (n.d.)
Bridge, tunnel, ferry, and road tolls (s.)
Insurance premiums less claims paid (s.)
Purchased local transportation
Transit systems (s.)
Taxicab(s.)
Railway (commutation) (s.)
Purchased intercity transportaion
Railway (excluding commutation) (s.)
Bus (s.)
Airline (s.)
Other 19 (s.)
Recreation

Private education and research

891
8,771
5,429
2,494
2,670

265
10,033

407
875
8,067

7,882
12,765
15,135
20,860
2,975
4,452
6,284
2,946

1,223
2,115
2,072
5,384

1,762

98

23,315

26,413

29,558

31,503

99
100
101

9,560
7,639
6,116

10,807
8,682
6,924

12,163
9,536
7,859

13,288
9,954
8,261

Religious and welfare activities 26 (s.)

102

20,783

23,346

25,714

28,106

Foreign travel and other, net

103

4,582

4,703

4,118

6,645

104
105
106
107

12,607
1,676
9,412
289

14,274
1,894
11,101
364

15,480
2,281
13,264
379

16,460
3,220
12,554
481

Higher education 24 (s.)
Elementary and secondary schools24 (s.)
Other 2 5 (s.)

Foreign travel by U.S. residents (s.)
Expenditures abroad by U.S. residents (n.d.)
Less: Expenditures in the United States by foreigners (s.)
Less: Personal remittances in kind to foreigners (n.d.)

1
Consists of purchases (including tips) of meals and beverages from retail, service, and amusement establishments, hotels, dining and buffet cars, schools, school fraternities, institutions, clubs,
and industrial lunchrooms.
2
Includes luggage.
3
Consists of watch, clock, and jewelry repairs, costume and dress suit rental, and miscellaneous personal services related to clothing.
4
Consists of rent for space and for heating and plumbing facilities, water heaters, lighting fixtures, kitchen cabinets, linoleum, storm windows and doors, window screens, and screen doors, but
excludes rent for appliances, furniture, fuel, and electricity.
5
Consists of space rent (see footnote 4) and rent for appliances, furnishings, and furniture.
6
Consists of transient hotels, motels, clubs, schools, and other group housing.
7
Consists of refrigerators and freezers, cooking ranges, dishwashers, laundry equipment, stoves, air conditioners, sewing machines, vacuum cleaners, and other appliances.
8
Includes such house furnishings as floor coverings, comforters, quilts, blankets, pillows, picture frames, mirrors, art products, portable lamps, and clocks. Also includes writing equipment and
hand, power, and garden tools.
9
Consists largely of textile house furnishings including piece goods allocated to house furnishing use. Also includes lamp shades, brooms, and brushes.
10
Consists of maintenance services for appliances and house furnishings, moving and warehouse expenses, postage and express charges, premiums for fire and theft insurance on personal
property
less claims paid, and miscellaneous household operation services.
1J
Excludes drug preparations and related products dispensed by physicians, hospitals, and other medical services.
12
Consists of osteopathic physicians, chiropractors, private duty nurses, chiropodists, podiatrists, and others providing health and allied services, not elsewhere classified.
13
Consists of current expenditures (including capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment) of nonprofit hospitals, sanitariums, and nursing homes, and payments by
patients to proprietary hospitals, sanitariums, and nursing homes.
14
Consists of (1) premiums, less benefits and dividends, for health, hospitalization, and accidental death and dismemberment insurance provided by commercial insurance carriers; and (2)
administrative expenses (including capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment) of Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans and of other independent prepaid and self—insured
health
plans.
15
Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for income loss insurance.
16
Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for privately administered workmen's compensation.
17
Consists of operating expenses of life insurance carriers and non — insured pension plans, and premiums less benefits and dividends of fraternal benefit societies. Excludes expenses allocated
by commercial carriers to accident and health insurance.
18
Consists of current expenditures (including capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment) of trade unions and professional associations, employment agency fees,
money order fees, spending for classified advertisements, and other personal business services.
19
Consists of baggage charges, coastal and inland water
«rway fares,
"
travel' agents'
' ' fees,
"
and airport bus fares.
20
Consists of admissions to professional and amateur athletic events, and to racetracks including horse, dog, and auto.
2
* Consists of dues and fees excluding insurance premiums.
22
Consists of billiard parlors; bowling alleys; dancing, riding, shooting, skating, and swimming places; amusement devices and parks; golf courses; sightseeing buses and guides; private flying
operations;
and other commercial participant amusements.
23
Consists of net receipts of lotteries and expenditures for purchases of pets and pet care services, cable TV, film processing, photographic studios, sporting and recreation camps, and
recreational
sevices, not elsewhere classified.
24
Equals current expenditures (including capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment) less receipts, such as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments, accounted
for separately in consumer expenditures, and less expenditures for research and development financed under contracts or grants.
25
Consists of fees paid to commercial, business, trade, and correspondence schools, and for educational services, not elsewhere classified, and current expenditures (including capital
consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment) by research organizations and foundations for education and research.
26
Equals current expenditures (including capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment) of religious, social welfare, foreign relief, and political organizations, museums,
libraries, and foundations. The expenditures are net of receipts, such as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments, accounted for separately in consumer expenditures, and excludes relief
payments within the United States and expenditures by foundations for education and research.
NOTE—Consumer durable goods are designated (d.), nondurable goods (n.d.), and services (s.).




38

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 2.5.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Line
Personal consumption expenditures
Durable goods
Motor vehicles and parts
Newautos(65)
Net purchases of used autos (66)
Other motor vehicles (67)
Tires, tubes, accessories, and other parts (68)
Furniture and household equipment
Furniture, including mattresses and bedsprings (29)
Kitchen and other household appliances (30)
China, glassware, tableware, and utensils (31)
Radio and television receivers, records, and musical instruments (87)
Other durable house furnishings (32)
Other
Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (46)
Wheel goods, durable toys, sports equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (86)
Jewelry and watches (18)
.
Books and maps (83)
Nondurable goods
Food
Food purchased for off-premise consumption (3)
Purchased meals and beverages (4)
Food furnished employees (including military) and food produced and consumed on
farms (5+6).
Addenda: Food excluding alcoholic beverages (8)
Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-prem ise consumption (9)
Other alcoholic beverages (10)
Clothing and shoes
Shoes and other footwear (12)
Women's and children's clothing and accessories (14)
Men's and boys' clothing and accessories (15+16)
Gasoline and oil (70)
Fuel oil and coal (40)
Other
Tobacco products (7)
Toilet articles and preparations (21)
Semidurable house furnishings (33)
Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and
paper products (34).
Drug preparations and sundries (45)
Nondurable toys and sports supplies (85)
Stationery and writing supplies (35)
Net foreign remittances (105 less 107)
Other (84 + 89)
Services
Housing
Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings —space rent (24)
Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings—rent (25)
Rental value of farm dwellings (26)
Other (27)
Household operation
Electricity (37)
Gas (38)
Water and other sanitary services (39)
Telephone and telegraph (41)
Domestic service (42)
Other (43)
Transportation
User-operated transportation (69+71 + 72)
Purchased local transportation
Transit systems (74)
Other (75+76)
Purchased intercity transportation
Railway (excluding commutation) (78)
Bus (79)
Airline (80)
Other (81)
Other
Personal care
Cleaning, storage, and repair of clothing and shoes (17)
Barbershops, beauty parlors, baths, and health clubs (22)
Other (19)
Medical care
Physicians (47)
Dentists (48)
Other professional services (49)
Privately controlled hospitals and sanitariums (50)
Health insurance (51)
Personal business
Brokerage charges and investment counselling (56)
Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (57)
Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers (58).
Other (59+60+61+62)
Recreation
Admissions to specified spectator amusements (90)
Other (88+94+95+96+97)
Private education and research
Higher education (99)
Elementary and secondary schools (100)
Other (101)
Religious and welfare activities (102)
Net foreign travel (104 less 106)

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23

1980

147.2
62.6
32.9
8.1
10.0
11.6
60.4
12.5
11.9
4.5
18.8
12.8
24.2
2.9
10.8
6.7
3.8
353.1
176.1
126.0
47.0
3.1

1981

1982

931.8
137.5
54.4
28.7
7.8
6.2
11.6
60.2
11.8
12.1
4.4
19.6
12.3
22.8
2.9
10.0
6.3
3.7
355.6
181.0
130.8
47.1
3.0

956.8
141.2
56.0
29.6
7.6
6.7
12.1
61.7
11.8
12.4
4.4
21.1
12.1
23.5
2.9
10.2
6.6
3.7
362.5
181.8
131.4
47.3
3.1

970.2
139.8
57.4
29.8
7.3
8.1
12.3
59.7
10.9
11.7
4.3
21.3
11.6
22.7
2.6
9.7
6.8
3.5
364.2
184.0
132.4
48.5
3.2

24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37

149.3
17.3
9.5
76.7
11.5
43.5
21.7
27.4
4.7
68.2
13.7
8.4
5.7

153.2
17.8
9.9
77.9
11.4
44.7
21.7
25.1
3.9
67.8
13.6
8.3
5.6
8.5

153.9
18.0
9.9
83.2
12.1
48.6
22.5
25.2

68.7
14.0
8.3
5.8
8.4

156.5
17.8
9.8
84.4
12.3
49.8
22.3
25.6
3.5
66.6
13.7
8.0
5.4
8.3

38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80

10.8
9.7
3.0
.6
7.7
427.3
154.8
108.2
38.8
2.6
5.2
60.1
16.9
6.6
4.8
21.6
3.6
6.7
35.0
25.0
3.8
2.0
1.8
6.2
.2
.5
5.1
.4
177.3
8.3
3.2
3.9
1.3
71.7
20.1
7.9
2.7
33.1
7.8
48.5
2.8
3.3
20.0

10.7
9.8
3.1
.6
7.5
438.8
159.8
112.8
39.6
2.4
5.1
62.3
17.7
6.6
5.1
22.7
3.2
6.9
33.2
24.0
3.5
1.8
1.7
5.7
.2
.5
4.6
.4
183.5
8.2
3.0
3.9
1.3
75.0
21.5
8.1
2.8
34.6
7.9
50.3
3.6
3.4
20.4

10.6
10.3
3.1
.7
7.4
453.1
166.7
118.0
41.4
2.1
5.2
63.0
18.3
6.4
5.2
23.1
3.1
6.8
32.3
24.0
3.3
1.7
1.6
5.0
.2
.5
4.0
.4
191.1
7.9
2.9
3.8
1.3
79.6
23.0
8.9
3.3
36.6
7.8
50.9
3.5
3.6
19.6

10.2
10.3
2.9
1.0
6.7
466.2
171.3
121.8
42.7
1.9
4.9
63.5
18.3
6.6
5.1
23.6
3.3
6.6
31.7
24.0
3.1
1.7
1.5
4.6
.2
.4
3.6
.4
199.6
7.7
2.8
3.7
1.3
82.0
23.5
8.9
3.6
38.5
7.6
52.8
3.8
3.6
21.2

81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90

22.4
22.2
4.3
17.9
13.1
5.8
3.9
3.4
11.8
1.8

22.9
23.4
4.1
19.3
13.3
6.0
4.0
3.3
11.7
1.6

24.2
26.4
4.2
22.2
13.6
6.1
4.0
3.4
11.7
1.0

24.1
28.1
4.4
23.7
13.6
6.2
4.0
3.5
12.4
3.0

NOTE.—The figures in parentheses are the line numbers of the corresponding items in table 2.4.




1979

39

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 2.6.—Personal Income by Type of Income
[Billions of dollars]
Wage and salary disbursements

Year and month

Personal
income

All
industries

Commodityproducing
Total

Manufacturing

Distributive

Service

Government
and
government
enterprises

Other
labor
income

Proprietors' income
with inventory
valuation and
capital
consumption
adjustments
Farm

Nonfarm

Rental
income of
persons
with
capital
consumption
adjustment

Personal
dividend
income

Personal Transfer
interest
Payments
income

Less:
Personal
contributions
for
social
insurance

Addendum:
Total
nonfarm1
income

1979

1,951.2

1,237.6

438.4

333.9

303.4

259.7

236.2

114.9

31.9

100.2

27.9

50.8

218.7

250.3

81.1

1,899.3

1980
1981
1982

2,165.3
2,435.0
2,578.6

1,356.7
1,493.2
1,568.1

468.1
509.5
509.2

354.6
385.3
383.8

330.7
361.6
378.8

297.6
337.7
374.1

260.3
284.4
306.0

128.0
143.5
156.6

21.8
30.5
21.5

95.6
89.7
87.4

31.5
41.4
49.9

56.8
62.8
66.4

266.0
341.3
366.2

297.6
337.2
374.5

88.7
104.6
112.0

2,119.5
2,377.0
2,527.6

1979
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

1,853.4
1,870.2
1,891.8
1,902.2
1,915.8
1,931.9
1,965.3
1,983.1
1,997.4
2,016.8
2,034.2
2,052.2

1,183.0
1,192.0
1,204.7
1,209.0
1,216.5
1,229.1
1,243.3
1,253.2
1,267.0
1,273.9
1,284.8
1,295.0

420.2
423.9
429.5
430.1
433.3
436.6
442.0
443.0
448.1
449.1
450.4
454.6

322.7
325.3
328.3
328.4
330.0
332.3
336.8
336.6
340.5
341.0
341.0
343.6

289.8
292.4
295.7
293.9
297.3
302.0
304.6
308.0
311.2
311.9
316.1
317.1

243.9
246.7
249.1
251.5
252.7
256.1
261.0
264.8
269.4
270.2
273.5
277.3

229.0
229.1
230.3
233.4
233.1
234.4
235.7
237.4
238.3
242.7
244.7
246.0

108.9
110.2
111.4
112.2
113.3
114.3
115.5
116.5
117.5
118.7
119.7
120.8

30.9
32.3
34.3
34.9
35.2
35.2
33.6
30.8
27.5
29.3
30.3
28.8

95.4
96.2
97.6
97.4
99.1
100.4
101.8
103.3
102.7
103.1
102.2
102.8

28.1
28.3
28.3
26.7
27.3
26.9
27.2
28.0
26.5
29.1
29.2
29.3

49.7
50.1
50.1
50.2
50.7
50.7
50.5
50.6
50.8
51.3
51.8
52.7

201.1
204.2
207.2
209.5
211.8
214.3
219.1
223.8
228.1
231.8
235.0
239.0

234.8
235.9
237.9
241.6
242.2
242.0
255.6
258.7
259.7
262.3
264.6
267.8

78.5
78.9
79.6
79.3
80.2
80.8
81.5
81.8
82.5
82.8
83.4
84.0

1,804.0
1,819.0
1,838.1
1,847.8
1,860.9
1,876.9
1,911.6
1,932.1
1,949.3
1,966.7
1,982.9
2,002.2

1980
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

2,079.2
2,089.7
2,107.5
2,108.5
2,116.2
2,129.8
2,165.4
2,184.0
2,208.5
2,239.4
2,264.5
2,291.2

1,310.3
1,319.0
1,330.6
1,329.2
1,334.6
1,341.4
1,344.5
1,360.2
1,374.0
1,397.5
1,413.9
1,425.1

460.5
463.0
464.9
461.9
459.5
459.0
457.0
465.8
471.7
478.2
485.3
490.6

348.4
350.0
352.5
350.2
347.7
347.0
346.3
352.9
357.4
362.4
368.3
371.9

321.1
322.2
325.8
324.5
326.3
326.5
329.1
331.4
334.7
340.2
342.4
344.3

280.0
283.5
287.9
289.1
291.8
297.2
298.0
301.1
304.6
308.2
313.4
316.0

248.7
250.3
251.9
253.8
257.0
258.6
260.4
261.9
263.0
270.9
272.7
274.3

122.2
123.3
124.7
125.4
126.3
127.2
128.2
129.2
130.4
131.6
133.0
134.4

25.1
21.9
20.0
18.5
16.5
18.6
21.3
23.2
23.6
23.7
24.3
25.0

102.5
101.0
98.7
96.1
92.9
92.6
93.9
93.1
95.0
94.5
93.0
94.5

29.1
28.6
29.4
29.8
30.1
30.5
31.5
32.5
33.7
33.6
34.4
35.2

55.0
55.5
56.2
56.5
56.7
57.1
57.0
57.3
57.3
57.3
57.5
58.3

247.7
253.8
258.9
260.2
261.9
263.7
264.8
266.0
267.3
273.9
282.3
291.1

274.3
273.6
276.0
279.3
284.2
285.9
312.3
311.9
317.1
318.3
318.0
319.9

86.9
87.2
87.0
86.5
86.8
87.3
88.1
89.2
89.9
91.1
91.8
92.3

2,032.1
2,045.0
2,064.0
2,066.4
2,076.0
2,087.3
2,119.9
2,136.4
2,160.1
2,190.7
2,215.2
2,240.9

1981
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

2,316.9
2,336.5
2,361.4
2,375.1
2,390.6
2,416.9
2,463.7
2,494.6
2,514.3
2,513.4
2,518.7
2,517.6

1,444.5
1,450.3
1,460.3
1,468.0
1,477.5
1,489.0
1,500.6
1,513.6
1,522.8
1,529.1
1,532.4
1,530.2

497.7
494.7
500.1
502.4
506.1
512.1
516.7
519.4
518.5
518.7
516.1
511.8

376.2
373.7
377.9
382.6
386.7
388.9
390.8
392.5
391.5
390.9
387.8
383.7

349.1
351.6
353.8
357.5
359.4
361.2
363.5
367.0
370.1
368.1
368.9
368.3

321.6
326.6
327.7
328.4
331.2
333.7
337.1
343.0
346.3
349.5
353.1
354.5

276.1
277.4
278.7
279.7
280.8
281.9
283.3
284.3
287.9
292.8
294.3
295.6

136.0
137.6
139.1
140.5
141.3
142.6
144.3
145.7
147.1
148.3
149.4
150.4

25.7
26.4
27.3
27.8
28.6
30.8
33.9
36.5
34.7
32.6
31.3
30.0

95.0
94.7
94.3
91.1
89.8
88.6
89.0
88.8
87.7
86.3
86.1
85.0

35.9
37.3
39.1
39.2
39.9
40.5
41.4
42.4
44.1
44.8
45.6
46.3

59.0
59.8
59.9
61.1
61.9
62.7
63.9
64.5
65.0
65.2
65.3
65.4

300.1
309.0
317.1
323.8
328.1
337.4
350.4
363.7
371.7
366.1
364.3
363.8

322.7
323.6
326.9
326.7
327.1
329.3
345.1
345.3
347.2
347.8
351.2
353.2

102.0
102.1
102.6
103.0
103.5
104.1
105.1
105.8
106.0
106.7
106.9
106.8

2,265.6
2,284.1
2,307.7
2,320.4
2,334.8
2,358.6
2,402.0
2,430.1
2,451.5
2,452.4
2,458.7
2,458.7

1982
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

2,518.1
2,530.2
2,535.8
2,549.0
2,568.0
2,572.5
2,589.8
2,586.7
2,597.4
2,617.8
2,633.1
2,645.0

1,536.5
1,545.8
1,546.1
1,551.8
1,568.0
1,571.7
1,578.9
1,579.2
1,581.2
1,583.1
1,583.1
1,591.8

514.3
516.4
513.8
512.6
514.6
513.7
512.1
508.7
505.9
501.0
498.6
499.0

385.0
388.0
385.7
385.7
387.2
387.7
386.9
384.6
382.8
378.3
377.2
376.7

369.1
372.9
372.9
374.2
379.9
380.1
381.2
382.4
382.3
383.0
382.3
385.2

355.5
358.0
359.4
363.5
370.5
373.3
377.8
381.2
384.7
386.5
387.7
391.3

297.6
298.6
300.0
301.5
303.0
304.6
307.8
306.9
308.3
312.6
314.5
316.4

151.4
152.4
153.4
154.4
155.4
156.4
157.4
158.1
159.1
159.7
160.4
161.2

29.5
28.5
24.4
19.6
15.4
15.5
15.0
14.1
18.3
23.8
28.1
26.1

83.4
83.0
84.7
86.4
88.7
89.1
87.7
87.5
88.3
89.1
89.0
92.5

46.9
47.3
48.0
48.4
48.9
49.7
50.5
50.8
51.4
52.8
52.9
51.0

65.5
65.7
65.6
65.6
65.7
65.5
65.9
66.5
66.8
67.4
68.0
68.3

363.6
364.6
366.5
371.5
373.0
371.1
368.2
363.9
362.2
361.7
363.3
364.3

351.7
353.9
358.0
362.4
364.8
365.6
378.9
379.2
383.1
392.9
401.0
403.0

110.4
110.9
110.9
111.1
112.0
112.1
112.7
112.8
112.8
112.8
112.7
113.1

2,459.5
2,472.4
2,482.0
2,499.9
2,523.0
2,527.4
2,545.2
2,543.1
2,549.7
2,564.5
2,575.5
2,589.4

1983
January
February
March
April
May
June

2,652.6
2,650.5
2,670.1
2,690.5
2,720.6
2,734.1

1,608.9
1,606.3
1,616.8
1,632.1
1,653.3
1,663.4

508.6
507.4
510.0
517.1
522.4
528.4

383.8
384.7
387.9
393.5
396.9
400.2

386.6
384.2
388.4
390.7
395.5
398.4

395.8
395.5
397.8
402.4
408.4
411.9

317.9
319.2
320.6
321.9
327.1
324.7

162.6
164.2
166.0
168.1
170.1
172.2

22.9
21.3
22.3
23.6
24.4
24.1

96.7
97.8
100.8
103.1
106.6
108.3

53.8
54.1
54.3
54.6
54.8
55.0

68.7
68.9
68.9
69.0
69.4
69.5

360.0
356.0
355.7
355.0
356.6
358.4

395.4
398.1
402.0
402.7
403.9
402.5

116.6
116.2
116.8
117.6
118.6
119.4

2,600.2
2,599.7
2,618.4
2,637.5
2,666.8
2,680.5

. ..

1
Equals personal income less the following farm components: wages and salaries, other labor income, proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments, and
net interest. These components plus employer contributions for social insurance and farm corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments equal income shown
annually in Table 1.18.




40

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 2.7.—Personal Income and Its Disposition
Billions of dollars

Disposable personal income

Less: Personal outlays
Year and month

Personal
income

Less:
Personal
tax and
nontax
payments

Equals:
Disposable
personal
income

Total

Personal
consumption
expenditures

Interest
paid by
consumers
to business

Per capita
Personal
transfer
payments
to
foreigners
(net)

Equals:
Personal
saving

Total,
billions of
1972
dollars

Current
dollars

1972
dollars

Population
(mid — period,
thousands)

Personal
saving as
a percent
of
disposable
personal1
income
(percent)

1979

1,951.2

301.0

1,650.2

1,553.5

1,507.2

45.5

.8

96.7

1,015.7

7,331

4,512

225,106

5.9

1980
1981
1982

2,165.3
2,435.0
2,578.6

336.5
387.4
402.1

1,828.9
2,047.6
2,176.5

1,718.7
1,912.4
2,051.1

1,668.1
1,857.2
1,991.9

49.6
54.3
58.1

1.0
.9
1.1

110.2
135.3
125.4

1,021.6
1,054.7
1,060.2

8,032
8,906
9,377

4,487
4,587
4,567

227,694
229,916
232,118

6.0
6.6
5.8

1,853.4
1,870.2
1,891.8
1,902.2
1,915.8
1,931.9
1,965.3
1,983.1
1,997.4
2,016.8
2,034.2
2,052.2

281.6
284.4
286.9
287.5
292.3
298.0
303.9
307.1
311.9
315.3
319.3
323.9

1,571.8
1,585.7
1,604.9
1,614.6
1,623.5
1,633.9
1,661.3
1,676.0
1,685.5
1,701.4
1,714.8
1,728.3

1,472.1
1,492.1
1,504.1
1,507.5
1,523.7
1,532.3
1,550.1
1,575.1
1,601.8
1,609.8
1,628.6
1,644.1

1,429.6
1,449.0
1,460.4
1,463.1
1,478.5
1,486.5
1,503.5
1,527.7
1,553.8
1,560.7
1,579.0
1,594.2

41.8
42.4
43.1
43.8
44.5
45.2
45.8
46.5
47.2
47.9
48.5
48.9

.8
.7
.6
.7
.7
.7
.8
.8
.9
1.2
1.1
1.1

99.6
93.6
100.8
107.1
99.8
101.5
111.2
101.0
83.6
91.6
86.2
84.2

1,008.8
1,009.1
1,015.5
1,013.9
1,011.5
1,009.8
1,019.7
1,021.3
1,018.6
1,018.8
1,020.7
1,020.7

7,018
7,074
7,154
7,191
7,224
7,263
7,378
7,435
7,469
7,532
7,584
7,636

4,504
4,502
4,527
4,516
4,501
4,489
4,529
4,531
4,514
4,510
4,514
4,510

223,973
224,150
224,333
224,529
224,734
224,948
225,174
225,419
225,662
225,893
226,120
226,339

6.0
6.2
6.3
6.4
6.3
6.4
6.3
5.9
5.5
5.1
5.1
5.0

1980
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

2,079.2
2,089.7
2,107.5
2,108.5
2,116.2
2,129.8
2,165.4
2,184.0
2,208.5
2,239.4
2,264.5
2,291.2

317.8
319.9
323.6
324.8
328.4
332.0
334.7
340.2
345.1
351.9
357.3
361.9

1,761.5
1,769.9
1,783.8
1,783.8
1,787.8
1,797.7
1,830.7
1,843.8
1,863.4
1,887.5
1,907.2
1,929.3

1,671.3
1,665.9
1,675.7
1,667.3
1,670.4
1,692.0
1,719.4
1,735.0
1,746.8
1,776.6
1,790.0
1,813.7

1,621.0
1,615.3
1,625.1
1,616.9
1,620.3
1,642.1
1,669.3
1,684.6
1,696.3
1,725.3
1,738.7
1,761.8

49.3
49.6
49.6
49.4
49.1
48.9
49.0
49.3
49.6
49.9
50.2
50.8

1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.1
1.1
1.0
1.3
1.1
1.0

90.2
104.0
108.2
116.5
117.4
105.7
111.3
108.8
116.6
110.9
117.2
115.6

1,031.2
1,025.0
1,021.1
1,015.5
1,010.7
1,009.8
1,020.8
1,018.0
1,018.8
1,025.6
1,029.0
1,034.0

7,775
7,806
7,861
7,853
7,863
7,898
8,036
8,086
8,164
8,262
8,342
8,432

4,552
4,521
4,499
4,470
4,445
4,437
4,481
4,464
4,463
4,489
4,501
4,519

226,540
226,724
226,936
227,151
227,373
227,605
227,813
228,034
228,253
228,457
228,636
228,799

5.3
5.7
6.2
6.4
6.3
6.2
6.0
6.1
6.0
6.1
6.0
6.0

1981
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

2,316.9
2,336.5
2,361.4
2,375.1
2,390.6
2,416.9
2,463.7
2,494.6
2,514.3
2,513.4
2,518.7
2,517.6

367.1
370.2
374.9
377.6
385.0
388.7
394.4
399.8
402.5
393.0
396.3
398.9

1,949.8
1,966.3
1,986.5
1,997.5
2,005.6
2,028.2
2,069.3
2,094.8
2,111.9
2,120.4
2,122.4
2,118.7

1,836.5
1,854.3
1,875.3
1,878.7
1,887.1
1,905.0
1,920.4
1,950.0
1,956.4
1,949.0
1,962.1
1,973.5

1,784.5
1,801.8
1,822.1
1,824.7
1,832.6
1,850.0
1,864.9
1,893.8
1,899.5
1,891.6
1,904.6
1,915.9

51.2
51.7
52.3
53.0
53.5
54.0
54.6
55.2
56.0
56.4
56.5
56.6

.8
.8
.9
1.0
1.0
1.0
.9
.9
.9
1.0
1.0
1.0

113.3
112.1
111.2
118.8
118.5
123.2
148.9
144.9
155.4
171.4
160.3
145.2

1,037.9
1,040.6
1,043.6
1,044.1
1,042.3
1,050.3
1,063.3
1,070.4
1,070.4
1,069.6
1,065.1
1,058.4

8,516
8,583
8,665
8,707
8,736
8,828
8,998
9,101
9,166
9,194
9,196
9,173

4,533
4,542
4,552
4,551
4,540
4,572
4,624
4,650
4,646
4,638
4,615
4,582

228,951
229,095
229,246
229,407
229,577
229,758
229,962
230,188
230,413
230,619
230,800
230,972

5.8
5.7
5.7
5.8
6.0
6.4
6.7
7.2
7.5
7.7
7.5
7.1

2,518.1
2,530.2
2,535.8
2,549.0
2,568.0
2,572.5
2,589.8
2,586.7
2,597.4
2,617.8
2,633.1
2,645.0

396.7
402.9
400.9
393.4
406.9
412.1
398.9
400.4
400.2
402.9
403.5
406.0

2,121.4
2,127.3
2,134.9
2,155.6
2,161.1
2,160.4
2,191.0
2,186.3
2,197.2
2,214.8
2,229.6
2,239.1

1,977.7
2,007.0
2,006.4
2,017.9
2,039.0
2,038.8
2,054.5
2,064.6
2,086.1
2,090.3
2,110.2
2,120.5

1,919.8
1,948.8
1,948.0
1,959.1
1,979.9
1,979.4
1,995.1
2,005.1
2,026.4
2,030.5
2,050.2
2,060.0

56.8
57.0
57.2
57.5
57.8
58.2
58.3
58.5
58.7
58.7
59.0
59.5

1.1
1.1
1.2
1.2
1.3
1.3
1.1
1.1
1.1
1.0
1.0
1.0

143.7
120.3
128.5
137.7
122.0
121.6
136.4
121.6
111.0
124.5
119.4
118.5

1,052.1
1,055.9
1,057.4
1,063.9
1,063.5
1,053.3
1,062.4
1,057.1
1,058.5
1,060.9
1,066.8
1,070.8

9,178
9,197
9,224
9,307
9,324
9,313
9,437
9,408
9,446
9,514
9,569
9,603

4,552
4,565
4,568
4,593
4,588
4,541
4,576
4,549
4,551
4,557
4,579
4,592

231,146
231,306
231,460
231,618
231,785
231,966
232,171
232,391
232,600
232,803
232,993
233,175

6.4
6.1
6.0
6.0
5.9
5.8
5.8
5.6
5.4
5.3
5.4
5.4

2,652.6
2,650.5
2,670.1
2,690.5
2,720.6
2,734.1

399.5
402.3
403.6
401.7
415.0
419.9

2,253.2
2,248.2
2,266.5
2,288.8
2,305.6
2,314.1

2,127.1
2,129.3
2,146.2
2,184.3
2,217.4
2,238.8

2,066.2
2,068.3
2,084.6
2,122.3
2,155.3
2,176.4

59.9
60.0
60.6
60.9
61.0
61.2

1.0
1.0
1.0
1.1
1.1
1.1

126.0
118.8
120.3
104.5
88.1
75.4

1,073.7
1,070.3
1,077.2
1,078.4
1,083.5

9,656
9,628
9,700
9,789
9,854
9,883

4,601
4,584
4,610
4,612
4,631

233,350
233,500
233,652
233,814
233,976
234,145

5.4
5.4
5.1
4.6
3.9

1979
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

1982
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
1983
January
February
March
April
May
June
1

....

....

...

....
,

Monthly estimates equal the three-month moving average of personal saving as a percentage of the three-month moving average of disposable personal income.




41

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 2.8.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product
[Billions of dollars]
Durable goods
Year and month

Personal
consumption
expenditures

Total

Motor
vehicles
and
parts

Furniture and
household
equipment

Nondurable goods

Other

Total

Food

Services

Clothing
and
shoes

Gasoline
and oil

Other

Total

Housing

Household
operation

Transportation

Other

1979

1,507.2

213.4

96.6

81.8

35.1

600.0

311.6

99.1

66.6

122.8

693.7

236.0

99.3

56.3

302.0

1980
1981
1982

1,668.1
1,857.2
1,991.9

214.7
236.1
244.5

90.7
101.6
109.9

86.3
93.3
93.5

37.7
41.2
41.1

668.8
733.9
761.0

345.1
375.9
396.9

104.6
115.3
119.0

84.8
94.6
91.5

134.3
148.1
153.5

784.5
887.1
986.4

266.2
302.0
334.1

113.0
128.4
144.3

61.1
65.5
68.4

344.3
391.3
439.6

1979
January
February
March.
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

1,429.6
1,449.0
1,460.4
1,463.1
1,478.5
1,486.5
1,503.5
1,527.7
1,553.8
1,560.7
1,579.0
1,594.2

207.6
211.8
214.0
209.3
211.8
205.0
213.6
216.0
222.5
213.7
216.4
219.7

98.2
99.5
100.6
95.3
96.8
88.3
96.9
96.6
101.6
93.2
94.4
97.3

76.9
78.3
79.6
79.5
79.9
81.2
81.9
84.0
84.6
84.6
85.3
85.7

32.4
33.9
33.8
34.6
35.0
35.5
34.8
35.4
36.2
36.0
36.7
36.7

562.6
570.0
575.3
578.4
586.0
593.8
597.2
608.7
622.0
624.8
636.7
644.9

297.9
299.7
302.3
303.5
305.4
310.2
310.6
310.6
318.2
321.1
326.2
333.0

94.7
94.7
97.5
96.3
97.6
97.2
99.2
101.0
102.1
101.6
103.5
104.1

56.0
58.5
58.6
60.2
61.9
64.5
65.1
72.1
74.2
74.9
76.5
76.4

113.9
117.0
116.9
118.3
120.9
121.8
122.3
125.1
127.6
127.2
130.5
131.5

659.5
667.2
671.2
675.4
680.8
687.7
692.8
703.0
709.3
722.2
726.0
729.5

224.0
225.9
227.0
228.7
231.7
233.8
235.8
239.1
242.2
246.3
248.1
250.0

95.5
97.6
97.0
97.8
97.5
98.0
98.0
100.3
100.6
102.4
104.1
103.0

52.2
53.0
54.2
54.9
55.6
56.6
56.8
56.9
58.0
59.3
59.5
59.0

287.8
290.8
293.0
294.0
296.0
299.3
302.2
306.7
308.4
314.3
314.3
317.4

1980
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

1,621.0
1,615.3
1,625.1
1,616.9
1,620.3
1,642.1
1,669.3
1,684.6
1,696.3
1,725.3
1,738.7
1,761.8

228.3
220.4
213.4
201.4
197.7
203.3
214.8
213.6
213.2
222.9
223.0
224.8

104.0
97.6
92.2
81.6
77.0
83.2
91.8
89.8
88.6
95.1
93.4
94.3

87.0
85.6
84.3
83.7
84.3
83.3
85.7
86.3
86.4
88.4
90.1
90.4

37.3
37.2
36.9
36.1
36.4
36.7
37.3
37.4
38.2
39.4
39.4
40.1

652.1
647.6
654.6
655.0
655.8
663.7
665.9
673.9
675.9
685.4
694.5
701.3

336.9
332.6
338.3
339.3
337.0
341.6
344.6
347.7
351.0
353.2
357.9
361.8

104.7
102.1
101.4
101.8
102.8
102.9
103.5
106.2
104.6
107.7
108.9
108.5

78.8
80.5
82.7
83.7
83.9
85.7
84.4
85.6
85.3
87.3
88.6
90.8

131.7
132.4
132.3
130.3
132.1
133.5
133.5
134.4
135.0
137.2
139.2
140.3

740.7
747.3
757.0
760.6
766.7
775.2
788.6
797.1
807.1
817.0
821.2
835.7

252.6
254.7
256.5
257.5
260.8
264.5
266.8
269.3
272.7
276.8
279.5
282.6

326.3
327.4
330.1
332.1
337.1
341.2
345.5
348.1
354.7
359.6
361.3
367.7

59.9
59.4
59.3
59.5
58.5
60.2
61.3
61.7
62.4
63.2
62.9
64.9

326.3
327.4
330.1
332.1
337.1
341.2
345.5
348.1
354.7
359.6
361.3
367.7

1981
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

1,784.5
1,801.8
1,822.1
1,824.7
1,832.6
1,850.0
1,864.9
1,893.8
1,899.5
1,891.6
1,904.6
1,915.9

231.1
237.9
241.8
233.9
232.9
233.3
236.2
250.9
243.5
230.3
230.6
231.3

98.4
105.4
107.9
98.9
98.8
97.8
100.4
114.3
108.4
96.1
96.9
96.4

92.6
92.6
92.9
93.4
92.6
94.0
93.0
94.4
94.0
93.5
93.0
93.6

40.0
40.0
40.9
41.5
41.6
41.5
42.8
42.2
41.1
40.7
40.7
41.3

709.4
715.9
723.6
728.2
727.7
735.8
736.0
741.4
745.8
744.2
747.8
751.0

363.0
368.0
372.1
372.7
372.4
375.9
376.5
378.9
381.5
380.0
383.4
386.1

110.4
112.9
112.9
115.0
113.7
116.2
115.6
117.9
117.0
117.2
116.7
117.8

91.9
93.1
94.3
94.6
94.8
95.0
94.3
94.4
96.6
95.3
95.5
95.9

144.0
141.8
144.3
145.9
146.8
148.6
149.7
150.2
150.8
151.6
152.3
151.2

844.1
848.0
856.7
862.6
871.9
880.9
892.7
901.5
910.3
917.1
926.2
933.6

285.5
287.9
290.5
293.7
297.6
299.7
302.3
306.9
310.5
314.0
316.4
319.2

371.1
373.7
378.7
381.5
383.5
388.5
393.8
398.0
403.4
403.1
409.2
410.9

65.8
65.4
65.0
65.1
64.3
64.2
66.0
65.8
66.1
65.9
66.0
65.7

371.1
373.7
378.7
381.5
383.5
388.5
393.8
398.0
403.4
403.1
409.2
410.9

1982
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

1,919.8
1,948.8
1,948.0
1,959.1
1,979.9
1,979.4
1,995.1
2,005.1
2,026.4
2,030.5
2,050.2
2,060.0

234.5
242.8
241.0
239.3
248.6
241.0
239.4
238.7
252.1
240.5
254.5
261.2

102.8
109.0
107.4
104.7
112.5
105.6
104.0
105.6
118.5
106.7
119.2
122.4

90.5
92.3
92.3
93.3
94.6
93.8
94.9
92.7
92.8
93.2
94.3
97.2

41.2
41.5
41.3
41.2
41.5
41.6
40.4
40.4
40.8
40.6
41.0
41.5

745.8
755.9
747.5
748.4
758.1
757.6
764.9
766.8
767.9
773.7
771.7
773.8

383.9
391.6
388.9
390.8
396.3
396.9
399.1
401.3
400.7
405.0
403.9
404.7

115.9
121.5
118.0
117.8
121.3
117.8
120.5
118.9
118.2
118.5
119.4
120.8

97.0
93.9
91.0
88.5
89.2
91.1
91.6
91.3
91.1
91.7
91.1
90.4

149.1
149.0
149.6
151.3
151.3
151.8
153.7
155.3
157.9
158.5
157.2
157.9

939.5
950.1
959.5
971.5
973.3
980.8
990.7
999.6
1,006.4
1,016.3
1,024.0
1,025.1

321.9
323.8
325.8
327.2
330.1
331.8
335.6
337.9
339.8
343.2
345.5
346.8

412.3
420.0
425.2
428.6
432.7
437.4
441.2
446.2
451.0
458.1
460.7
462.0

65.1
66.3
68.0
68.0
67.9
68.2
69.3
70.0
70.0
69.5
69.2
69.0

412.3
420.0
425.2
428.6
432.7
437.4
441.2
446.2
451.0
458.1
460.7
462.0

1983
January
February
March
April
May
June

2,066.2
2,068.3
2,084.6
2,122.3
2,155.3
2,176.4

259.1
256.9
259.6
270.6
277.5
286.3

118.6
118.4
118.2
128.8
134.0
140.7

97.5
96.0
98.3
99.4
100.4
101.6

43.0
42.4
43.1
42.3
43.0
44.0

776.5
774.5
780.1
786.6
805.2
807.5

408.2
411.8
414.9
414.8
424.3
421.2

119.4
120.1
120.5
123.9
126.3
128.7

89.5
86.0
86.3
87.9
91.6
93.0

159.3
156.6
158.4
160.0
163.0
164.7

1,030.5
1,036.9
1,044.9
1,065.2
1,072.5
1,082.6

350.6
352.9
354.3
358.5
360.8
363.7

466.8
468.1
471.4
477.6
483.2
485.6

69.5
70.0
70.9
71.2
73.4
74.6

466.8
468.1
471.4
477.6
483.2
485.6




42

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
Table 2.9.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Durable goods

Year and month

Personal
consumption
expenditures

Total

Motor
vehicles
and
parts

Nondurable goods

Furniture and
household
equipment

Other

Total

Food

Clothing
and
shoes

Services

Gasoline
and oil

Other

Total

Housing

Household
operation

Transportation

Other

1979

927.6

147.2

62.6

60.4

24.2

353.1

176.1

76.7

27.4

72.9

427.3

154.8

60.1

35.0

177.3

1980
1981
1982

931.8
956.8
970.2

137.5
141.2
139.8

54.4
56.0
57.4

60.2
61.7
59.7

22.8
23.5
22.7

355.6
362.5
364.2

181.0
181.8
184.0

77.9
83.2
84.4

25.1
25.2
25.6

71.7
72.3
70.2

438.8
453.1
466.2

159.8
166.7
171.3

62.3
63.0
63.5

33.2
32.3
31.7

183.5
191.1
199.6

1979
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

917.6
922.1
924.0
918.7
921.2
918.7
922.9
930.9
939.0
934.6
939.8
941.5

147.0
149.1
149.6
145.7
146.8
142.3
146.9
148.5
151.9
145.5
146.1
147.2

65.9
66.3
66.3
62.2
63.0
57.2
62.3
62.3
65.1
59.6
59.9
61.3

57.8
58.6
59.4
59.1
59.3
60.3
60.6
62.0
62.2
61.9
61.9
61.8

23.3
24.1
23.9
24.3
24.5
24.7
24.0
24.3
24.5
24.1
24.3
24.2

349.6
349.7
350.2
348.3
349.1
350.1
349.5
353.1
357.6
356.4
360.6
362.5

174.7
173.2
173.5
173.3
173.2
175.4
174.9
175.1
178.3
178.4
180.2
182.5

74.6
74.5
76.1
75.0
75.6
75.4
76.8
78.0
78.4
77.9
79.3
79.3

29.0
29.6
28.7
27.7
27.2
26.4
25.5
27.1
27.1
26.9
26.9
26.3

71.3
72.4
72.0
72.3
73.2
72.9
72.3
72.9
73.8
73.2
74.1
74.4

420.9
423.3
424.2
424.8
425.2
426.3
426.5
429.3
429.5
432.7
433.2
431.8

152.3
152.9
153.3
153.7
154.0
154.5
154.8
155.4
156.0
156.5
157.0
157.4

59.6
60.4
60.2
60.4
59.9
59.6
59.3
60.2
60.0
60.9
61.2
59.8

34.2
34.8
35.3
35.1
35.2
35.3
35.1
34.9
35.1
35.2
35.5
34.7

174.7
175.2
175.5
175.6
176.1
176.8
177.3
178.8
178.4
180.1
179.6
179.9

1980
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

949.0
935.5
930.2
920.5
916.0
922.4
930.8
930.1
927.4
937.5
938.1
944.3

151.6
145.0
139.1
131.1
128.2
130.6
137.5
135.4
134.0
139.3
138.5
139.2

65.0
60.2
56.4
49.6
46.6
50.4
55.5
53.5
52.1
55.6
54.1
54.3

62.5
61.1
59.7
59.1
59.2
58.2
59.5
59.7
59.4
60.6
61.5
61.6

24.2
23.7
23.0
22.3
22.3
22.1
22.5
22.3
22.5
23.1
23.0
23.2

362.8
357.1
355.7
354.5
353.1
355.2
354.2
354.5
351.8
354.7
356.8
357.2

184.4
182.4
183.4
182.5
180.1
181.8
181.2
179.6
178.7
178.5
179.2
179.9

79.0
76.9
76.1
76.3
77.1
77.1
77.1
79.0
77.3
79.1
79.8
79.6

25.3
24.8
24.3
24.6
24.6
25.2
24.9
25.2
25.1
25.5
25.6
25.9

74.1
73.1
72.0
71.1
71.3
71.1
70.9
70.7
70.7
71.6
72.2
71.8

434.7
433.4
435.4
434.9
434.8
436.6
439.2
440.2
441.6
443.5
442.8
447.9

157.9
157.9
158.2
158.4
158.9
159.3
159.8
160.3
160.8
161.6
162.1
162.8

182.3
180.4
180.7
180.5
181.8
182.9
183.5
183.1
184.9
186.2
186.1
189.2

34.8
34.0
33.5
33.2
32.4
33.0
33.3
33.0
32.8
32.8
32.3
33.0

182.3
180.4
180.7
180.5
181.8
182.9
183.5
183.1
184.9
186.2
186.1
189.2

1981
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

949.9
953.5
957.3
953.8
952.4
958.0
958.3
967.7
962.8
954.2
955.8
957.1

142.5
145.9
147.9
141.9
140.1
139.7
140.5
148.4
142.7
135.0
134.7
134.6

56.5
60.5
62.0
55.7
54.7
53.7
54.9
62.4
58.1
51.2
51.5
51.0

62.8
62.3
62.3
62.3
61.6
62.2
61.2
62.0
61.4
61.0
60.4
60.6

23.1
23.2
23.6
23.9
23.8
23.7
24.4
24.0
23.3
22.9
22.8
23.1

358.9
360.3
360.2
362.3
361.0
364.9
362.7
364.2
363.9
363.0
364.0
364.5

179.7
181.3
181.7
181.5
181.5
182.8
181.4
181.6
182.1
181.4
182.9
183.8

81.0
82.4
82.2
83.4
82.4
84.1
83.3
84.5
83.6
83.9
83.6
84.1

25.6
25.1
24.5
25.0
25.1
25.4
25.4
25.3
25.7
25.1
25.0
25.0

72.6
71.5
71.8
72.4
72.0
72.6
72.7
72.8
72.5
72.6
72.5
71.6

448.5
447.4
449.1
449.6
451.3
453.5
455.2
455.1
456.2
456.2
457.0
458.0

163.4
164.0
164.5
165.3
166.0
166.5
167.1
167.7
168.3
168.9
169.2
169.5

188.7
188.1
189.3
189.6
189.9
191.2
192.0
192.4
193.4
191.8
193.2
193.3

33.3
32.9
32.6
32.5
32.1
32.0
32.4
32.3
32.3
32.1
32.0
31.6

188.7
188.1
189.3
189.6
189.9
191.2
192.0
192.4
193.4
191.8
193.2
193.3

1982
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

952.1
967.3
964.8
966.9
974.3
965.1
967.4
969.5
976.2
972.6
981.0
985.1

135.5
140.3
139.5
138.0
143.1
137.4
136.3
135.7
142.6
136.6
144.9
148.0

54.2
58.0
57.1
55.3
59.6
54.5
53.7
54.3
61.0
55.5
62.5
63.3

58.4
59.4
59.4
59.9
60.4
59.9
60.4
59.1
59.1
59.0
59.9
61.8

22.9
23.0
23.0
22.9
23.0
23.0
22.2
22.2
22.4
22.1
22.5
22.8

359.3
366.2
362.2
362.8
366.1
361.7
364.1
365.2
364.7
365.9
365.2
367.0

180.7
183.4
182.3
182.4
183.5
182.7
183.7
185.6
185.0
186.7
186.0
186.3

82.9
86.7
83.8
83.5
86.1
83.5
85.1
83.8
83.4
83.6
84.3
85.6

25.7
26.1
25.8
26.6
26.4
25.6
25.4
25.2
25.2
25.3
25.1
25.2

70.1
70.1
70.3
70.3
70.0
69.8
70.0
70.5
71.1
70.3
69.8
69.9

457.3
460.8
463.1
466.0
465.2
466.0
466.9
468.7
468.9
470.1
470.8
470.2

169.8
170.2
170.5
170.7
171.0
171.2
171.5
171.7
171.9
172.2
172.4
172.6

192.5
195.5
197.2
197.8
198.8
199.5
199.9
201.2
201.7
203.4
203.5
203.8

31.3
31.6
32.2
32.1
31.9
31.7
32.0
32.1
31.9
31.6
31.3
31.2

192.5
195.5
197.2
197.8
198.8
199.5
199.9
201.2
201.7
203.4
203.5
203.8

1983
January
February
March
April
Mav
June

984.6
984.7
990.8
1,000.0
1,012.8

146.1
144.3
147.1
152.1
156.4

60.9
60.3
61.4
66.0
69.2

61.8
60.9
62.3
63.0
63.9

23.4
23.1
23.5
23.0
23.3

367.9
368.9
370.0
370.0
376.5

187.2
188.9
188.6
187.3
190.9

84.6
84.5
85.0
87.2
88.4

25.8
26.4
26.9
26.3
26.4

70.3
69.2
69.6
69.2
70.7

470.6
471.5
473.7
477.9
479.9

173.3
174.0
174.8
175.4
176.1

204.8
204.4
205.1
206.1
207.6

31.1
31.1
31.4
31.3
32.0

204.8
204.4
205.1
206.1
207.6




July 1983

43

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

3. Government Receipts and Expenditures
Table 3.1.—Government Receipts and Expenditures
[Millions of dollars]
Line

1979

Receipts..
Personal tax and nontax receipts
Corporate profits tax accruals
Indirect business tax and nontax accrualsContributions for social insurance

1980

1981

1982

765,088

838,294

957,188

972,540

301,015
87,597
189,578
186,898

336,461
84,785
213,387
203,661

387,367
82,842
249,961
237,018

402,085
59,155
258,330
252,970

750,755

868,987

984,089

1,088,336

Purchases of goods and services
Compensation of employees
Other

474,351
247,444
226,907

537,807
272,962
264,845

595,711
299,267
296,444

649,202
324,131
325,071

Transfer payments...
To persons
To foreigners

244,221
239,991
4,230

291,155
285,893
5,262

329,960
324,264
5,696

366,732
360,399
6,333

30,562
70,874
59,798
11,076
40,312

36,296
86,613
74,101
12,512
50,317

53,896
115,352
16,753
61,456

65,174
137,641
119,412
18,229
72,467

Expenditures..

Net interest paid
Interest paid
To persons and business
To foreigners
Less: Interest received by government 1
Less: Dividends received by government l

1,913

1,782

1,856

2,300

Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises
Subsidies
Less: Current surplus of government enterprises

3,353
9,542
6,189

5,471
10,723
5,252

6,437
12,200
5,763

9,524
15,399
5,875

Less: Wage accruals less disbursements
Surplus or deficit ( — ) , national income and product accounts
Social insurance funds
Other
1

-181

-40

59

-4

14,333

-30,693

-26,901

-115,796

27,583
-13,250

14,507
-45,200

19,983
-46,884

4,171
-119,967

Prior to 1968, dividends received is included in interest received (line 17).

Table 3.2.—Federal Government Receipts and Expenditures
Millions of dollars

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

Line

1979
1979

1980

1981

1980

1982
IV

III

IV

1

493,636

540,872

627,016

617,375

510.1

526.1

523.4

543.2

570.8

Personal tax and nontax receipts
Income taxes
Estate and gift taxes
Nontaxes

2
3
4
5

230,575
224,844
5,546
185

257,663
250,859
6,572
232

298,637
291,386
6,982
269

304,652
296,738
7,619
295

244.9
238.8
5.9
.2

244.9
238.6
6.1
.2

251.2
244.4
6.6
.2

260.3
253.1
7.0
.2

274.2
267.3
6.6
.2

Corporate profits tax accruals

6

74,185

70,319

67,498

46,487

71.3

78.6

62.1

67.8

72.7

Indirect business tax and nontax accruals
Excise taxes
Customs duties
Nontaxes

7
8
9
10

29,388
18,539
7,454
3,395

38,978
26,849
7,160
4,969

56,421
41,701
8,589
6,131

48,342
32,392
8,609
7,341

29.6
18.5
7.4
3.7

31.8
20.6
7.2
4.1

38.5
27.2
6.9
4.4

41.3
29.3
7.3
4.7

44.3
30.3
7.3
6.7

Contributions for social insurance

11

159,488

173,912

204,460

217,894

164.2

170.7

171.6

173.8

12

509,726

602,120

689,240

764,432

539.6

564.5

587.7

Purchases of goods and services
National defense
Nondefense

13
14
15

168,343
111,839
56,504

197,048
131,190
65,858

229,235
154,031
75,204

258,707
179,417
79,290

177.8
119.0
58.7

188.1
125.9
62.2

199.0
129.1
69.9

194.5
130.8

206.6
139.1
67.6

Transfer payments
To persons
To foreigners

16
17
18

209,189
204,959
4,230

251,456
246,194
5,262

286,613
280,917
5,696

321,122
314,789
6,333

222.6
217.7
4.9

230.5
225.7
4.8

236.9
232.6
4.3

266.4
261.4
5.0

272.0
265.1
6.9

Grants-in-aid to State and local governments

19

80,510

88,678

87,880

83,892

84.5

85.7

87.5

89.0

92.5

Net interest paid
Interest paid
To persons and business
To foreigners

20
21
22
23

42,399
53,634
42,558
11,076

53,394
67,255
54,743
12,512

73,167
91,576
74,823
16,753

84,931
107,694
89,465
18,229

45.2
57.4
46.1
11.3

50.2
62.6
50.4
12.2

53.6
66.8
55.1
11.7

53.0
67.6
55.6
12.0

56.8
72.0
57.9
14.1

Receipts

Expenditures

179.5

639.8

24

11,235

13,861

18,409

22,763

12.1

12.4

13.3

14.5

15.2

Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises
Subsidies
Less: Current surplus of government enterprises

25
26
27

9,239
9,215
-24

11,544
10,369
-1,175

12,404
11,798
-606

15,776
14,945
-831

9.5
9.6
.1

10.1
9.9
-.2

10.7
10.2
-.5

13.5
10.5
-3.0

11.8
10.9

Less: Wage accruals less disbursements

28

-46

0

Surplus or deficit ( —), national income and product accounts.. 29

-16,090

-61,248

-62,224

-147,057

-29.6

-38.5

-64.3

3,791
-19,881

-12,549
-48,699

-10,914
-51,310

-29,019
-118,038

-1.4
-28.1

1.6
-40.0

-4.7
-59.6

Less: Interest received by government

Social insurance funds
Other




30
31

0

-4

-69.0
-24.7
-48.5

-22.4
-46.6

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

44

Table 3.2.—Federal Government Receipts and Expenditures*- Continued
Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1981

Line

1982
III

1983
III

IV

622.6

638.8

629.2

619.5

622.2

615.2

612.6

623.3

285.8
279.0
6.5

296.4
289.3
6.9

308.6
301.2
7.2

303.8
296.1
7.4

306.5
297.0
9.2

308.5
300.3
8.0

300.6
293.0
7.3
.3

303.0
296.7
6.0
.3

297.7
291.7
5.7
.3

Receipts....
Personal tax and nontax receipts
Income taxes
Estate and gift taxes
Nontaxes

IV

303.9
297.6
6.0

Corporate profits tax accruals

6

74.9

65.5

68.2

61.4

47.6

48.4

47.8

42.1

48.6

Indirect business tax and nontax accruals
Excise taxes
Customs duties
Nontaxes

7
9
10

56.7
43.0
7.8
5.9

58.1
44.0
8.4
5.8

55.8
40.7
8.9
6.2

55.0
39.2
9.3
6.6

49.5
34.2
9.0
6.3

47.7
31.3
8.7
7.7

47.9
31.7
8.4
7.8

48.3
32.4
8.3
7.6

48.6
33.3
7.5
7.7

55.3
38.8
8.6
7.9

Contributions for social insurance

11

200.0

202.6

206.2

209.1

215.8

217.6

218.9

219.3

228.5

232.5

12

660.8

669.9

725.0

728.0

735.4

773.5

820.9

806.6

815.2

Purchases of goods and services
National defense
Nondefense

13
14
15

215.7
143.3
72.4

220.4
151.2
69.2

232.4
154.9
77.5

248.5
166.7
81.8

249.7
168.1
81.7

244.1
175.2
68.9

261.7
183.6
78.1

279.2
190.8
88.5

273.5
194.4
79.1

274.8
201.9
72.8

Transfer payments
To persons
To foreigners

16
17
18

274.6
269.5
5.2

276.5
271.7
4.8

295.3
289.1
6.1

300.1
293.4
6.7

302.5
296.5
6.0

311.2
305.3
5.9

325.9
320.1
5.8

344.8
337.2
7.6

340.3
335.3
5.0

343.5
338.6
4.8

Grants-in-aid to State and local governments

19

90.5

90.4

86.4

84.2

82.5

85.1

83.0

85.0

85.8

86.5

Net interest paid
Interest paid
To persons and business
To foreigners

20
21
22
23

68.3
84.9
69.1
15.8

70.1
87.7
70.7
17.0

75.2
94.2
77.1
17.1

79.0
99.5
82.4
17.1

79.7
101.6
83.8
17.9

82.3
104.9
87.4
17.4

88.6
111.7
92.8
18.9

89.1
112.6
93.8
18.8

88.4
113.0
95.4
17.6

91.6
116.0
98.4
17.6

24

16.6

17.6

19.0

20.5

22.0

22.5

23.1

23.5

24.6

24.4

25
26
27

11.6
10.9

12.5
11.1
-1.4

12.3
11.7
-.6

13.2
13.5
.3

13.4
14.4
1.0

12.7
14.1
1.4

14.2
13.5

22.8
17.9
-4.9

18.6
16.4
-2.3

17.7
17.7
.1

0

0

0

-.1

0

0

0

-1.3

Surplus or deficit ( — ) , national income and product accounts.. 29

-43.4

-47.3

-62.4

-95.8

-108.5

-158.3

-208.2

-183.3

-4.5
-38.9

-3.7
-43.6

-16.7
-45.8

-18.8
-77.0

-15.9
-92.6

-34.3
-124.1

-43.9
-164.3

-32.0
-151.4

Expenditures

Less: Interest received by government
Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises
Subsidies
Less: Current surplus of government enterprises
Less: Wage accruals less disbursements

Social insurance funds
Other




30
31

.3

-22.0
-91.2

-31.1

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

45

Table 3.3.—State and Local Government Receipts and Expenditures
Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

Millions of dollars
Line

1980

1979
1979

1980

1981

1982
IV

Receipts
1
Personal tax and nontax receipts
2
Income taxes
3
Nontaxes
4
Other
5
Corporate profits tax accruals
6
Indirect business tax and nontax accruals
7
Sales taxes
8
Property taxes
9
Other
10
Contributions for social insurance
11
Federal grants-in-aid
12
Expenditures
13
Purchases of goods and services
14
Compensation of employees
15
Other
16
Transfer payments to persons
17
Net interest paid
18
Interest paid
19
Less: Interest received by government
20
Less: Dividends received by government
21
Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises
22
Subsidies
23
Less: Current surplus of government enterprises
24
Less: Wage accruals less disbursements
25
Surplus or deficit ( — ) , national income and product ac- 26
counts.
Social insurance funds
27
Other
28

351,962
70,440
38,529
24,548
7,363
13,412
160,190
77,281
64,403
18,506
27,410
80,510
321,539
306,008
171,772
134,236
35,032
-11,837
17,240
29,077
1,913
-5,886
327
6,213
-135
30,423
23,792
6,631

III

439,057
97,433
51,754
36,438
9,241
12,668
209,988
95,547
85,100
29,341
35,076
83,892
407,796
390,495
223,010
167,485
45,610
-19,757
29,947
49,704
2,300
-6,252

366.3
74.6
41.2
25.9
7.5
12.9
166.0
80.1
65.6
20.3
28.3
84.5
334.7
319.8
177.8
142.0
36.5
-13.6
18.5
32.0
2.0
-5.9

375.3
75.5
41.1
26.7
7.7
16.1
169.4
81.4
66.5
21.4
28.7
85.7
344.4
329.6
182.9
146.7
37.8
-15.2
18.6
33.8
1.9
-6.1

377.2
77.2
41.6
27.7
8.0
12.8
171.0
80.7
67.7
22.6
28.7
87.5
351.0
336.5
187.8
148.7
39.0
-16.6
18.9
35.5
1.8
-6.1

389.4
79.7
42.9
28.6
8.2
14.1
176.2
83.5
69.0
23.8
30.4
89.0
359.4
344.6
192.5
152.1
40.5
-17.8
19.5
37.4
1.7
-6.1

454
6,706

.3
6.3

.3
6.4

.3
6.4

.4
6.4

30,555

418,052
88,730
47,912
32,317
8,501
15,344
193,540
90,430
75,092
28,018
32,558
87,880
382,729
366,476
206,508
159,968
43,347
-19,271
23,776
43,047
1,856
-5,967
402
6,369
0
35,323

0
31,261

.2
31.6

-.2
30.9

0
26.2

30.0

27,056
3,499

30,897
4,426

33,190
-1,929

25.2
6.4

25.7
5.2

25.9
.3

27.7
2.3

386,100
78,798
42,594
28,174
8,030
14,466
174,409
82,858
68,388
23,163
29,749
88,678
355,545
340,759
190,015
150,744
-17,098
19,358
36,456
1,782
-6,073
354
6,427
-40

0

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1981

Line

Receipts
Personal tax and nontax receipts..
Income taxes....
Nontaxes
Other
Corporate profits tax: accruals
Indirect business tax and nontax accruals
Sales taxes
Property taxes
Other
Contributions for social insurance
Federal grants-in-aid
Expenditures
Purchases of goods and services
Compensation of employees
Other
Transfer payments to persons
Net interest paid
Interest paid
Less: Interest received by government
Less: Dividends received by government
Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises
Subsidies
Less: Current surplus of government enterprises
Less: Wage accruals less disbursements
Surplus or deficit ( —), national income and product accounts.
Social insurance funds
Other

IV

1983
III

IV

411.3
85.0
45.9
30.8
8.3
16.7
187.3
89.1
72.0
26.3
31.7
90.5
376.0
360.5
201.3
159.2
42.5
-19.3
21.4
40.7
1.7
-6.0

415.9
87.4
47.1
31.8
8.5
14.9
190.9
89.2
73.9
27.8
32.3
90.4
379.2
363.2
204.7
158.5
43.2
-19.5
22.8
42.3
1.8
-5.9

421.6
90.3
48.9
32.8
8.5
15.5
196.6
91.8
75.9
28.8
32.8
86.4
384.3
367.9
208.1
159.8
43.7
-19.4
24.5
43.9
1.9
-5.9

423.4
92.3
49.8
33.8
8.7
14.2
199.3
91.6
78.5
29.2
33.4
84.2
391.4
374.3
212.0
162.3
44.0
-19.0
26.4
45.4
2.0
-6.0

425.9
93.7
49.9
34.8
9.0
12.7
203.0
92.7
81.2
29.1
34.0
82.5
397.2
380.0
216.5
163.6
44.4
-18.9
28.1
47.0
2.1
-6.2

436.8
95.6
50.6
35.8
9.1
13.1
208.3
95.0
83.9
29.4
34.7
85.1
404.8
387.5
221.1
166.4
45.0
-19.2
29.5
48.7
2.2
-6.3

442.8
99.3
53.0
37.0
9.4
13.0
212.0
96.5
86.4
29.1
35.4
83.0
411.4
394.0
225.0
169.0
46.0
-19.9
30.6
50.5
2.4
-6.3

450.7
101.2
53.5
38.1
9.5
11.9
216.6
98.0
88.8
29.8
36.1
85.0
417.8
400.5
229.5
171.0
47.1
-21.1
31.5
52.6
2.5
-6.2

.4
6.4

.4
6.3

.4
6.3

.4
6.4

.4
6.7

.4
6.7

.5
6.7

.5
6.7

461.7
104.1
55.1
39.3
9.6
12.9
222.0
100.4
91.2
30.5
36.9
85.8
421.3
404.0
233.8
170.1
48.3
-22.0
32.3
54.3
2.6
-6.3
.5
6.8

0
35.3

0

0

36.7

37.3

0
32.0

0
28.8

0
32.0

0
31.3

0
32.9

40.4

29.8
5.4

30.6
6.1

31.3
5.9

31.9
.2

32.3
-3.5

32.9

33.5
-2.1

34.2
-1.2

34.9
5.5

NOTE.— Prior to 1968, dividends received is included in interest received (line 20).




1982
III

0

46

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 3.4.—Personal Tax and Nontax Receipts

Table 3.6.—Contributions for Social Insurance

[Millions of dollars]

[Millions of dollars]

Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

301,015

336,461

387,367

402,085

2

230 575

257 663

298 637

304 652

Income taxes
Withheld
.
Declarations and settlements
Less: Refunds

3
4
5
6

224 844
202 864
56,650
34670

250 859
230 747
64,524
44412

291 386
262,107
77,858
48579

296 738
266 165
86,703
56 130

Estate and gift taxes...
Nontaxes

7
g

5,546

6572

6,982

7,619

9

70440

78798

88730

97433

Income taxes
Estate and gift taxes
Motor vehicle licenses
Property taxes
Other taxes

10
11
12
13
14

38529
2,047
3,247
1,143

42594
2,264
3,438
1,227
1 101

47912
2,371
3,644
1,249
1237

51754
2,588
3,917
1,411
1325

Nontaxes
Tuition and related educational charges
Hospital and health charges
Fines
Other

15

24548
6,280
12016
2,390
3,862

28 174
7,136
13954
2,751
4,333

32,317
8,091
16,168
3,108
4,950

36438
9,123
18300
3,455
5,560

Personal tax and nontax receipts
Federal

.

State and local

16
17

18
19

185

926

232

269

295

Table 3.5.—Indirect Business Tax and Nontax Accruals
[Millions of dollars]
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

189,578

213,387

249,961

258,330

2

29,388

38,978

56,421

48,342

Excise taxes
Liquor
Tobacco
Windfall profit tax
Other

3
4
5
6
7

18,539
5,587
2469
10483

26,849
5,515
2486
9,347
9501

41,701
5,566
2,571
24,334
9,230

32,392
5,397
2,507
15,582
8,906

Customs duties
Nontaxes

g
9

7454
3,395

7 160
4,969

8,589
6,131

8,609
7,341

10

160,190

174,409

193,540

209,988

11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23

77,281
65735
41,775
9740
2,406
3667
2,932
2912
2,303
11,546
7,717
2517
1,312

82,858
70035
44,815
9570
2,527
3824
3,706
3241
2,352
12,823
8,801
2600
1,422

90,430
76,432
48,945
10,093
2,703
3,920
4,621
3425
2,725
13,998
9,505
2,940
1,553

95,547
80,602
51,476
10,464
2,712
4,060
5,352
3514
3,024
14,945
9,976
3,322
1,647

Property taxes
Motor vehicle licenses
Severance taxes
Other taxes

24
25
26
27

64,403
2342
3,464
6,217

68,388
2477
4,950
6,761

75,092
2,623
7,539
7,079

85,100
2,795
7,762
7,244

Nontaxes
Rents and royalties
Special assessments
Fines
Other

28
29
30
31
32

6,483
3,262
1,212

8,975
5,385
1,320

1,212

1,353

10,777
6,824
1,388
1,035
1,530

11,540
7,220
1,454
1,158
1,708

Indirect business tax and nontax accruals
Federal

State and local
Sales taxes
...
State
General
Gasoline
Liquor
Tobacco
Public utilities
Insurance receipts
Other
Local.
General
Public utilities
Other

...
.

...




797

917

Line
Contributions for social insurance

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

186,898

203,661

237,018

252,970

2

105,791

114,984

132,466

140,944

3
4

85,870
61,034

92,769
67,256

108,441
80,858

115,079
85,621

5
6

50,479
10,555

55,630
11,626

64,921
15,937

69,191
16,430

State unemployment insurance
Federal unemployment tax
Railroad unemployment insurance
Railroad retirement
Federal civilian employees retirement
Veterans life insurance
Workers' compensation

7
8
9
10
11
12
13

12,315
3,181
196
1,652
6,770
5
717

11,795
3,565
148
1,712
7,449
6
838

12,301
3,842
205
1,876
8,480
9
870

13,172
4,084
180
1,965
9,131
9
917

State and local social insurance funds
State and local employees retirement
Temporary disability insurance
Workers' compensation

14
15
16
17

19,921
16,839
54
3,028

22,215
19,100
75
3,040

24,025
20,905
82
3,038

25,865
22,700
90
3,075

Employer contributions
Federal social insurance funds
Old-age, survivors, disability, and hospital insurance.
Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance ...
Hospital insurance

Personal contributions
Federal social insurance funds
Old-age, survivors, disability, and hospital insurance.
Employees
Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance.
Hospital insurance
Self-employed
Supplementary medical insurance
State unemployment insurance
Railroad retirement
Federal civilian employees retirement
Veterans life insurance
State and local social insurance funds
State and local employees retirement
Temporary disability insurance

18

81,107

88,677

104,552

112,026

19
20

73,618
66,053

81,143
72,933

96,019
86,973

102,815
92,854

21
22

61,130
50,545

67,365
55,705

80,956
64,981

85,714
69,247

23
24
25
26
27
28
29

10,585
4,923
2,704
120
563
3,497
681

11,660
5,568
2,993
130
600
3,779
708

15,975
6,017
3,437
140
716
4,019
734

16,467
7,140
3,939
147
831
4,296
748

30
31
32

7,489
6,691
798

7,534
7,077
457

8,533
7,839
694

9,211
8,411
800

July 1983

47

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
Table 3.7B.—Government Purchases of Goods and Services by Type
Millions of dollars
Line

1979

1980

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1980

1979

1981

1982
IV

Government purchases of goods and services
Federal
National defense
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Compensation of employees
Military .
Civilian
Other services
Structures
Nondefense. .
.. .
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change
Other nondurables
Services
Compensation of employees
Other services
Structures
State and local
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Compensation of employees
Other services
Structures

II

I

III

IV

1

474,351

537,807

595,711

649,202

497.6

517.6

535.5

539.1

559.0

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11

168,343
111,839
28,998
6,589
73,768
48,675
27,630
21,045
25,093
2,484

197,048
131,190
33,548
10,692
83,787
53,123
30,502
22,621
30,664
3,163

229,235
154,031
40,419
12,556
97,849
61,266
36,044
25,222
36,583
3,207

258,707
179,417
49,632
13,721
112,228
68,394
40,905
27,489
43,834
3,836

177.8
119.0
32.0
8.1
76.4
50.9
29.0
21.9
25.5
2.5

188.1
125.9
33.5
9.9
79.7
51.1
29.1
22.0
28.6
2.8

199.0
129.1
32.9
10.4
82.8
51.5
29.3
22.2
31.3
2.9

194.5
130.8
33.0
11.0
82.9
52.0
29.8
22.3
30.8
3.9

206.6
139.1
34.8
11.4
89.8
57.9
33.8
24.1
31.9
3.1

12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20

56,504
1,615
2,177
-1,165
3,342
46,967
26,997
19,970
5,745

65,858
2,765
4,438
849
3,589
52,018
29,824
22,194
6,637

75,204
2,566
11,440
3,408
8,032
53,836
31,493
22,343
7,362

79,290
3,142
14,416
9,213
5,203
55,005
32,727
22,278
6,727

58.7
.1
3.8
.7
3.1
48.9
28.0
21.0
5.9

62.2
2.9
2.8
-.1
2.9
50.2
28.8
21.4
6.3

69.9
2.7
8.4
5.5
3.0
52.2
30.0
22.2
6.5

63.8
2.8
1.9
-1.1
3.0
52.3
29.6
22.6
6.8

67.6
2.6
4.6
-.8
5.4
53.5
30.9
22.5
6.9

21
22
23
24
25
26
27

306,008
10,116
23,833
231,773
171,772
60,001
40,286

340,759
11,233
27,388
256,766
190,015
66,751
45,372

366,476
12,336
30,427
280,687
206,508
74,179
43,026

390,495
13,296
31,349
304,813
223,010
81,803
41,037

319.8
10.6
25.0
241.0
177.8
63.2
43.2

329.6
10.8
26.0
247.2
182.9
64.3
45.6

336.5
11.1
26.8
253.3
187.8
65.5
45.3

344.6
11.4
27.9
260.0
192.5
67.5
45.3

352.4
11.6
28.9
266.6
196.8
69.8
45.2

IV

I

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1981

Line
II

I

Government purchases of goods and services
Federal
National defense
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services .
Compensation of employees
Military
Civilian
Other services
Structures
Nondefense
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change
Other nondurables
Services
Compensation of employees
Other services
Structures
State and local
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services ...
Compensation of employees
Other services
Structures

1983

1982
III

IV

I

II

III

II

1

576.3

583.5

600.3

622.8

629.8

631.6

655.7

679.7

677.4

683.3

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11

215.7
143.3
36.4
11.9
92.2
58.9
34.3
24.5
33.4
2.8

220.4
151.2
40.1
13.3
94.6
59.6
34.7
24.9
35.0
3.3

232.4
154.9
42.2
11.9
97.6
60.4
35.1
25.2
37.3
3.1

248.5
166.7
43.0
13.1
106.9
66.3
40.0
26.3
40.6
3.6

249.7
168.1
43.7
13.4
107.4
67.1
40.3
26.8
40.3
3.5

244.1
175.2
49.0
12.9
109.8
67.8
40.5
27.3
42.0
3.5

261.7
183.6
52.2
13.5
113.7
68.1
40.6
27.4
45.6
4.2

279.2
190.8
53.6
15.0
118.1
70.6
42.2
28.4
47.5
4.1

273.5
194.4
55.3
14.8
120.3
71.5
42.4
29.1
48.8
3.9

274.8
201.9
61.2
14.0
122.7
71.7
42.5
29.2
51.0
4.1

12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20

72.4
2.7
8.6
2.1
6.5
53.5
31.3
22.1
7.6

69.2
2.6
5.6
-3.6
9.1
53.7
31.3
22.4
7.3

77.5
2.2
14.4
5.7
8.7
53.5
31.2
22.4
7.3

81.8
2.7
17.2
9.3
7.8
54.6
32.2
22.4
7.3

81.7
3.1
16.9
10.9
6.0
54.8
32.4
22.3
6.9

68.9
3.1
5.6
.7
4.9
53.5
32.3
21.2
6.8

78.1
3.0
13.8
9.2
4.6
54.6
32.6
22.0
6.6

88.5
3.4
21.3
16.1
5.2
57.1
33.6
23.5
6.6

79.1
3.5
10.3
4.3
6.0
58.6
34.1
24.4
6.8

72.8
3.5
4.0
-2.6
6.6
58.9
34.3
24.6
6.4

21
22
23
24
25
26
27

360.5
11.9
29.6
272.8
201.3
71.5
46.2

363.2
12.2
30.3
278.0
204.7
73.3
42.7

367.9
12.5
30.7
283.2
208.1
75.2
41.4

374.3
12.7
31.1
288.7
212.0
76.7
41.8

380.0
12.9
31.2
295.5
216.5
79.0
40.4

387.5
13.2
31.2
302.2
221.1
81.1
40.8

394.0
13.4
31.4
307.8
225.0
82.8
41.4

400.5
13.7
31.6
313.7
229.5
84.3
41.5

404.0
13.9
30.8
319.8
233.8
85.9
39.5

408.6
14.2
31.2
325.4
238.1
87.3
37.7

NOTE.—Estimates of Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change and purchases of other nondefense nondurable goods (lines 15 and 16) are shown separately for the first time in this issue
of the Survey.




48

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 3.8B.—Government Purchases of Goods and Services by Type in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

Government purchases of goods
and services.
Federal
National defense
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Compensation of employees
Military
Civilian
Other services
Structures
Nondefense
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change.
Other nondurables
Services
Compensation of employees
Other services
Structures
State and local
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Compensation of employees..
Other services
Structures

1981

1980
III

IV

1982
III

IV

1983
III

IV

278.3

284.3

286.5

291.8

281.2

284.0

286.8

284.0

282.5

285.6

284.1

286.8

289.6

289.4

285.8

292.2

299.7

292.9

102.1
67.4
17.7
2.2
46.1
32.0
18.7
13.2
14.2
1.4

106.4
70.0
18.2
2.4
47.8
32.2
18.9
13.2
15.6
1.5

110.4
73.6
19.6
2.6
49.9
33.1
19.5
13.6
16.9
1.5

116.6
78.8
21.7
2.8
52.6
33.9
19.9
14.0
18.7
1.7

103.4
68.2
18.8
2.2
45.9
31.9
18.7
13.2
13.9
1.3

105.8
69.9
19.0
2.3
47.2
31.9
18.7
13.1
15.3
1.4

109.3
70.1
17.9
2.4
48.3
32.0
18.8
13.2
16.2
1.4

106.2
70.0
17.8
2.5
47.8
32.3
19.1
13.2
15.5
1.9

104.2
69.9
18.2
2.5
47.7
32.4
19.1
13.3
15.3
1.4

107.3
71.0
18.6
2.6
48.5
32.7
19.3
13.4
15.8
1.3

107.9
73.3
19.8
2.7
49.3
33.0
19.4
13.5
16.4
1.5

111.8
74.4
20.3
2.4
50.3
33.3
19.6
13.7
17.0
1.4

114.5
75.7
19.9
2.6
51.6
33.4
19.7
13.7
18.2
1.6

114.5
75.5
20.0
2.8
51.2
33.6
19.8
13.8
17.6
1.6

110.3
77.8
21.7
2.7
51.9
33.9
19.9
14.0
18.0
1.6

116.9
80.4
22.5
2.8
53.3
34.0
19.9
14.0
19.3
1.9

124.4
81.4
22.8
3.0
53.8
34.1
20.0
14.1
19.7
1.8

118.4
82.7
23.5
3.1
54.3
34.2
20.0
14.2
20.1
1.7

118.2
85.5
25.7
3.0
55.0
34.3
20.1
14.2
20.7
1.8

34.8
1.3
1.3
-.5

36.4
1.6
2.1

36.8
1.3
4.3
1.9

37.8
1.5
6.6
4.9

35.2
.7
2.4
.6

35.9
1.8
1.6
-.1

39.3
1.6
4.3
2.6

36.1
1.6
1.6
-.2

34.3
1.4
1.0
-1.0

36.3
1.5
3.1
.6

34.6
1.4
1.9
-.7

37.4
1.1
5.3
2.8

38.7
1.3
6.8
4.7

39.1
1.5
7.5
5.6

32.5
1.5
1.8
.2

36.5
1.4
5.7
4.1

43.0
1.6
11.4
9.7

35.7
1.6
3.8
1.7

32.7
1.6
.9
-1.2

1.8
29.1
17.0
12.1
3.1

1.8
29.5
17.4
12.1
3.2

2.4
27.9
16.9
11.0
3.3

1.7
26.8
16.6
10.2
2.9

1.8
29.1
16.9
12.2
3.0

1.7
29.4
17.2
12.2
3.2

1.8
30.2
17.9
12.3
3.2

1.8
29.8
17.6
12.2
3.2

2.0
28.7
17.0
11.7
3.2

2.5
28.3
17.1
11.2
3.5

2.5
28.1
17.0
11.2
3.3

2.5
27.7
16.8
10.9
3.2

2.1
27.4
16.7
10.7
3.2

1.9
27.1
16.6
10.5
3.0

1.6
26.2
16.5
9.8
2.9

1.6
26.6
16.6
10.0
2.9

1.8
27.2
16.6
10.5
2.9

2.0
27.4
16.6
10.8
2.9

2.1
27.4
16.6
10.8
2.7

176.2
6.1
11.8
137.9
104.1
33.9
20.4

177.9
6.1
11.5
139.8
106.0
33.8
20.6

176.1
6.1
11.5
139.9
106.0
33.9
18.7

175.2
6.2
11.7
139.5
105.6
33.9
17.7

177.8
6.2
11.5
139.2
104.9
34.3
21.0

178.1
6.1
11.3
139.4
105.5
33.8
21.3

177.5
6.1
11.3
139.5
106.0
33.5
20.5

177.8
6.1
11.5
139.9
106.2
33.7
20.2

178.3
6.1
11.7
140.4
106.2
34.1
20.1

178.3
6.1
11.4
140.4
106.3
34.1
20.3

176.2
6.1
11.4
140.1
106.1
34.0
18.6

175.0
6.1
11.5
139.5
105.7
33.7
17.9

175.1
6.2
11.6
139.4
105.8
33.6
17.9

174.9
6.2
11.7
139.6
105.9
33.8
17.3

175.4
6.2
11.8
139.9
106.0
33.9
17.6

175.3
6.3
11.7
139.5
105.4
34.0
17.8

175.2
6.3
11.8
139.1
105.1
34.0
18.0

174.5
6.4
11.9
139.2
105.1
34.1
17.0

174.0
6.5
12.0
139.3
105.1
34.2
16.2

NOTE.—Estimates of Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change and purchases of other nondefense nondurable goods (lines 15 and 16) are shown separately for the first time in this issue
of the Survey.

Table 3.9.—National Defense Purchases
Millions of dollars
Line

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates
1979

1981

1979

1980

1982
IV

National defense purchases
Durable goods
Military equipment
Aircraft
Missiles
Ships
Vehicles
Electronics equipment
Other
Other durable goods
Nondurable goods
Bulk petroleum products
Ammunition
Clothing and textiles
Other nondurable goods
Services
Compensation of employees
Military
Civilian
Other services
Contractual research and development
Travel
Transportation
,
Communications
Depot maintenance
Other
Structures
Military facilities
Other




III

IV

1

111,839

131,190

154,031

179,417

129.1

130.8

139.1

2

28,998

33,548

40,419

49,632

32.0

33.5

32.9

33.0

34.8

3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

22,850
9,148
3,151
3,738
1,748
1,797
3,268
6,148

26,522
10,861
3,685
4,232
1,839
2,217
3,688
7,026

31,015
12,666
4,624
4,910
1,853
2,664
4,298
9,404

39,979
16,525
5,692
5,967
3,011
3,162
5,622
9,653

25.5
11.0
3.7
3.7
2.0
2.0
3.3
6.5

26.6
11.2
3.5
4.3
1.8
2.1
3.7
6.9

25.9
10.3
3.5
4.3
2.1
2.2
3.5
7.1

26.3
10.2
3.8
4.4
1.8
2.4
3.6
6.7

27.3
11.7
3.9
3.9
1.6
2.3
4.0
7.4

11

6,589

10,692

12,556

13,721

8.1

9.9

10.4

11.0

11.4

12
13
14
15

3,994
1,339
464
792

7,581
1,558
662
891

8,950
1,808
741
1,057

9,542
2,257
758
1,164

5.4
1.4
.5
.8

7.1
1.4
.5

7.4
1.5
.7
.9

7.7
1.7
.7
.9

8.1
1.6

112,228

76.4

79.7

82.8

82.9

89.8

13,814
2,643
3,208
1,048
4,697
18,424

50.9
29.0
21.9
25.5
8.6
1.3
2.0
.7
2.5
10.4

51.1
29.1
22.0
28.6
9.1
1.4
2.4
.7
2.6
12.4

51.5
29.3
22.2
31.3
10.1
1.5
2.5
.7
2.9
13.6

52.0
29.8
22.3
30.8
10.3
1.6
2.7
.7
3.1
12.4

57.9
33.8
24.1
31.9
10.5
1.8
2.8
.7
3.2
12.8

16

73,768

83,787

97,849

17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26

48,675
27,630
21,045
25,093
8,298
1,298
2,190
686
2,262
10,359

53,123
30,502
22,621
30,664
10,002
1,561
2,610
720
2,953
12,818

61,266
36,044
25,222
36,583
11,964
2,078
2,885
864
3,569
15,223

27

2,484

3,163

3,207

3,836

2.5

2.8

2.9

3.9

3.1

28
29

1,667
817

2,138
1,025

1,960
1,247

2,323
1,513

1.8

1.9
.9

1.9
1.0

2.8
1.1

2.0
1.1

40,905
27,489

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

49

Table 3.9.—National Defense Purchases—Continued
Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1981

Line
I

National defense purchases
Durable goods
Military equipment
Aircraft
Missiles
Ships
Vehicles
Electronics equipment
Other
Other durable goods
Nondurable goods

....

Bulk petroleum products
Ammunition
Clothing and textiles
Other nondurable goods
Services
Compensation of employees
Military
Civilian
Other services
Contractual research and development
Travel
Transportation
.
Communications
Depot maintenance
Other
Structures

....

.. .

Military facilities
Other

1982

II

III

I

IV

II

1983
I

IV

III

II

1

143.3

151.2

154.9

166.7

168.1

175.2

183.6

190.8

194.4

201.9

2

36.4

40.1

42.2

43.0

43.7

49.0

52.2

53.6

55.3

61.2

3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

27.3
11.7
4.0
3.9
1.6
2.5
3.5
9.1

30.6
11.8
4.8
5.1
1.8
2.8
4.4
9.4

32.1
12.6
4.9
5.2
2.1
2.7
4.6
10.1

34.0
14.5
4.8
5.4
1.9
2.7
4.7
9.0

34.9
14.0
5.0
5.6
2.4
2.8
5.0
8.9

39.1
15.6
6.0
6.5
2.7
2.9
5.5
9.9

43.0
18.6
5.7
6.1
3.2
3.5
5.9
9.2

42.9
18.0
6.1
5.7
3.8
3.3
6.0
10.7

45.5
18.0
7.8
5.8
3.7
3.4
6.9
9.7

11

11.9

13.3

11.9

13.1

13.4

12.9

13.5

15.0

14.8

12
13
14
15

8.3
1.8
.8
1.0

9.6
1.8
.8
1.0

8.5
1.8
.6
1.1

9.5
1.8
.7
1.1

9.3
2.2
.8
1.1

8.8
2.1
.8
1.2

9.5
2.2
.7
1.1

10.6
2.5
.7
1.2

10.1
2.6
.9
1.2

16

92.2

94.6

97.6

106.9

107.4

109.8

113.7

118.1

120.3

122.7

17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26

58.9
34.3
24.5
33.4
11.2
1.8
2.8
.8
3.3
13.5

59.6
34.7
24.9
35.0
11.8
2.1
2.6
.8
3.5
14.3

60.4
35.1
25.2
37.3
12.2
2.1
3.1
.9
3.7
15.3

66.3
40.0
26.3
40.6
12.8
2.3
3.0
1.0
3.8
17.8

67.1
40.3
26.8
40.3
13.1
2.4
3.1
1.0
3.9
16.9

67.8
40.5
27.3
42.0
13.6
2.6
3.1
1.1
4.2
17.4

68.1
40.6
27.4
45.6
14.1
2.9
3.3
1.1
5.2
19.0

70.6
42.2
28.4
47.5
14.4
2.7
3.3
1.0
5.5
20.4

71.5
42.4
29.1
48.8
16.2
2.4
3.1
1.0
5.6
20.4

71.7
42.5
29.2
51.0

27

2.8

3.3

3.1

3.6

3.5

3.5

4.2

4.1

3.9

4.1

28
29

1.7
1.1

2.1
1.2

1.9
1.2

2.2
1.4

2.2
1.4

2.1
1.4

2.5
1.7

2.5
1.6

2.3
1.6

14.0

NOTE.—This table contains quarterly estimates for the first time in this issue of the Survey.

Table 3.10.—National Defense Purchases in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

IV

National defense purchases
Durable goods
Military equipment
..
Aircraft
Missiles
Ships
Vehicles
Klectronics equipment
Other
Other durable goods
Nondurable goods
Bulk petroleum products
Ammunition
Clothing and textiles
Other nondurable goods

I

II

III

IV

I

II

1983

1982

1981

1980

1979

IV

III

I

II

III

IV

I

II

1

67.4

70.0

73.6

78.8

68.2

69.9

70.1

70.0

69.9

71.0

73.3

74.4

75.7

75.5

77.8

80.4

81.4

82.7

85.5

2

17.7

18.2

19.6

21.7

18.8

19.0

17.9

17.8

18.2

18.6

19.8

20.3

19.9

20.0

21.7

22.5

22.8

23.5

25.7

3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

13.8
5.5
2.0
2.0
1.0
1.2
2.1
3.9

14.3
5.7
2.1
2.0
.9
1.3
2.2
3.9

14.9
5.9
2.3
2.1
.8
1.5
2.3
4.8

17.1
6.5
2.5
2.4
1.1
1.7
2.9
4.6

14.9
6.4
2.1
1.9
1.1
1.3
2.1
3.9

15.0
6.3
2.1
2.1
1.0
1.3
2.2
4.0

13.9
5.3
2.1
2.1
1.1
1.3
2.1
4.0

14.0
5.4
2.1
2.1
.9
1.4
2.1
3.8

14.2
5.9
2.1
1.8
.8
1.3
2.3
4.0

13.8
5.8
2.1
1.7
.7
1.4
2.0
4.8

14.9
5.5
2.4
2.3
.8
1.6
2.4
4.9

15.3
5.8
2.4
2.2
.9
1.5
2.5
5.0

15.5
6.4
2.1
2.3
.8
1.5
2.4
4.4

15.7
5.9
2.4
2.3
.9
1.6
2.6
4.3

16.9
6.3
2.6
2.7
1.0
1.6
2.8
4.7

18.1
7.1
2.4
2.5
1.1
1.9
3.0
4.4

17.7
6.8
2.4
2.3
1.3
1.8
3.1
5.1

18.9
6.5
3.6
2.3
1.3
1.8
35
4.6

11

2.2

2.4

2.6

2.8

2.2

2.3

2.4

2.5

2.5

2.6

2.7

2.4

2.6

2.8

2.7

2.8

3.0

3.1

12
13
14
15

.8
.7
.3
.4

.9
.7
.4
.4

.9
.8
.4
.5

1.0
.8
.4
.5

.8
.7
.3
.4

.9
.7
.3
.4

.9
.7
.4
.4

.9
.8
.4
.5

.9
.7
.5
.4

.9
.8
.4
.5

.9
.8
.5
.5

.8
.7
.3
.5

1.0
.7
.4
.5

1.0
.9
.4
.5

.9
.8
.4
.6

1.1
.8
.4
.5

1.2
.9
.4
.5

1.2
.9
.5
.5

3.0

16

46.1

47.8

49.9

52.6

45.9

47.2

48.3

47.8

47.7

48.5

49.3

50.3

51.6

51.2

51.9

53.3

53.8

54.3

55.0

17
Compensation of employees
18
Military
19
Civilian
20
Other services
Contractual research and develop- 21
ment.
22
Travel
23
Transportation
24
Communications
25
Depot maintenance
26
Other

32.0
18.7
13.2
14.2
4.7

32.2
18.9
13.2
15.6
5.1

33.1
19.5
13.6
16.9
5.5

33.9
19.9
14.0
18.7
5.9

31.9
18.7
13.2
13.9
4.8

31.9
18.7
13.1
15.3
4.9

32.0
18.8
13.2
16.2
5.2

32.3
19.1
13.2
15.5
5.2

32.4
19.1
13.3
15.3
5.1

32.7
19.3
13.4
15.8
5.3

33.0
19.4
13.5
16.4
5.5

33.3
19.6
13.7
17.0
5.6

33.4
19.7
13.7
18.2
5.7

33.6
19.8
13.8
17.6
5.7

33.9
19.9
14.0
18.0
5.8

34.0
19.9
14.0
19.3
5.9

34.1
20.0
14.1
19.7
5.9

34.2
20.0
14.2
20.1
6.6

34.3
20.1
14.2
20.7

.8
1.2
.6
1.3
5.6

.8
1.2
.6
1.6
6.3

.9
1.2
.6
1.7
7.0

1.1
1.3
.6
1.9
7.9

.8
1.0
.6
1.4
5.4

.8
1.1
.6
1.4
6.5

.8
1.1
.6
1.6
6.8

.9
1.2
.6
1.6
6.1

.7
1.2
.6
1.6
6.0

.8
1.2
.6
1.6
6.3

.9
1.1
.6
1.7
6.6

.9
1.3
.5
1.7
7.0

1.0
1.2
.6
1.7
8.1

1.0
1.3
.6
1.7
7.3

1.1
1.2
.6
1.8
7.5

1.2
1.4
.6
2.1
8.1

1.1
1.4
.6
2.1
8.6

1.0
1.3
.6
2.1
8.5

27

1.4

1.5

1.5

1.7

1.3

1.4

1.4

1.9

1.4

1.3

1.5

1.4

1.6

1.6

1.6

1.9

1.8

1.7

28
29

.9
.4

1.1
.5

.9
.6

1.1
.6

.9
.4

.9
.5

1.0
.5

1.4
.5

.9
.5

.8
.5

1.0
.5

.8
.5

1.0
.6

1.0
.6

.9
.6

1.2
.7

1.2
.7

1.1
.7

Services

Structures
Military facilities
Other

NOTE.—This table contains quarterly estimates for the first time in this issue of the Survey.




1.8

50

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 3.11.—Government Transfer Payments to Persons

Table 3.12.—Subsidies Less Current Surplus of Government Enterprises

[Millons of dollars]

[Millions of dollars]

1979

1980

1981

1982

Government transfer payments to persons.... 1

239,991

285,893

324,264

360,399

2

204,959

246,194

280,917

314,789

3
4
5

160,286
102,581
29,238

192,268
118,586
35,582

222,929
138,644
43,310

255,967
153,713
50,818

6
7
8
9

9,406
9,100
163
143

15,746
15,331
177
238

15,307
14,820
221
266

23,520
22,867
259
394

10
11
12
13
14
15

4,313
12,951
12,740
211
1,080
717

4,812
15,482
15,230
252
1,222
838

5,314
18,168
17,887
281
1,316
870

5,770
19,861
19,547
314
1,368
917

Military retirement
Veterans benefits
Pension and disability
Readj ustment
Unemployment
Other 2

16
17
18
19
20
21

10,649
13,333
10,636
2,411
286

12,480
13,765
11,372
2,042
351

14,021
14,755
12,520
1,924
311

15,362
14,979
13,308
1,588
83

Food stamp benefits
Black lung benefits
Special unemployment benefits
Supplemental security income
Direct relief
Earned3 income credit
Other

22
23
24
25
26
27
28

6,332
1,724

8,214
1,751

10,065
1,724

5,321

5,905

6,551

9,910
1,652
1,228
6,923

822
6,492

1,326
10,485

1,318
9,554

1,201
7,567

29

35,032

39,699

43,347

45,610

30
31
32
.... 33

15,838
13,304
695
1,839

17,842
15,052
780
2,010

20,161
17,129
935
2,097

22,264
19,010
1,050
2,204

Direct relief
General assistance
Other direct relief
Aid to families with dependent children
Other categorical public assistance 4

34
35
36
37
38

14,068
1,230
12,838
10,999
1,839

15,994
1,442
14,552
12,409
2,143

17,244
1,627
15,617
13,460
2,157

17,380
1,872
15,508
13,372
2,136

Other 5

39

5,126

5,863

5,942

5,966

Line

Federal
Benefits from social insurance funds
Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance
Hospital and supplementary medical insurance.
Unemployment insurance
State
Federal employees
Railroad .
Railroad retirement
Federal civilian employees retirement
Civil service
Other l
Veterans life insurance
Workers' compensation

State and local
Benefits from social insurance funds
Government pensions
Temporary disability insurance
Workers' compensation
....

1
2
3
4

Consists largely of foreign service and Tennessee Valley Authority.
Consists of mustering out pay, terminal leave pay, and adjusted compensation benefits.
Consists largely of payments to nonprofit institutions and aid to students.
Prior to 1974, consists of old-age assistance, aid to the blind, and aid to the permanently and
totally disabled. In 1974, these programs were replaced by the Federal Supplementary Security
Income (SSI) program. Beginning with 1974 consists of State benefits under the SSI program.
Federal
SSI benefits are shown in line 25.
5
Consists largely of educational assistance, medical insurance premiums paid on behalf of
indigents, veterans bonuses, other types of veterans aid, and foster care payments.




Line
Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises.
Federal. ..

.

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

3,353

5,471

6,437

9,524

2

9,239

11,544

12,404

15,776

Subsidies. ...
3
4
Agricultural
Housing .
5
Maritime
6
7
Air carriers
1
Other
8
Less: Current surplus of government enterprises.. 9
10
Postal Service
11
12
Federal Housing Administration
13
Tennessee
Valley Authority
2
14
Other

9,215
1,179
5,225
574
77
2,160
-24
-1,303
-1,167
262
912
1,272

10,369
1,160
6,132
578
91
2,408
-1,175
-2,272
1 632
392
1,129
1,208

11,798
1,623
7,635
560
118
1,862
-606
-893
2 262
471
1,067
1,011

14,945
2,676
9,740
525
75
1,929
-831
-721
3 365
443
1,137
1,675

15

-5,886

-6,073

-5,967

-6,252

16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25

327
6,213
1,952
2,603
847
506
891
592
-1,953
775

354
6,427
2,112
2,758
879
529
980
495
-2,212
886

402
6,369
2,311
3,010
901
498
1,060
720
3,149
1,018

454
6,706
2,391
3,107
895
520
1,132
954
3480
1,187

State and local
Subsidies
Less: Current surplus of government enterprisesWater and sewerage
Gas and electricity
Toll facilities.
Liquor stores
Air and water terminals
Housing and urban renewal
Public transit
Other 3

1
Consists largely of subsidies to railroads and mass transit systems.
2
Consists largely of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal Savings and Loan
Insurance
Corporation, and Bonneville Power Administration.
3
Consists of State lotteries, off-track betting, local parking, and miscellaneous activities.

Table 3.13.—Social Insurance Funds Receipts and Expenditures
[Millions of dollars]
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

Federal
1

168 968

185,014

217 787

232 950

2

159 488

173912

204 460

217 894

Personal contributions

3

73618

81 143

96019

102815

Employer contributions
Government and government enterprises
Other

4
5
6

85870
15,904
69966

92769
17,520
75249

108 441
20,511
87930

115079
22,458
92621

Receipts
Contributions for social insurance

Interest received
Expenditures

7

9,480

11,102

13,327

15,056

8

165,177

197,563

228,701

261,969

4,891

5,295

5,772

6,002

10

160 286

192 268

222,929

255 967

11

3 791

12 549

10914

29 019

12

40,146

45,478

51,718

56,206

13

27410

29749

32,558

35076

Personal contributions

14

7,489

7,534

8,533

9,211

Employer contributions
Government and government enterprises
Other

15
16
17

19921
17,630
2291

22215
19,930
2,285

24025
21,747
2,278

25865
23,565
2,300

Administrative expenses (purchases of goods and
services).
Transfer payments to persons
Surplus or deficit ( )

9

State and local
Receipts
Contributions for social insurance

Interest and dividends received
Expenditures
Adminstrative expenses (purchases of goods and
services).
Transfer payments to persons
Surplus or deficit ( — )

18

12,736

15,729

19,160

21,130

19

16,354

18,422

20,821

23,016

20

516

580

660

752

21

15838

17,842

20,161

22264

22

23,792

27,056

30,897

33,190

NOTE.—In this table interest and dividends received is included in receipts; in tables 3.1, 3.3,
3.15, 3.17, 3.19, and 9.4, interest received and dividends received are netted against expenditures.

51

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 3.14.—State and Local Government Social Insurance Funds Receipts and Expenditures
[Billions of dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1979

Line

1980

1981

1982

IV

Receipts
Contributions for social insurance

1980

1979
I

II

1982

1981
IV

III

II

I

I

IV

III

1983
III

II

II

I

IV

1

40.1

45.5

51.7

56.2

42.2

43.3

44.0

46.4

48.2

49.8

51.2

52.4

53.5

54.4

55.5

56.7

58.1

59.5

60.8

2

27.4

29.7

32.6

35.1

28.3

28.7

28.7

30.4

31.2

31.7

32.3

32.8

33.4

34.0

34.7

35.4

36.1

36.9

37.5

3

7.5

7.5

8.5

9.2

7.6

7.3

6.8

7.9

8.2

8.3

8.5

8.6

8.8

8.9

9.1

9.3

9.5

9.7

9.9

4
Employer contributions
Government and government enter- 5
prises.
6
Other

19.9
17.6

22.2
19.9

24.0
21.7

25.9
23.6

20.7
18.4

21.4
19.0

22.0
19.7

22.5
20.3

23.0
20.7

23.4
21.1

23.8
21.5

24.2
21.9

24.6
22.4

25.1
22.8

25.6
23.3

26.1
23.8

26.7
24.3

27.2
24.9

27.7
25.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

2.3

7

12.7

15.7

19.2

21.1

13.9

14.6

15.3

16.1

17.0

18.0

18.9

19.6

20.1

20.4

20.8

21.3

22.0

22.6

23.3

8

16.4

18.4

20.8

23.0

17.0

17.5

18.1

18.7

19.3

20.0

20.6

21.1

21.6

22.1

22.7

23.3

24.0

24.7

25.2

9

.5

.6

.7

.8

.5

.6

.6

.6

.6

.6

.6

.7

.7

.7

.7

.8

.8

.8

.8

10

15.8

17.8

20.2

22.3

16.5

17.0

17.5

18.1

18.7

19.3

19.9

20.5

20.9

21.4

21.9

22.5

23.2

23.9

24.4

11

23.8

27.1

30.9

33.2

25.2

25.7

25.9

27.7

28.8

29.8

30.6

31.3

31.9

32.3

32.9

33.5

34.2

34.9

35.6

Personal contributions

Interest and dividends received
Expenditures
Administrative expenses (purchases of
goods and services).
Transfer payments to persons...
Surplus or deficit ( )

NOTE.—In this table interest and dividends received is included in receipts; in tables 3.1, 3.3, 3.15, 3.17, 3.19, and 9.4, interest received and dividends received are netted against expenditures.

Table 3.15.—Government Expenditures by Function
[Millions of Dollars]
Line
Total l

1979

1981

1980

1

750,755

868 987

984,089

Central executive legislative and judicial activities

2

27006

30000

30,976

International affairs

3

4932

5967

6,290

Space

4

4253

5009

5,614

National defense

5

111 605

130 918

153,749

Civilian safety

6

26,063

28,815

31,553

Education

7

133,246

147,964

159,612

Health and hospitals

8

35,563

40,553

44,817

Income support social security, and welfare

9

239,095

285,162

323,266

Veterans benefits and services .

10

20965

22,361

24,050

Housing and community services

11

16695

18,553

18,050

Recreational and cultural activities

12

7072

7,987

8,267

Energy

13

5712

5,246

9,774

Agriculture

14

6391

9,469

13,648

Natural resources

15

6601

7,328

8,280

Transportation

16

36303

41,136

42,981

Postal service

17

1696

2,684

1,383

Economic development regulation and services

18

3638

4499

4,328

Labor training and services

19

6046

6,772

6,614

Commercial activities

20

1 276

- 1,353

Net interest paid 2

21

41,385

50,243

71,200

Other and unallocable

22

17460

19,557

21,049

1

.

.

.

.

1 153

Equals Federal government expenditures less grants-in-aid to State and local governments plus State and local government expenditures. These data include employee compensation on a
disbursement basis. The estimates by function include employee compensation on an accrual basis. Wage accruals less disbursements (in millions of dollars) is zero except as follows: 1979, -181;
1980,2 -40; 1981, 59;
Excludes interest received by State and local social insurance funds, which is netted against expenditures for the appropriate functions.




52

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 3.16.—Federal Government Expenditures by Type and Function
[Millions of dollars]

1979

Line

Total l
Central executive, legislative, and judicial activities
Central administration and management
Tax collection and financial management
Legislative and judicial activities
Other
International affairs
Conduct of foreign affairs and informational activities
Foreign economic assistance
Space
National defense
Military activities
Civil defense
Foreign military assistance
.
Other
Civilian safety
Police
Fire

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
Education
21
Elementary and secondary
22
Higher
23
24
Health and hospitals
25
Income support social security and welfare
26
Retirement
27
Old age and survivors insurance
28
Government employees civilian
29
Government employees, military
30
Railroad
31
Disability
32
Disability insurance (social security)
33
Government employees civilian
34
Government employees military
35
Railroad
36
Other
37
38
Regular
39
Extended
40
Other
41
Medical care
Hospital and supplementary medical insurance (Medi- 42
care).
43
Medicaid
44
Welfare and social services
45
Other
46
Veterans benefits and services
47
Disability and survivors compensation
48
49
Insurance
50
51
Other
52
Housing and community services
53
Urban renewal and community development
54
55
Water and sewerage
56
Recreational and cultural activities
57
58
Conservation and development of energy sources
59
Production and sale of power
60
Administration and regulation
61
Agriculture
62
Stabilization of farm prices and income
63
Financing farm ownership and utilities
64
Conservation of agricultural resources
65
Other
66
67
Transportation
68
69
Water Y
70
Air
71
Railroad
72
Transit
73
74
Economic development regulation and services
75
Economic development assistance
76
Regulation of commerce and finance
77
Other
78
Labor training and services
79
80
Other
81
Net interest paid
82
g




Expenditures1

509,726
9,273
3,304
3,541
1,767
661
4,932
1,929
3,003
4,338
112,444
111,578
98
815
-47
2,262
1,650
32
580
12,075
5,254
4,129
2,692
8,044
221,448
114,848
90,677
10,806
9,499
3,866
19,920
14,125
2,418
1,104
510
1,763
11,715
10,540
221
954
43,070
30,218
12,852
29,339
2,556
20,992
10,788
2,467
1,087
5,477
1,173
13,188
4,694
4,456
4,038
1,533
6,498
5,129
1,037
332
5,488
1,861
1,258
790
1,579
4,719
17,846
8,175
2,779
2,889
1,332
2,671
1,696
3,151
2,637
351
163
10,491
4,667
5,824
42,399
6,863

1980

Purchases
of goods
and
services

Transfer
payments
and net
interest
paid

Grants-inaid to
State and
local
governments

Subsidies
less
current
surplus of
government
enterprises

168,343
8,866
3,052
3,541
1,632
641
1,943
1,903
40
4,253
111,839
111,014
57
815
-47
1,858
1,439
32
387
1,127
305
208
614
4,453
4,580
903
873

251,588
-14
-16

80,510
415
262

9,239
6
6

30
324
291
4"
29
49
49
952
952

1,823
529
6,292
33
1
5,417
841
617
426
191 (.

1,049
7,063
4,599
2,132
332
1,620
-254
306
436
1,132
3,822
5,528
270
2,508
2,311
373
66
393
1,576
515
351
710
1,458
774
684

2"
3,076
26
3,050

135
18
-87
-87
85
839
798
41

3
3

3,720
174
3,113
433
698
186,128
113,945
89,804
10.806
<U99
3,836
19,285
13,523
2,418
1,104
506
1,734
10,054
8,879
221
954
29,238
29,238
12,000
1,606
14,594
10788
2,434
1,086
286
158
158
205

52

52
16
9
7

401
208
193
7,228
4,775
808
1,645
2,893
30,740
[

31l"
311

1,612
1,612
12,880"
28
12,852
15,516
421
111

60
51
7,821
3,783

4,038
279
634
530
104
808
290
123
395
844
10,197
7,896
4
517
60
1,720

1,881
1,880
553
553

1
8,477
3,340
5,137

42,399
6

234
-234

6,857

-5

-5
4,592
327
4,265

-1,199
-1,199
3,008
2,115
662
231
53
2,105

266"
61
899
885
1,303
-306
242
548
3
3

Expenditures1

602,120
10,834
4,073
3,837
1,913
1,011
5,967
1,969
3,998
5,127
131,928
130,432
155
1,380
-39
2,373
1,765
44
564
14,139
5,738
5,488
2,913
9,426
266,540
133,471
105,066
12,965
11,126
4,314
22,382
15,911
2,863
1,245
569
1,794
20,346
15,771
1,595
2,980
50,965
36,705
14,260
35,672
3,704
22,387
11,537
2,097
1,230
6,243
1,280
14,659
5,208
5,153
4,298
1,761
6,811
4,732
1,381
698
8,374
4,536
1,338
820
1,680
5,160
20,859
9.668
3,074
3,243
1,343
3,531
2,684
3,153
1,932
395
826
9,720
5,546
4,174
53,394
6,824

Purchases
of goods
and
services

197,048
10,277
3,762
3,837
1,788
890
1,992
1,937
55
5,009
131,190
129,739
110
1,380
-39
1,999
1,570
44
385
1,273
362
222
689
5,413
5,323
924
891
33
332
297
5
30
49
49

i',093"
1,093
2,166
759
7,104
36
1
6,177
890
491
391
100

1,074
7,349
3,890
2,761
698
4,026
1,994
346
495
1,191
4,155
6,117
282
2,801
2,580
368
86
412
2,178
438
395
1,345
1,659
904
755

Transfer
payments
and net
interest
paid

304,850
84
-16
100
3,991
32
3,959

Grants-inaid to
State and
local
governments

Subsidies
less
current
surplus of
government
enterprises

88,678
468
322

11,544
5
5

125
21
16
-16
118
1,010
965
45

3
3

4,986
138
4,377
471
760
225,267
132,547
104,175
12,965
11,126
4,281
21,690
15,254
2,863
1,245
564
1,764
18,312
13,737
1,595
2,980
35,582
35,582
14,904
2,232
15,179
11,537
2,061
1,229

371
192
179
7,880
5,238
889
1,753
3,253
35,950

360
360

1,985
1,985
14,290
30
14,260
18,602
713
109

352
167
167

66"
43
8,836
4,538

312
2
2

4,298
375
961
840
121

59

59
16
12
4

810
305
75
430
995
12,092
9,374
2
585
53
2,078

1,221
1,219
630
630

2
7,412
4,012
3,400

53,394
7

-272
-272

6,817

-5

-5
5,165
112
5,053

-1,501
-1,501
3,479
2,542
687
250
10
2,634
267
78
922
1,367
2,272
-246
275

-521
19
19

53

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 3.16.—Federal Government Expenditures by Type and Function—Continued
[Millions of dollars]

1981

Line

Total l
Central executive, legislative and judicial activities
Central administration and management
Tax collection and financial management
Legislative and judicial activities
Other
International affairs
Conduct of foreign affairs and informational activities
Foreign economic assistance
Space
National defense
Military activities
Civil defense
Foreign military assistance
Other
Civilian safety
Police
Fire
Correction
Education
...
Elementary and secondary
Higher
..
General research and other
Health and hospitals
Income support social security, and welfare
Retirement
Old age and survivors insurance
Government employees, civilian
Government employees military
Railroad
.
Disability
Disability insurance (social security)
Government employees, civilian
Government employees military.
Railroad
Other
Unemployment insurance ...
Regular
Extended
.
Other
Medical care
Hospital and supplementary medical insurance (Medicare).
Medicaid
Welfare and social services
Other
Veterans benefits and services
Disability and survivors compensation
Education
Insurance
Hospitals and medical care
Other
Housing and community services
Urban renewal and community development
Housing
Water and sewerage
Recreational and cultural activities
Energy
Conservation and development of energy sources

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
2?
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35

^
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
5Q

Administration and regulation
Agriculture
Stabilization of farm prices and income
Financing farm ownership and utilities
Conservation of agricultural resources .
Other
Natural resources
Transportation
Highways
Water
Air

..

60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71

Transit
Postal service
.
.
Economic development regulation and services
Economic development assistance
Other
Labor training and services
Training programs
Other
Net interest paid
Revenue sharing
1

72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82

Expenditures1

689 240
10893
3,809
4 106
1,938
1 040
6,290
2,033
4257
5,746
154,875
153,113
145
1,602
15
2,320
1,762
43
515
15,334
5669
6,671
2,994
10062
303,402
156,157
123 623
15,194
12577
4763
24,786
17672
3,358
1 335
628
1793
18554
15694
1 226
1,634
61 727
44,599
17 128
38318
3860
24,071
12696
1981
1 324
6781
1,289
15 025
5,062
6 196
3767
1,906
10 871
9005
1 155
711
12,406
8 139
1,578
800
1 889
5,953
20,496
8,874
3370
3 136
1295
3,821
1,383
2 456
1 570
407
479
8,060
5,263
2797
73,167
4,583

Purchases
of goods
and
services

229 235
10458
3,453
4 106
1,866
1033
2043
1,999
44
5614
154,031
152,310
104
1602
15
2092
1,649
43
400
1,445
322
220
903
5 924
5,249
950
914
36
359
304
5
50
50
50
1 253
1 253
1 988
649
7,702
41
1
6706
954
430
447
17

1,150
11 143
8023
2 409
711
6,730
4473
379
498
1380
4,868
6,512
311
3047
2658
417
79
490
1 725
503
407
815
1,623
870
753

1982

Transfer
payments
and net
interest
paid

359 780
30
-13

Grants-inaid to
State and
local
governments

Subsidies
less
current
surplus of
government
enterprises

87 880
459
363

12 404
fi
6

72
24

17
4,266
34
4232

19
19

,r
1 126
1,085
41
o
2

5,950
140
5,327
483
718
258,223
155,207
122 709
Jo, 194
12 577
4727
23,965
16906
3,358
1 335
623
1 743
16 454
13 594
1 226
1,634
43310
43,310
17 033
2254
16,271
12 696
1 940
1 323
312
163
163

226
111
115
7,939
5207
1 124
1,608
3 420
39,930

462
462

r
2 656
2 050
17 164
36
17 128
19297
957
102

75
27
8 219
4452

4

-4
6 213

6213
409

54

54
11
8
3

3767
347
1 196
'982
144
783
245
83
455
1,081
11,695
8,555
1
371
49
2,719
868
866

576
576

2
5,850
3,817
2033

73,167
6

282
-282

4,577

1 398
1 398

4,839
3666
954
219
4
2,278
319
107
829
1,023
893
137
201

-338
11
11

Expenditures1

764 432
11 619
4361
4254
2 177
827
7 402
2,491
4911
5 943
180 312
178,992
168
1 076
76
2 354
1,838
35
481
14,363
5553
5734
3,076
9 362
338 983
174,117
138 568
16604
13777
5 168
25,732
18 174
3,670
1 462
682
1 744
27 105
22722
3519
864
69939
52,081

17,858
38444
3,646
25,005
13493
1 637
1 375
7429
1,071
15 694
4552
7747
3395
1,689
6911
5664
481
766
21,480
16788
2,012
823
1857
5,808
19,994
8,329
3,583
3003
1 257
3,822
1,230
1 587
1,450
393
-256
5,181
3,981
1,200
84,931
4,580

Purchases
of goods
and
services

258 707
10996
3,740
4254
2140
862
2531
2,453
78
5 813
179 417
178,134
131
1 076
76
2227
1,780
35
412
1,418
310
220
888
5 509
5,270
1,053
1016
37
462
395
5
62
49
49

1220
1,220
1863
623
8,356
36
1
7,350
969
191
335
144

1,146
7 446
4843
1 837
766
13,257
10,986
427
504
1 340
4,697
6,694
288
3,296
2,622
407
81
509
1,724
572
393
759
1,500
761
739

.Transfer
payments
and net
interest
paid

Grants-inaid to
State and
local
governments

Subsidies
less
current
surplus of
government
enterprises

406 053
108
-27

83 892
735
652

15 776
4
-4

81
4 878
38
4840

37
46
7
7
130
1 206
1 169
37

1
1

5434
125
4790
519
588
292 901
173,064
137 552
16604
13777
5131
24,706
17 215
3,670
1462
677
1 682
24959
20576
3519
864
50818
50,818
17 168
2,186
16,551
13493
1,601
1 374
83
116
116

311
-311

126
57
69
7511
5 118
724
1,669
3 265
40 812

564
564

2097
2097
17901
43
17,858
19413
837
103

79
24
7496
4,101

-5

-5
7,891

7891
264

45

3,395
279
991
821
170
733

isi

45
11
8
3

80
472
1,102
11,031
8,033
2
317
58
2,621
677
675

441
441

2
3,121
2,779
342

1 526

1,526
7,445
5,802
1,404
239
9
2,258
282
64
792
1,120
721
-814
203

-1,017
119
119

84,931
6

4,574

Total expenditures include employee compensation on a disbursement basis. Expenditures by type and function include employee compensation on an accrual basis. Wage accruals less
disbursements (in millions of dollars) is zero except as follows: 1979, -46; 1981, 59; 1982, -4.




54

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
Table 3.17.—State and Local Government Expenditures by Type and Function
[Millions of dollars]
1979

Line

1

Expenditures

Total 1

1980

Purchases of
goods and
services

Transfer
payments
and net
interest paid
less
dividends

Subsidies
less current
surplus of
government
enterprises

Purchases of
goods and
services

Transfer
payments
and net
interest paid
less
dividends

355,545

340,759

20,819

19,634
9,899
9,735

19,634
9,899
9,735

26,813
14,343
5,933
6,537

26,813
14,343
5,933
6,537
139,277
100,826
32,479
1,839
4,133

2,428

1

Expenditures

1

321,539

306,008

21,282

.. 2
3
4

18,148
8,718
9,430

18,055
8,718
9,337

93

5
6
7
8

24,202
13,101
5,401
5,700

24,202
13,101
5,401
5,700

Education
Elementary and secondary
Higher
Libraries
Other

9
10
11
12
13

128,399
91,758
28,875
1,755
6,011

126,165
91,758
28,875
1,755
3,777

2,234

2,234

141,705
100,826
32,479
1,839
6,561

Health and hospitals
Health
Hospitals

14
15
16

30,412
7,772
22,640

30,303
7,726
22,577

109
46
63

34,380
8,909
25,471

34,250
8,853
25,397

130
56
74

Income support social security, and welfare
Government employees retirement and disability
Workers' compensation and temporary disability insurance .
Medical care
Welfare and social services

17
18
19
20
21

48,387
1,511
2,107
19,015
25,754

30,270
249
267
18,715
11,039

18,117
1,262
1,840
300
14,715

54,572
444
2,249
22,058
29,821

34,947
272
308
21,732
12,635

19,625
172
1,941
326
17,186

Veterans benefits and services

22

84

58

26

24

Central executive, legislative, and judicial activities
Administrative legislative and judicial activities
Tax collection and financial management
Civilian safety
Police
Fire
Correction

....

.

Housing and community services
Housing, community development, and urban renewal
Water
Sewerage
Sanitation
.

23
24
25
26
27

11,328
668
996
7,287
2,377

13,872
1,260
2,799
7,436
2,377

Recreational and cultural activities 2

28

5,818

5,818

Enerirv
Gas utilities
Electric utilities

29
30
31

-152
60
-92

2,451
140
2,311

Agriculture

32

1,711

1,681

Natural resources

33

2,726

2,726

Transportation
Highways
Water
Air
Transit and railroad

34
35
36
37
38

28,654
25,024
88
167
3,551

28,112
25,871
156
814
1,271

Economic development regulation and services

39

2,368

2,368

Labor training and services

40

4,032

2,345

Commercial activities

41
42
43
44

1 153
-514
-1,036
397

..

Government-administered lotteries and parimutuels
Other
Net interest paid 3

. . . .

45

-1,014

Other and unallocable

....

46

17,454




93

83

59

-2,544
-592
-1,803
-149

12,730
1,237
1,706
7,132
2,655

15,337
1,732
3,612
7,338
2,655

6,601

6,601

-2,603
200
-2,403

-604
76
-528

2,154
139
2,015

30

542
847
-244
647
2,280

1,687

-1,281
506
-1,036
261

128
-8

136
-1,014
17,454

-5,886

1,905

1,866

3,163

3,163

32,369
28,006
-59
96
4,326

31,662
28,885
191
826
1,760

2,567

2,567

4,464

2,740

-1,276
545
-1,152
421

139
16

19,550

-2,607
-495
-1,906
-206

-2,758
-215
-2,543

39

707
-879
-250
-730
2,566

1,724

-1,415
-529
-1,152
266
-3,151

19,550

6073

2,428

155

-3,151

Subsidies
less current
surplus of
government
enterprises

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

55

Table 3.17.—State and Local Government Expenditures by Type and Function—Continued
[Millions of dollars]

1981
Purchases of goods and
services

Expenditures1
Total 1

Transfer payments and net
interest paid less dividends

1

382 729

366 476

Central executive, legislative, and judicial activities
Administrative, legislative, and judicial activities
Tax collection and financial management

2
3
4

20542
10,646
9896

20542
10646
9896

Civilian safety
Police
Fire
Correction

5
6
7
8

29459
15,613
6495
7,351

29 459
15613
6495
7351

Education
Elementary and secondary
Higher
Libraries
Other

9
10
11
12
13

152,217
107 220
35,927
1895
7,175

149,641
107 220
35,927
1 895
4,599

2,576

Health and hospitals
Health
Hospitals

14
15
16

38,175
10088
28,087

38,021
10025
27,996

154
63
91

Income support, social security, and welfare
Government employees retirement and disability
Workers' compensation and temporary disability insurance .
Medical care
Welfare and social services

17
18
19
20
21

59,794
776
2,437
25351
32,782

39,912
312
348
24990
14,262

19,882
1 088
2,089
361
18,520

Veterans benefits and services

22

81

59

22

23
24
25
26
27

11,244
1,196
1,341
5796
2,911

14,275
1,916
3,402
6046
2,911

Recreational and cultural activities 2

28

6,708

6,708

Energy
Gas utilities
Electric utilities

29
30
31

29
25
4

3,039
251
2788

Agriculture

32

2,025

1980

Natural resources

33

3408

3408

Transportation
Highways
Water
Air
..
Transit and railroad

34
35
36
37
38

34 180
28515
80
17
5568

32590
29416
332
825
2017

Economic development regulation and services

39

2 740

2 740

Labor training and services

40

4 404

2896

Commercial activities
Publicly-owned liquor store systems
.
Government-administered lotteries and parimutuels
Other
.
.
.

41
42
43
44

1 353
507
1 274
428

Net interest paid 3

.

45

1,967

Other and unallocable

46

21 043

.

Housing and community services ..
Housing, community development, and urban renewal
Water
Sewerage
Sanitation

22220

Subsidies less current
surplus of government
enterprises
5,967

2,576

-3,031
-720
-2061
250

3,010
-226
2784
45

1,590
-901
252
-808
3551

1,508
-1,516
498
-1,274
256

163
_9
172

-1,967
21 043

1
Total expenditures include employee compensation on a disbursement basis. Expenditures by type and function include employee compensation on an accrual basis. Wage accruals ]
disbursements
(in millions of dollars) is zero except as follows: 1979, -135; 1980, -40.
2
Prior
to 1968, State government recreational expenditures are included in natural resources.
3
Excludes interest received by social insurance funds, which is netted against expenditures for the appropriate functions.




56

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 3.18B.—Relation of Federal Government Receipts and Expenditures in the National Income and Product Accounts to the Unified Budget,
Fiscal Years
[Billions of dollars]
Fiscal years

Calendar quarters not seasonally adjusted

1979

Line

1979

1980

1981

1980

1981

1982
IV

III

IV

1982
III

IV

rv

III

Receipts
Unified budget receipts

465.9

520.1

602.6

617.8

114.0

114.6

156.2

135.2

127.0

135.2

183.7

156.7

146.0

143.6

178.9

149.3

137.0

Less: Coverage differences l....

1.1

1.2

1.1

1.6

.3

.3

.3

.2

.2

.3

.3

.3

.3

.7

.3

.3

.2

Financial transactions..

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

2.5

2.8

2.6

2.7

2.8

3.0

2.5

2.5

2.5

2.0

2.2

Plus: Netting differences:
Contributions to government
employees retirement funds.
Other 2
Timing differences:
Corporate income tax
Federal and State unemployment insurance taxes.
Withheld personal income tax
and social security contributions.
Excise taxes
Other

Equals: Federal Government receipts,
national income and product accounts.

7.7

8.6

9.7

10.9

2.2

2.2

2.1

2.2

2.4

2.4 |

2.3

3.6

4.1

4.6

9.4

1.0

I.I

1.0

.9

1.0

1.5 !

1.2

2.3
.2

-6.2 j

-2.8
.1

-11.9
1.1

2.8
-.6

1.9
4.3

2.2
-1.3

3.9

3.6
4.5 ;

-12.0
-2.4

2.0

-.4

-.8

1.9

.3

-3.0

0

.1

0

12

480.8

525.9

610.3

13

493.2 |

579.0

-13.0
-2.1

-1.9
-.1
0

-.7
.2

-.1
.3

Miscellaneous3

!

1.0

-.2
0

.6 !
-.2 I

-.5
.1

1.7
-1.3

-3.1
5.0

-2.7

-10.2
-2.7

2.1
-1.2

-2.3

1.8

-.9
.1

-.3
.3

-.1
.1

.1

.1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

-.1

-.1

-.2

-.1

627.8

118.3

126.6

144.2

136.8

133.3

147.3

173.1

156.6

150.0

151.6

171.5

154.8

139.6

728.4

138.5

141.5

148.2

150.8

160.6

167.4

165.3

194.2

167.3

181.4

185.5

205.3

4.9
-17.2

1.1
-.9

1.1
-3.8

1.0
-4.6

1.2
-4.7

1.1
-2.1

1.1

1.2
-6.8

1.2
-3.5

1.2
-2.2

1.2
-5.6

1.2
-5.9

1.2
-1.0

19.3
0

4.9
0

7.0
0

8.3
0

5.3
0

5.3
0

8.3
0

5.5
0

4.1
0

4.6
0

5.8
0

4.8
0

2.9
0

0

-1.0
0

-.9
.1

-.3
0

-.1
0

-2.4
0

Expenditures
Unified budget outlays
Less: Coverage differences:
Geographic 4
Other 5

3.9
-12.2

-14.1

4.5
-20.7

Financial transactions:
Net lending
Net purchases of foreign currencyOther

20.4
0

Net purchases of land:
Outer Continental Shelf
Other ..................................................

-1.9
.4

-2.8
.4

-7.8
.2

-2.4
.2

7.7

8.6

9.7

10.9

2.2

2.2

2.1

2.2

2.4

2.4

2.3

2.5

2.8

2.6

2.7

2.8

3.0

3.6

4.1

4.6

9.4

1.0

1.1

1.0

.9

1.0

1.5

1.2

.9

2.5

2.5

2.5

2.0

2.2

-2.2

-.9

28.7
0 I

9.6
0

-.5

Plus: Netting differences:
Contributions to government
employees retirement funds.
Other 2 ..............................................
Timing differences:
Purchases of goods and services
(increase in payables net of
advances).
Interest..... .........................................
Transfer payments
Subsidies less current surplus of
government enterprises.
Miscellaneous 6

25.5
0

1.1

-1.5

-.1
-.1

-1.7
.1
0
-.3

-.1
.2

-3.3

-1.0

-.7

-.2
1.5
0

-1.0
-.3
-.1

-1.4
0

-3.1
0

-.8
.1

0
-1.7
-.4

.3
1.6
-.2

-.5

-.3

-.1
-.2
-.1

-.4
-13.9
-1.3

.4
-1.8

-.2
13.9
.7

27

.1

.2

.4

.2

0

.1

.1

0

.1

.1

.1

0

.1

.1

.1

0

Equals: Federal Government expendi- 28
tures, national income and product
accounts.

495.6

576.5

668.1

740.0

135.5

142.5

146.5

152.0

167.5

166.7

172.7

182.3

183.3

183.8

190.5

206.8

1
2
3
4
5
6

Consists largely of contributions for social insurance by residents of U.S. territories.
Consists largely of proprietary receipts that are netted against outlays in the unified budget, and classified as receipts in the national income and product accounts.
Consists largely of Treasury receipts from sales of foreign currencies to Government agencies.
Consists largely of transfer payments to residents of U.S. territories.
Consists of agencies not included in the unified budget, such as the Postal Service and the Federal Financing Bank, and net purchases of silver and minor coin metal.
Consists largely of net expenditures of foreign currencies.




57

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 3.19.—Relation of State and Local Government Receipts and
Expenditures in the National Income and Product Accounts to Bureau of Census Governmental Finances Data, Fiscal Years

Table 3.20.—Relation of Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) Expenditures in the National Income and Product Accounts to CCC Outlays
in the Unified Budget

[Billions of dollars]

[Billions of dollars]

Line

1979

1980

Line

1981

404.9

Less: Coverage differences:
Unemployment insurance fund contribu- 2
tions and earnings.
Certain grant programs
3

12.9
-6.2

451.5

13.5
-6.2

506.7
18.6
-5.7

Financial transactions..

4

1.1

1.1

1.2

Sale of land

5

.4

7

.8

36.6

41.6

48.2

10.4
21.2
-10.0

11.3
29.1
-11.7

12.7
36.0
-13.1

1.8

1.9

1.7

-1.2
1.0
.9

-1.1
.4
.1

-1.9
1.1
.1

Netting and grossing differences:
Enterprise current operating expendi- 6
tures plus current surplus.
Government sales2
7
Interest received ..
Employer contributions to own social in- 9
surance funds.
Dividends received 2
10
Plus: Timing differences:
Property taxes
Corporate profits taxes
Other
Miscellaneous

11
12
13
14

0

0

0

Equals: State and local government receipts, na- 15
tional income and product accounts.

337.6

369.6

405.6

16

381.9

434.1

487.0

Unemployment insurance fund benefits 17
paid.

8.9

12.1

17.9

Purchases of land

2.1

2.4

2.6

36.6

41.6

48.2

10.4
21.2
-10.0

11.3
29.1
-11.7

12.7
36.0
-13.1

Expenditures
Census total expenditures 1
Less: Coverage differences:

18

Netting and grossing differences:
Enterprise current operating expendi- 19
tures plus current surplus.
Government sales2
20
Interest received
21
Employer contributions to own social in- 22
surance funds.
Dividends received 2
23
Plus: Timing differences:
Excess of accruals over disbursements, 24
and other.
Miscellaneous

1.8

-2.6

1.7

-8.7

-10.3

25

.2

0

0

Equals: State and local government expenditures, 26
national income and product accounts.

308.7

338.6

370.8

1
The Bureau of the Census measures of State and local government receipts and expenditures (lines 1 and 16) represent a combination of fiscal years. 46 states and many localities use
the July 1-June 30 fiscal years; the rest use varying fiscal years. The national income and
product account measures shown in this table are for the fiscal year ending June 30. The
differences that arise from restating the Census data to a year ending June 30 are included in
lines
11, 12, and 13 (receipts) and line 24 (expenditures).
2
Prior to 1968, dividends received is included in interest received (lines 8 and 21).




1980

1981

1982

2.2

3.0

7.3

16.6

1.2
0
.1
-.1

-.2
0
-.3
-.1

0
.2
-.2

.9
0
.1
-.1

Equals: Commodity Credit Corporation expenditures, national income and product accounts.

1.0

3.6

7.6

15.7

Purchases of goods and services
Change in inventories
Other purchases
Transfer payments to foreigners
Grants-in-aid to State and local governments.
Net interest paid
Subsidies less current surplus
Subsidies
Less: Current surplus

-1.0
-1.2
.1
.6
0

3.9
3.4
.5

10.0
9.2
.7
.6
0

Commodity Credit Corporation outlays in the
unified budget.

Receipts
Census total revenue *

1979

: Financial transactionsNetting differences
Timing1 differences
Other

-.6
2.1
.9
-1.2

2.5
.9
-1.6

3.7
1.4
-2.3

-.7
5.8
2.4
-3.4

NOTE.—Change in inventories and other purchases (lines 8 and 9) are shown separately for the
first
time in this issue of the Survey.
1
Consists largely of foreign currency transactions.

58

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

4. Foreign Transactions
Table 4.1.—Foreign Transactions in the National Income and Product Accounts
Millions of dollars

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

Line

1979
1979

1980

1981

1982

1980

I

IV

II

III

IV

1

282,497

339,923

369,846

347,614

311.7

336.5

337.9

338.8

346.5

Exports of goods and services
Merchandise
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Factor income 1
Other

2
3
4
5
6
7
8

281,358
179,180
104,518
74,662
102,178
64,819
37,359

338,771
220,061
128,949
91,112
118,710
74,533
44,177

368,753
232,621
134,889
97,732
136,132
86,282
49,850

347,614
209,218
119,464
89,754
138,396
86,527
51,869

310.5
198.0
112.8
85.2
112.5
74.0
38.5

335.3
214.9
127.9
87.0
120.4
79.1
41.3

336.8
218.4
128.4
90.0
118.4
75.3
43.1

337.6
220.7
128.2
92.6
116.9
70.5
46.4

345.4
226.2
131.3
94.9
119.2
73.2
45.9

Capital grants received by the United States (net)

9

Receipts from foreigners

Payments to foreigners
Imports of goods and services
Merchandise
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Factor income 1
Other
Transfer payments (net)
From persons (net)
From government (net)

...
...

.

.

1,139

1,152

1,093

0

1.1

1.2

1.2

1.2

1.2

10

282,497

339,923

369,846

347,614

311.7

336.5

337.9

338.8

346.5

11
12
13
14
15
16
17

268,145
209,427
99,143
110,284
58,718
22,247
36,471

314,822
244,195
110,150
134,045
70,627
29,223
41,404

342,491
261,086
124,092
136,994
81,405
36,697
44,708

330,202
244,515
123,396
121,119
85,687
39,251
46,436

300.0
234.8
104.8
129.9
65.3
27.0
38.2

322.5
250.5
111.7
138.8
72.0
30.8
41.2

314.2
245.0
107.4
137.6
69.3
28.9
40.4

300.5
234.4
107.8
126.5
66.1
25.0
41.1

322.0
246.9
113.7
133.2
75.1
32.2
42.9

18
19
20

5,062
832
4,230

6,306
1,044
5,262

6,614
918
5,696

7,461
1,128
6,333

6.1
1.1
4.9

5.8
1.0
4.8

5.3
1.0
4.3

6.0
1.1
5.0

8.1
1.1
6.9

12.2

11.7

12.0

14.1

6.7

20.3

2.3

Interest paid by government to foreigners

21

11,076

12,512

16,753

18,229

Net foreign investment

22

-1,786

6,283

3,988

-8,278

11.3

-4.1

-5.7

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1981

Line

I
Receipts from foreigners
Exports of goods and services
Merchandise
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Factor income 1
Other

..

....

Payments to foreigners
Imports of goods and services
Merchandise
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Factor income 1
Other

...

Transfer payments (net)
From persons (net)
From government (net)
Interest paid by government to foreigners
Net foreign investment
1

.

1982

III

I

IV

II

1983

III

IV

II

I

1

368.4

370.3

368.6

372.0

358.4

364.5

346.0

321.6

326.9

321.7

2
3
4
5
6
7
8

367.3
237.7
134.3
103.4
129.6
81.8
47.8

369.2
235.0
140.0
95.0
134.3
84.5
49.8

367.5
226.8
133.9
92.9
140.7
89.7
51.0

371.0
231.0
131.3
99.7
140.0
89.2
50.8

358.4
220.8
124.3
96.5
137.6
85.6
52.0

364.5
218.5
124.4
94.2
146.0
92.8
53.1

346.0
206.6
120.5
86.1
139.3
87.4
51.9

321.6
190.9
108.7
82.2
130.8
80.3
50.5

326.9
195.6
111.8
83.8
131.3
76.9
54.5

321.7
192.4
111.7
80.7
129.3
78.0
51.3

1.1

1.1

1.1

1.1

.0

0

0

0

0

0

10

368.4

370.3

368.6

372.0

358.4

364.5

346.0

321.6

326.9

321.7

11
12
13
14
15
16
17

335.4
256.9
116.7
140.2
78.5
34.2
44.2

348.1
265.5
124.1
141.4
82.7
37.8
44.8

344.7
260.7
125.5
135.2
84.1
39.9
44.2

341.7
261.3
130.2
131.1
80.4
34.8
45.6

328.5
244.1
126.0
118.2
84.4
38.7
45.7

331.2
241.0
127.6
113.4
90.2
43.2
47.1

345.0
257.9
126.0
131.9
87.1
40.9
46.3

316.1
235.0
114.0
121.0
81.0
34.3
46.7

309.9
230.9
124.7
106.2
79.0
32.6
46.5

334.3
251.3
134.9
116.4
83.0
34.6
48.4

18
19
20

6.0
.8
5.2

5.8
1.0
4.8

7.1
.9
6.1

7.7
1.0
6.7

7.1
1.1
6.0

7.1
1.3
5.9

6.9
1.1
5.8

8.7
1.0
7.6

6.1
1.0
5.0

6.0
1.1
4.8

21

15.8

17.0

17.1

17.1

17.9

17.4

22

11.3

-.5

-.3

5.5

4.8

8.7

9

Capital grants received by the United States (net)

II

18.9

18.8

-24.8

17.6

17.6
-6.7

-21.9

-36.1

Line 7 less line 16 equals rest-of-the-world product as shown in table 1.5.

Table 4.2.—Exports and Imports of Goods and Services in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1980

1979

IV

I

1981

II

III

IV

I

1982

II

III

IV

I

1983

II

III

IV

I

II

1

146.2

159.1

159.7

147.3

156.4

164.4

161.0

156.4

154.7

160.6

160.7

159.0

158.7

151.8

154.5

146.4

136.5

137.3

134.2

Merchandise
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

2
3
4

83.9
51.3
32.6

93.1
56.2
36.9

90.7
52.6
38.1

81.4
44.4
37.0

89.5
53.9
35.6

94.5
58.7
35.8

94.3
56.8
37.5

92.3
54.8
37.5

91.2
54.2
37.0

93.1
53.8
39.3

91.9
55.1
36.8

88.2
51.6
36.6

89.7
49.9
39.8

85.0
46.6
38.3

84.7
46.1
38.6

80.6
44.5
36.0

75.4
40.2
35.2

76.9
41.2
35.7

75.1
41.0
34.1

Services
Factor income *
Other

5
6
7

62.3
40.0
22.3

66.0
42.3
23.7

69.0
44.6
24.4

65.9
42.2
23.7

66.8
44.5
22.3

69.9
46.5
23.3

66.7
43.1
23.6

64.0
39.6
24.4

63.5
40.0
23.5

67.5
43.5
24.0

68.9
44.3
24.6

70.7
46.0
24.7

69.0
44.7
24.2

66.8
42.5
24.3

69.8
45.4
24.4

65.9
42.4
23.5

61.1
38.5
22.6

60.4
36.3
24.1

59.1
36.4
22.7

Exports of goods and services

8

109.0

108.8

116.7

118.4

112.2

114.5

108.4

102.9

109.3

112.4

116.6

119.1

118.8

116.6

121.1

122.4

113.5

116.8

124.0

Merchandise
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

9
10
11

76.9
47.2
29.7

74.7
48.2
26.5

79.6
52.4
27.3

79.7
52.3
27.4

78.0
48.3
29.8

78.3
50.0
28.3

74.6
47.8
26.9

71.7
46.8
25.0

74.2
48.1
26.0

76.2
49.4
26.8

78.6
51.9
26.8

80.8
53.4
27.4

82.8
54.7
28.1

78.6
53.1
25.5

80.3
53.5
26.8

83.0
53.4
29.6

77.0
49.0
28.0

81.4
53.2
28.2

87.2
57.1
30.1

Services
Factor income *
Other

12
13
14

32.0
13.7
18.3

34.1
16.6
17.5

37.1
19.0
18.1

38.7
19.1
19.5

34.1
16.3
17.9

36.2
18.1
18.1

33.8
16.6
17.2

31.2
14.0
17.2

35.1
17.6
17.6

36.2
18.2
18.0

38.0
19.8
18.1

38.3
20.5
17.9

36.0
17.5
18.5

38.0
19.2
18.8

40.8
21.1
19.7

39.5
19.8
19.6

36.5
16.4
20.1

35.4
15.4
20.0

36.8
16.2
20.7

Imports of goods and services


1
Line 6 less line 13 equals rest-of-the-world product as shown in table 1.6.


July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

59

Table 4.3.—Merchandise Exports and Imports by Type of Product and by End-Use Category
Millions of dollars

1979

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1979

1980

1981

1982

1980

IV

III

IV

Merchandise exports

1

179,180

220,061

232,621

209,218

198.0

214.9

218.4

220.7

Foods, feeds, and beverages
Industrial supplies and materials
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Capital goods, except autos
Autos
Consumer goods
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Other
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

30,005
53,103
18,131
34,972
58,842
18,200
12,791
6,225
6,566
6,239
3,120
3,119

35,721
67,771
24,328
43,443
74,178
17,540
16,633
8,794
7,839
8,218
4,109
4,109

38,163
65,552
20,216
45,336
81,548
19,791
16,386
7,743
8,643
11,181
5,591
5,590

31,586
61,618
16,887
44,731
73,816
17,084
14,833
6,536
8,297
10,281
5,141
5,140

34.8
61.2
21.3
39.9
62.5
18.5
14.0
6.9
7.1
7.0
3.5
3.5

33.6
66.7
25.6
41.1
68.3
18.1
18.6
11.1
7.4
9.7
4.9
4.9

33.8
71.4
26.5
44.9
73.8
16.5
15.4
7.8
7.6
7.5
3.7
3.7

36.8
67.1
23.3
43.8
75.9
16.9
16.1
8.1
8.0
8.0
4.0
4.0

65.9
21.9
44.0
78.7
18.7
16.4
8.1
8.3
7.7
3.9
3.9

Merchandise imports
Foods, feeds, and beverages
Industrial supplies and materials, excluding petroleum
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Petroleum and products
Capital goods, except autos
Autos
Consumer goods
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Other
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

14

209,427

244,195

261,086

244,515

234.8

250.5

245.0

234.4

246.9

15
16
:.... 17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27

17,366
47,488
28,935
18,553
60,482
24,575
25,503
30,566
18,406
12,160
3,447
1,724
1,723

18,127
49,441
28,465
20,976
79,263
30,861
27,203
34,445
21,193
13,252
4,855
2,428
2,427

18,113
53,828
30,635
23,193
77,794
36,579
30,595
38,664
23,526
15,138
5,513
2,757
2,756

17,118
46,673
23,892
22,781
61,201
34,304
39,658
23,252
16,406
7,227
3,614
3,613

18.8
51.4
30.9
20.4
76.4
26.6
25.8
32.1
19.7
12.4
3.8
1.9
1.9

17.8
53.3
31.8
21.5
84.0
30.1
26.1
33.8
21.0
12.8
5.5
2.7
2.7

17.7
49.2
27.8
21.5
83.2
30.5
25.7
34.3
21.2
13.1
4.3
2.2
2.2

18.3
45.6
25.5
20.0
72.5
30.8
28.5
34.3
20.8
13.5
4.4
2.2
2.2

18.7
49.7
28.7
21.0
77.3
32.1
28.6
35.3
21.7
13.6
5.2
2.6
2.6

28
29
30

35,594
143,586
148,945

42,158
177,903
164,932

44,034
188,587
183,292

37,230
171,988
183,314

41.4
156.6
158.4

40.6
174.3
166.5

40.6
177.8
161.8

42.8
177.9
161.8

44.5
181.7
169.6

Addenda:
Exports of agricultural products l
Exports of nonagricultural products
Imports of nonpetroleum products

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1981

Line

1982

III

III

IV

IV

Merchandise exports..

237.7

235.0

226.8

231.0

220.8

218.5

206.6

190.9

195.6

192.4

Foods, feeds, and beverages
Industrial supplies and materialsDurable goods
Nondurable goods
Capital goods, except autos
Autos
Consumer goods
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Other
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

42.8
68.8
21.9
46.9
80.6
18.7
16.9
8.2
8.7
9.9
5.0
5.0

38.2
63.0
20.9
42.1
84.4
21.0
16.6
7.8
8.8
11.7
5.9
5.9

34.7
62.8
18.8
44.0
80.6
21.1
16.3
7.8
8.5
11.2
5.6
5.6

36.9
67.5
19.2
48.3
80.6
18.3
15.7
7.2
8.5
11.9
6.0
6.0

34.4
66.9
17.9
49.0
77.3
17.5
15.0
6.8
8.2
9.7
4.8
4.8

35.9
62.5
17.4
45.2
76.8
18.8
15.3
6.8
8.5
9.2
4.6
4.6

28.6
59.6
16.6
43.1
73.7
17.8
14.7
6.4
8.3
12.2
6.1
6.1

27.4
57.4
15.7
41.6
67.4
14.3
14.3
6.1
8.1
10.0
5.0
5.0

31.6
55.0
15.0
39.9
69.4
16.6
13.8
6.1
7.7
9.2
4.6
4.6

30.4
53.6
15.6
38.0
67.0
18.4
13.8
6.1
7.7
9.2
4.6
4.6

Merchandise imports-

256.9

265.5

260.7

261.3

244.1

241.0

257.9

235.0

230.9

251.3

19.6
51.1
28.6
22.5
81.5
34.3
28.6
37.1
22.9
14.3
4.6
2.3
2.3

18.2
54.6
32.0
22.6
83.2
35.2
31.2
37.4
22.8
14.6
5.7
2.8
2.8

17.7
55.0
31.4
23.7
76.0
37.3
30.7
38.4
23.4
15.1
5.4
2.7
2.7

17.0
54.6
30.6
24.0
70.4
39.5
31.9
41.6
25.1
16.6
6.3
3.2
3.2

14.9
48.5
26.1
22.4
61.9
39.8
32.0
40.8
25.0
15.9
6.2
3.1
3.1

17.1
46.4
24.2
22.2
53.4
40.3
36.4
38.5
22.3
16.2
8.8
4.4
4.4

18.7
47.1
23.3
23.8
68.9
38.7
37.5
40.3
23.3
17.0
6.7
3.3
3.3

17.7
44.6
22.0
22.7
60.5
34.5
31.3
39.0
22.5
16.5
7.3
3.6
3.6

17.7
47.8
23.2
24.5
42.0
37.2
36.9
43.2
24.3
18.8
6.2
3.1
3.1

19.2
50.8
26.0
24.8
50.0
38.4

48.9
188.8
175.4

44.0
191.0
182.3

39.9
187.0
184.6

43.4
187.6
190.9

40.3
180.5
182.2

41.7
176.8
187.5

33.8
172.9
189.0

33.1
157.8
174.5

36.0
159.5
188.9

34.4
158.0
201.3

Foods, feeds, and beverages
Industrial supplies and materials, excluding petroleumDurable goods
Nondurable goods
Petroleum and products
Capital goods, except autos
Autos
Consumer goods
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Other
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

42.5
44.0

24.8
19.2
6.4
3.2
3.2

Addenda
Exports of agricultural products l
Exports of nonagricultural products..
Imports of nonpetroleum products
1

Includes parts of line 2 and line 5.




SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

60

July 1983

Table 4.4.—Merchandise Exports and Imports by Type of Product and by End-Use Category in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1980

1979
IV

I

II

1981
III

IV

I

II

1982
III

IV

I

II

1983
III

IV

I

II

Merchandise exports

1

83.9

93.1

90.7

81.4

89.5

94.5

94.3

92.3

91.2

93.1

91.9

88.2

89.7

85.0

84.7

80.6

75.4

76.9

75.1

Foods feeds End beverages
Industrial supplies and materials
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Capital goods except autos
Autos
Consumer goods
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Other
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

13.5
21.1
7.2
13.9
31.1
8.4
6.8
3.1
3.8
2.9
1.5
1.5

15.2
24.0
8.6
15.4
34.9
7.0
8.5
3.9
4.6
3.5
1.7
1.7

15.5
22.4
6.9
15.5
33.6
6.8
8.2
3.2
5.0
4.4
2.2
2.2

14.5
21.7
5.9
15.7
28.4
5.4
7.4
2.6
4.8
4.0
2.0
2.0

15.2
22.7
7.9
14.8
32.9
8.3
7.3
3.3
4.0
3.2
1.6
1.6

14.7
23.4
9.0
14.4
34.8
7.7
9.6
5.1
4.5
4.3
2.1
2.1

15.2
25.2
9.4
15.9
35.6
6.8
8.2
3.5
4.8
3.2
1.6
1.6

15.7
23.9
8.3
15.6
34.8
6.6
8.0
3.5
4.5
3.3
1.7
1.7

15.2
23.3
7.7
15.5
34.5
7.0
8.1
3.4
4.7
3.1
1.6
1.6

16.3
23.5
7.5
16.0
34.3
6.7
8.5
3.4
5.0
3.9
1.9
1.9

14.9
21.5
7.1
14.4
35.2
7.3
8.4
3.2
5.2
4.6
2.3
2.3

14.5
21.4
6.4
15.0
32.7
7.2
8.1
3.1
4.9
4.4
2.2
2.2

16.2
23.1
6.6
16.5
32.0
6.1
7.7
2.9
4.8
4.6
2.3
2.3

15.1
23.0
6.1
16.9
30.3
5.7
7.3
2.7
4.6
3.7
1.9
1.9

16.1
21.7
6.0
15.7
29.6
5.9
7.8
2.8
5.0
3.6
1.8
1.8

13.5
21.2
5.9
15.3
28.2
5.5
7.3
2.5
4.8
4.8
2.4
2.4

13.3
20.7
5.7
15.0
25.7
4.4
7.3
2.4
4.8
4.0
2.0
2.0

14.8
20.0
5.5
14.5
26.4
5.1
7.0
2.4
4.6
3.6
1.8
1.8

13.8
19.6
5.7
13.9
25.5
5.7
7.0
2.4
4.6
3.6
1.8
1.8

Merchandise imports

14

76.9

74.7

79.6

79.7

78.0

78.3

74.6

71.7

74.2

76.2

78.6

80.8

82.8

78.6

80.3

83.0

77.0

81.4

87.2

15
Foods feeds, and beverages
Industrial supplies and materials, ex- 16
cluding petroleum.
17
Durable goods
18
Nondurable goods
19
Petroleum and products
20
Capital goods, except autos
21
Autos
22
Consumer goods
23
Durable goods
24
Nondurable goods
25
Other
26
Durable goods
27
Nondurable goods

7.6
19.4

6.7
16.9

7.0
18.1

7.2
16.3

7.6
19.0

6.8
18.6

6.6
16.8

6.6
15.3

6.8
16.8

7.1
17.2

6.8
18.2

7.0
18.6

7.1
18.6

6.1
16.4

7.2
16.0

8.0
16.7

7.4
16.1

7.6
17.5

8.1
18.7

11.8
7.6
8.6
13.8
11.0
15.0
9.9
5.1
1.6
.8
.8

9.7
7.2
6.9
15.6
11.0
15.7
10.9
4.8
2.0
1.0
1.0

10.3
7.8
6.0
18.2
10.7
17.3
12.0
5.3
2.2
1.1
1.1

8.3
8.0
5.1
18.9
11.5
17.9
12.1
5.8
2.9
1.5
1.5

11.4
7.6
8.6
14.5
11.0
15.6
10.5
5.1
1.7
.8
.8

11.1
7.5
7.9
15.7
10.9
16.0
11.0
4.9
2.3
1.2
1.2

9.4
7.3
7.2
15.4
10.9
16.0
11.2
4.8
1.8
.9
.9

8.6
6.8
6.1
15.5
11.3
15.1
10.5
4.6
1.8
.9
.9

9.7
7.0
6.3
15.9
10.7
15.7
10.7
4.9
2.1
1.0
1.0

9.7
7.5
6.2
17.0
10.3
16.6
11.5
5.1
1.8
.9
.9

10.7
7.5
6.2
17.5
11.0
16.7
11.6
5.2
2.3
1.1
1.1

10.6
8.0
6.0
18.8
10.9
17.4
12.0
5.3
2.2
1.1
1.1

10.4
8.2
5.6
19.6
10.6
18.6
12.8
5.8
2.5
1.3
1.3

8.8
7.6
5.0
19.4
10.7
18.5
13.0
5.6
2.5
1.3
1.2

8.3
7.7
4.5
19.7
12.2
17.2
11.5
5.7
3.5
1.8
1.8

8.2
8.5
5.8
19.1
12.7
18.1
12.1
6.0
2.7
1.4
1.4

7.9
8.2
5.0
17.3
10.5
17.7
11.8
5.8
3.0
1.5
1.5

8.5
9.0
3.6
18.5
12.2
19.4
12.7
6.7
2.6
1.3
1.3

9.6
9.1
4.7
19.1
14.0
19.9
13.1
6.9
2.6
1.3
1.3

16.0
67.9
68.3

18.0
75.1
67.8

17.9
72.8
73.6

17.1
64.3
74.6

18.1
71.4
69.5

17.7
76.8
70.3

18.4
75.9
67.5

18.3
74.0
65.6

17.6
73.6
67.9

18.7
74.4
70.0

17.3
74.6
72.5

16.7
71.6
74.8

18.9
70.7
77.1

17.7
67.3
73.6

18.8
65.9
75.8

15.9
64.7
77.2

15.9
59.6
71.9

16.8
60.1
77.7

15.6
59.5
82.6

Addenda:
Exports of agricultural products 1
Exports of nonagricultural products
Imports of non petroleum products
1

Includes parts of line 2 and line 5.




28
29
30

61

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 4.5.—Relation of Foreign Transactions in the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA's) to the Corresponding Items in the Balance of
Payments Accounts (BPA's)
[Millions of dollars]
Line
1

1979

1980

1982

1981

Exports of goods and
services, BPA's
Less: Gold, BPA's 2
Capital gains net of losses
in direct investment income receipts, BPA's 3
4
Statistical differences
5
Other items
Equals: Exports of goods and services, NIPA's

1
2
3
4
5
6

286,772
5,293
-254
0
375
281,358

342,073
4,176
-1,624
0
750
338,771

374,621
4,398
470
0
1,000
368,753

348,324
1,999
-1,852
0
563
347,614

Imports of goods and services, BPA's l
Less: Payments of income
on U.S. Government liabilities 6
Gold, BPA's 2
Capital gains net of losses in direct investment income payments, BPA's 3
Statistical differences 4
Other items
Plus: Gold, NIPA's 2
Equals: Imports of goods and services, NIPA's

7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14

281,677
11,076
2,912
64
0
0
520
268,145

334,596
12,512
5,565
1,676
0
0
-21
314,822

363,098
16,753
4,014
-146
0
0
14
342,491

351,502
18,229
3,403
-20
0
0
312
330,202

Balance on goods and services, BPA's ( 1 — 7 )
Less: Gold (2-9 + 13)
Capital gains net of losses in direct investment income, BPA's (3 — 10)
Statistical differences (4-11)
Other items (5-12)
Plus: Payments of income on U.S. Government liabilities (8)
Equals: Net exports of goods and services, NIPA's (6-14)

15
16
17
18
19
20
21

5,095
2,901
-318
0
375
11,076
13,213

7,477
-1,410
-3,300
0
750
12,512
23,949

11,523
398
616
0
1,000
16,753
26,262

-3,178
-1,092
-1,832
0
563
18,229
17,412

Allocations of special drawing rights, BPA's
Plus: Other items 7
Equals: Capital grants received by U.S., net, NIPA's

22
23
24

1,139
0
1,139

1,152
0
1,152

1,093
0
1,093

0
0

Unilateral transfers (excluding
military grants of goods and services), net, BPA's
4
Less: Statistical differences
Other items 8
Equals: Transfer payments to foreigners, net, NIPA's

25
26
27
28

5,561
0
500
5,062

7,056
0
750
6,306

6,931
0
317
6,614

8,034
0
573
7,461

Payments of income on U.S. Government liabilities, BPA's
Equals: Interest paid by government to foreigners, NIPA's

29
30

11,076
11,076

12,512
12,512

16,753
16,753

18,229
18,229

Balance on current account, BPA's (15-25)
Less: Gold (16)
Capital gains net of losses in direct investment income, BPA's (17)
Statistical differences (18-26)
Other items (19-27)
Plus: Capital grants received by U.S., net, NIPA's (24)
Equals: Net foreign investment, NIPA's (21 + 24-28-30)

31
32
33
34
35
36
37

-466
2,901
-318
0
-125
1,139
-1,786

421
-1,410
-3,300
0
0
1,152
6,283

4,592
398
616
0
683
1,093
3,988

-11,212
-1,092
-1,832
0
-10
0
-8,278

1
2

Includes reinvested earnings of incorporated affiliates.
Beginning in 1960, the treatment of net exports of gold in the NIPA's differs from that in the BPA's. BPA gold exports (line 2) and imports (line 9) are removed from the NIPA's. Imports of
gold in the NIPA's (line 13) is the excess of the value of gold in domestic final sales plus the change in business inventories over the value of U.S. production of gold. Prior to 1960, the treatment of
net exports
of gold in the NIPA's and BPA's is identical, and is the same as the present NIPA treatment.
3
BPA capital gains and losses included in U.S. direct investment income abroad (line 3) and in foreign direct investment income in the U.S. (line 10) are removed from the NIPA's beginning in
1978;4 data needed to remove them from the NIPA's in earlier years are not available.
Consists of statistical revisions in the BPA's that have not yet been incorporated in the NIPA's.
5
Consists of arms shipments to Israel financed under the Emergency Security Act of 1973 and subsequent legislation. In the NIPA's, these arms shipments are classified as military grants,
which
are included in the defense purchases component of GNP when they are acquired by the U.S. Government. Their transfer abroad is not reflected ii the NIPA's.
6
Represents interest paid by government to foreigners. This item is treated as an import of services in the BPA's. In the NIPA's, it is excluded from government purchases and, thus, also from
imports.
7
Consists of a U.S. Government payment to India under the Agricultural Trade Development and Assistance Act. In the NIPA's, this payment is included in capital grants received by the
United
States (net). In the BPA's, it is included in unilateral transfers (excluding military grants of goods and services), net.
8
Consists of financing provided to Israel in accordance with the Emergency Security Act of 1973 and subsequent legislation.




62

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

5. Saving and Investment
Table 5.1.—Gross Saving and Investment
Millions of dollars

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1979

Line

1979

1980

1981

1980

1982
IV

Gross saving
Gross private saving
Personal saving
Undistributed corporate profits with inventory valuation and
capital consumption adjustments.
Undistributed profits'
Inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment

III

IV

1

422,731

405,865

483,807

405,774

404.4

408.3

400.3

2
3
4

407,259
96,690
54,527

435,406
110,191
32,055

509,615
135,270
44,834

521,570
125,439
36,954

401.2
87.3
45.0

414.7
100.8
35.1

437.3
113.2
34.9

440.8
112.2
29.7

448.8
114.6
28.5

5
6
7

112,409
—43,110
-14,772

91,240
-42,872
-16,313

79,459
-23,620
-11,005

46,384
-8,350
-1,080

111.0
-50.1
-16.0

108.7
-58.5
-15.1

80.8
-29.7
-16.3

88.1
-41.1
-17.2

87.3
-42.2
-16.6

157,501

179,326

202,875

222,021

165.7

170.6

176.8

182.4

187.6

98,541

113,834

126,636

137,156

103.2

108.3

112.5

115.9

118.7

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

.5

-.5

Corporate capital consumption allowances with capital consump- 8
tion adjustment.
Noncorporate capital consumption allowances with capital con- 9
sumption adjustment.
Wage accruals less disbursements
10

416.1

Government surplus or deficit ( —), national income and product
accounts.
Federal
State and local

11

14,333

-30,693

-26,901

-115,796

2.1

-7.5

-38.1

-43.3

-33.9

12
13

-16,090
30,423

-61,248
30,555

-62,224
35,323

- 147,057
31,261

-29.6
31.6

-38.5
30.9

-64.3
26.2

-73.3
30.0

-69.0
35.1

Capital grants received by the United States (net)

14

1,139

1,152

1,093

0

1.1

1.2

1.2

1.2

1.2

15

421,244

408,156

478,904

406,236

411.1

417.9

401.0

399.8

414.0

16
17

423,030
-1,786

401,873
6,283

474,916
3,988

414,514
-8,278

416.8
-5.7

422.0
-4.1

394.3
6.7

379.5
20.3

411.7
2.3

18

-1,487

2,291

-4,903

462

6.8

9.5

Gross investment
Gross private domestic investment
Net foreign investment
Statistical discrepancy

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1981

Line
I

Gross saving
Gross private saving
Personal saving
Undistributed corporate profits with inventory valuation and
capital consumption adjustments.
Undistributed profits
Inventory valuation adjustment
Capital consumption adjustment
Corporate capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment.
Noncorporate capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment.
Wage accruals less disbursements
Government surplus or deficit ( —), national income and product
accounts.
Federal
State and local
Capital grants received by the United States (net)
Gross investment
Gross private domestic investmentNet foreign investment
Statistical discrepancy..




1

1982
III

IV

1983
III

IV

461.8

475.8

507.6

490.1

434.4

439.5

397.9

351.3

398.5

468.8
112.2
41.8

485.2
120.2
40.9

531.6
149.7
47.5

552.8
159.0
49.2

514.1
130.8
34.0

520.7
127.1
37.5

524.9
123.0
38.9

526.6
120.8
37.5

541.5
121.7
48.9

89.4

90.9
-36.7
-12.4

74.9
-22.6
-11.4

77.6
-19.4
-10.7

74.4
-15.7
-9.5

45.2
-5.5
-5.6

49.5
-8.5
-3.5

47.7
-9.0
.1

43.1
-10.3
4.7

36.7
-1.7
13.9

-8.5
23.0

193.2

199.6

206.2

212.6

215.6

220.2

224.5

227.7

228.3

230.1

121.7

124.6

128.2

132.0

133.7

135.9

138.5

140.5

142.6

144.3

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

-8.1

-10.6

-25.2

-63.7

-79.7

-81.2

-127.0

-175.3

-142.9

-43.4
35.3

-47.3
36.7

-62.4
37.3

-95.8
32.0

-108.5
28.8

-113.2
32.0

-158.3
31.3

-208.2
32.9

-183.3
40.4

1.1

1.1

1.1

1.1

0

0

0

0

0

0

466.8

471.6

495.5

481.7

427.7

441.3

400.5

355.5

397.4

415.4

455.5
11.3

472.1
-.5

495.8
-.3

476.2
5.5

422.9
4.8

432.5
8.7

425.3
-24.8

377.4
-21.9

404.1
-6.7

451.5
-36.1

-6.7

1.7

2.5

4.2

5.1

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

63

Table 5.2.—Gross Private Domestic Investment, Capital Consumption Allowances with Capital Consumption Adjustment, and Net Private Domestic
Investment by Major Type of Investment
[Millions of dollars]
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

Gross private domestic investment

1

423,030

401 873

474,916

414,514

Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment

2

256,042

293 160

329511

359 177

Equals: Net private domestic investment

3

166,988

108713

145 405

55337

4
5
6

408,769
256 042
152,727

411 662
293 160
118 502

456 464
329511
126 953

439 058
359 177
79881

7
8
9

290,200
201,204
88996

308 794
231,762
77032

352 203
262,538
89665

348 308
289,262
59 046

Structures .
..
Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals' Net structures

10
11
12

98,291
64,571
33720

110 940
74781
36 159

133 354
84259
49095

141 889
93051
48838

Producers' durable equipment
Less: Capital consumption allowances with capial consumption adjustment
Equals' Net producers' durable equipment

13
14
15

191 909
136,633
55276

197 854
156,981
40873

218 849
178,279
40570

206 419
196,211
10208

16
17
18

118 569
54,838
63731

102 868
61 398
41 470

104 261
66973
37288

90750
69915
20 835

Nonfarm structures
Less' Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals: Net nonfarm structures

19
20
21

113,993
50804
63,189

98,075
56903
41 172

99,785
62045
37740

85,974
64719
21 255

Farm structures .
.
. . . .
Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals' Net farm structures

22
23
24

1,707
1,876
169

1 762
2,067
305

1 254
2,199
945

1 532
2,231
699

Producers' durable equipment
Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals: Net producers' durable equipment

25
26
27

2869
2158
711

3 031
2428
603

3 222
2729
493

3 244
2965
279

28

14,261

-9,789

18,452

-24,544

Fixed investment
Less* Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals: Net fixed investment
Nonresidential
...
Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals: Net nonresidential

Residential
Less1 Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals' Net residential

Change in business inventories

Table 5.3.—Gross Private Domestic Investment, Capital Consumption Allowances With Capital Consumption Adjustment, and Net Private Domestic
Investment by Major Type of Investment in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Line

1980

1979

1982

1981

Gross private domestic investment

1

236.3

208.5

227.6

194.5

Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment

2

143.0

149.8

155.9

162.5

Equals: Net private domestic investment

3

93.3

58.7

71.6

32.0

4
5
6

229.1
143.0
86.0

212.9
149.8
63.1

219.1
155.9
63.1

203.9
162.5
41.4

7
8
9

169.9
115.3
54.6

165.8
121.5
44.3

174.4
126.9
47.5

166.1
132.9
33.3

Structures
Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals* Net structures

10
11
12

49.1
32.6
16.5

48.8
33.5
15.3

52.5
34.6
17.9

53.4
35.9
17.5

Producers' durable equipment
Less* Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals: Net producers' durable equipment

13
14
15

120.8
82.7
38.1

117.0
88.0
29.1

121.9
92.3
29.6

112.7
97.0
15.7

16
17
18

59.1
27.7
31.4

47.1

44.7

28.4
18.7

29.0
15.6

37.8
29.6
8.2

Nonfarm structures
Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals* Net nonfarm structures
. . . .

19
20
21

56.3
25.3
31.0

44.2
25.8
18.4

42.1
26.4
15.7

35.2
26.9
8.3

Farm structures
Less* Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals* Net farm structures

22
23
24

.8
.9
-.1

.8
.9
-.1

.5
.9
-.4

.6
.9
-.3

Producers' durable equipment
Less* Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals* Net producers' durable equipment

25
26
27

2.0
1.5
.5

2.0
1.6
.4

2.0
1.7
.3

1.9
1.8
.2

28

7.3

4.4

8.5

Fixed investment
Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals* Net fixed investment
Nonresidential
Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals' Net nonresidential

Residential
Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Equals: Net residential

a ge




-9.4

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

64

July 1983

Table 5.4.—Purchases of Structures by Type

Table 5.5.—Purchases of Structures by Type in Constant Dollars

[Millions of dollars]

[Billions of 1972 dollars]

Line
1

1979

1980

1981

Line

1982
1

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

131.8

119.8

119.1

112.0

2

1062

939

951

892

3

491

48 8

525

53 4

4

49.0

48.7

52.4

53.3

Nonresidential buildings, excluding farm
5
6
Industrial
7
Commercial
Religious
.
. . . . 8
9
Educational
10
Hospital and institutional
.
11
Other 2

26.5
80
13.4
8
.4
19
2.0

26.5
66
14.4
8
.6
19
2.2

29.3
77
15.6
.8
.5
2.2
2.5

30.5
76
16.5
7
.6
26
2.5

28,481
1 314
7,024
16091
3,675
377

Public utilities
Railroads
Telephone and telegraph
Electric light and power
Gas
Petroleum pipelines

12
13
14
15
16
17

13.5
6
3.6
78
1.2
3

12.6
6
3.4
7.0
1.3
4

12.0
6
3.4
6.4
1.4
.3

12.0
6
3.2
66
1.5
2

4,779
35,082
33,306
1,776
1,268

4957
37,741
36,137
1,604
1,253

Farm
Mining exploration, shafts, and wells
Petroleum and natural gas
Other
Other 3

18
19
20
21
22

30
5.3
47
.6
.7

25
6.6
59
.7
.6

22
8.4
76
.8
.6

22
8.1
74
.7
.5

431
-269

503
-358

536
-446

23
24

.2
_1

.2
-.1

.2
-.2

.2
_2

115,700

99,837

101,039

87,506

102,664

88810

91,458

79,338

27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34

101 005
83,034
78,015
60,217
17,798
5,019
17913
58

87090
67,173
62,692
45,216
17,476
4,481
19830
87

90247
67,097
62,215
43,952
18,263
4,882
22966
184

77842
56,371
51,583
35,330
16,253
4,788
21233
238

35
36
37

1,659
646
1,013

38
39

13,633
-597

11,796
-769

10,435
-854

8,968
-800

Government structures and new construction 40
force-account compensation.

49,893

56,635

54,966

52,921

1

263,884

267,412

289,359

282,316

2

213,991

210,777

234,393

229,395

3

98,291

110,940

133,354

141,889

4

98,144

110,778

133,209

141,799

Nonresidential buildings, excluding farm
Industrial
Commercial
Religious
Educational
Hospital and institutional
Other 2

5
6
7
8
9
10
11

49,619
14950
25,097
1 548
806
3530
3,688

55,532
13837
30,133
1637
1,175
4046
4,704

64,756
17030
34,493
1665
1,171
4,907
5,490

69,367
17343
37,534
1 543
1,356
5875
5,716

Public utilities
Railroads
Telephone and telegraph
Electric light and power
Gas
Petroleum pipelines

12
13
14
15
16
17

25,823
1 189
6,276
15,265
2,502
591

26,545
1 256
6,652
14979
2,849
809

27,324
1 334
6,988
14,858
3,402
742

Farm
Mining exploration, shafts and wells
Petroleum and natural gas
Other
Other 3

18
19
20
21
22

5558
15,692
14,586
1,106
1,452

5244
22,207
20,827
1,380
1,250

Brokers' commissions on sale of structures
Net purchases of used structures

23
24

385
-238

25
26

Nonfarm
New housing units
Permanent site
1-unit structures
2-or-more unit structures
Mobile homes
Additions
and alterations
Other 4
Farm
New housing units......
Additions and alterations

Purchases of structures
Private
Nonresidential
New

Residential
New

Brokers' commissions on sale of structures
Net purchases of used structures

1,720
435
1 285

1,211
460
751

41

49,058

55,597

53,754

51,675

42
43
44
45
46
47

15,698
1,556
1,068
6,903
1,486
4,685

18,778
2,150
1,379
8,050
1,605
5,594

18,140
2,338
1,592
6,737
1,877
5,596

17,436
2,379
1,566
5,927
1,775
5,789

Highways and streets
Military facilities
Conservation and development

48
49
50

11,997
1,667
4,587

13,770
2,138
5,091

13,599
1,959
5,300

13,522
2,323
5,027

Sewer and water systems
Sewer systems
Water supply facilities
Other 6

51
52
53
54

9,788
7,298
2,490
5,321

10,437
7,171
3,266
5,383

8,939
5,935
3,004
5,817

8,431
5,529
2,902
4,936

55

835

1,038

1,212

1,246

Net purchases of used structures

Nonresidential
New

Brokers' commissions on sale of structures
Net purchases of used structures
.. .

25

57.1

45.1

42.6

35.9

26

507

40 1

386

325

Nonfarm
New housing units
. . ..
Permanent site
1-unit structures
2-or-more unit structures
Mobile homes
Additions
and alterations
Other 4

27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34

499
41 1
382
29.5
87
2.9
88
0

393
30.4
281
20.2
78
2.4
89
0

38 1
28.5
260
18.4
76
2.5
96
.1

31 9
23.5
21 1
14.5
67
2.3

Farm
New housing units
Additions and alterations

35
36
37

.8
.3
5

.8
.2
6

.5
.2
3

6
.2
4

38
39

6.7
-.3

5.3
-.3

4.4
-.4

3.7
-.3

Government structures and new construction 40
force-account compensation.

25.6

26.0

24.0

22.8

Residential
New

1,496
365
1 131

Buildings, excluding military
Residential
Industrial
Educational
Hospital
Other 5

New

Purchases of structures
Private

Brokers' commissions on sale of structures
Net purchases of used structures

1
In this table, purchases of structures includes compensation of government employees
engaged in new force-account construction. In table 1.3 this compensation is classified as a
service
and is included as part of government compensation of employees.
2
Consists of hotels and motels, buildings used primarily for social and receational activities,
and buildings not elsewhere classified, such as passenger terminals, greenhouses, and animal
hospitals.
3
Consists of streets, .dams and reservoirs, sewer and water facilities, parks, airfields, etc.
4
Consists of dormitories, fraternity and sorority houses, nurses' homes, etc.
5
Consists of general office buildings, police and fire stations, courthouses, auditoriums,
garages,
passenger terminals, etc.
6
Consists of electric and gas facilities, transit systems, airfields, etc.




.1

41

252

255

235

223

Buildings excluding military
Residential
Industrial
Educational
Hospital
Other 5
Highways and streets
Military facilities
Conservation and development

42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50

86
8
6
3.8
10
2.5
55
9
25

92
10
7
4.0
9
2.6
55
1.1
25

83
10
7
3.1
10
2.5
55
.9
24

77
10
7

Sewer and water systems
Sewer systems
Water supply facilities
Other 6

51
52
53
54

5.0
3.8
1.3
2.7

4.9
3.4
1.5
2.4

3.9
2.7
1.3
2.5

3.6
24

55

4

5

5

5

New

Net purchases of used structures
1

83

2.6
9
26
58
10
21

1.2
21

In this table, purchases of structures includes compensation of government employees
engaged in new force-account construction. In table 1.4 this compensation is classified as a
service
and is included as part of government compensation of employees.
2
Consists of hotels and motels, buildings used primarily for social and receational activities,
and buildings, not elsewhere classified, such as passenger terminals, greenhouses, and animal
hospitals.
3
Consists of streets, dams and reservoirs, sewer and water facilities, parks, airfields, etc.
4
Consists of dormitories, fraternity and sorority houses, nurses' homes, etc.
5
Consists of general office buildings, police and fire stations, courthouses, auditoriums,
garages,
passenger terminals, etc.
6
Consists of electric and gas facilities, transit systems, airfields, etc.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

65

Table 5.6.—Private Purchases of Producers' Durable Equipment by
Type

Table 5.7.—Private Purchases of Producers' Durable Equipment by
Type in Constant Dollars

[Millions of dollars]

[Billions of 1972 dollars]

Private purchases of producers' durable
equipment.

Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

194,778

200,885

222,071

209,663

Line

114.7

121.9

112.7

4.0
3.7
1.4
2.1

4.1
3.6
1.4
2.0

4.2
3.1
1.2
1.4

5,369
3,761
8780
10,511

Agricultural machinery except tractors
Construction machinery, except tractors
Mining and oilfield machinery
Metalworking machinery ... . ..

7
8
9
10

3.9
4.2
1.7
6.3

3.3
3.1
1.9
6.3

3.1
2.7
2.7
6.1

2.1
1.4
2.5
4.2

10,892
12,463

9,641
11,353

4.4
6.1

4.2
5.8

4.4
5.5

3.7
4.6

19,832
5636

24,527
5770

26,924
5,122

11
Special industry machinery n e e
General industrial, including materials han- 12
dling, equipment.
13
Office, computing, and accounting machinery
14
Service industry machinery

16.2
3.3

19.3
3.2

24.3
3.0

26.6
2.5

28876
8,339

32619
9,093

36528
9,954

37979
10,118

15
16

19.9
4.9

21.7
4.9

21.9
4.8

20.8
4.5

17,286
3251

20,179
3347

22,421
4 153

23,840
4021

Electrical and communication equipment
Electrical transmission, distribution, and industrial apparatus.
Communication equipment
Electrical equipment, n.e.c

17
18

13.3
1.7

15.1
1.6

15.3
1.8

14.8
1.6

24466
13410
5,256
2330
5,548
13360
5,568

17850
11,504
5,974
3061
5,599
15499
6,097

17 673
13,311
7,083
3784
3,680
17329
6,438

16308
12,353
6,392
2603
3,013
17,909
5,751

Trucks buses, and truck trailers
Autos
Aircraft
Ships and boats
Railroad equipment
Instruments
Other

19
20
21
22
23
24
25

13.8
10.1
2.9
1.3
2.6
9.6
3.4

9.1
8.0
2.9
1.5
2.4
10.5
3.4

8.0
9.5
3.1
1.7
1.4
11.0
3.2

6.9
9.3
2.6
1.1
1.1
11.1
2.7

Less: Sale of equipment scrap, excluding autos

26

.7

.6

.7

.5

27

2.0

2.0

2.0

1.9

Agricultural machinery, except tractors
Construction machinery, except tractors
Mining and oilfield machinery
Metalworking machinery

7
8
9
10

7,453
8,190
3896
11,754

7,038
6,916
4878
13,207

7,195
6,563
8213
14,216

Special industry machinery, n e.c
General industrial, including materials handling, equipment.
Office, computing, and accounting machinery
Service industry machinery

11
12

8,687
11,255

9,311
11,939

13
14

16,431
5234

15
Electrical and communication equipment
Electrical transmission, distribution, and in- 16
dustrial apparatus.
17
Communication equipment
18
Electrical equipment n e e
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26

1,791

1,566

1,753

866

27

2,869

3,031

3,222

3,244

28

194,778

200,885

222,071

209,663

29
30

1 662
209

1 629
236

1 852
256

1730
258

9,988
12,258
10,354
675
782
524
1 810
1 584
1 781
205,380 211,740 234,526

13,702
507
884
222,768

Nonresidential

Residential

Addenda:
Private purchases of producers' durable equipment.
Less* Dealers' margin on used equipment
Net purchases of used equipment from
government.
Plus: Net sales of used equipment
Net exports of used equipment
Sale of equipment scrap
.' .
Equals: Private purchases of new equipment

124.0

117.0

9401
7,104
3 160
3,851

Less: Sale of equipment scrap, excluding autos

119.0

4.0
3.8
1.4
2.7

206,419

8738
7,781
3355
5063

Residential

122.9
120.8

218,849

7896
6,999
2917
4,648

.

1
2

197,854

7236
6,772
2735
5243

Trucks buses and truck trailers
Autos
..
Aircraft
Ships and boats
Railroad equipment
Instruments
Other

1982

1981

3
4
5
6

191 909

3
4
5
6

.

1980

Furniture and fixtures
Fabricated metal products
Engines and turbines
Tractors

2

Furniture and fixtures
Fabricated metal products
Engines and turbines
Tractors
..

Nonresidential .

Private purchases of producers' durable
equipment.

1979

n.e.c. Not elsewhere classified.

31
32
33
34

n.e.c. Not elsewhere classified.

Table 5.8.—Change in Business Inventories by Industry
Millions of dollars

Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

Line

1980

1979
1979

1980

1981

1982

Change in business inventories

1

14,261

-9,789

18,452

-24,544

Farm

2

5,669

-5,323

7,593

-1,420

5.1

Nonfarm
Change in book value
. . .
Inventory valuation adjustment l

3
4
5

8,592
58,787
-50,195

-4,466
45,962
-50,428

10,859
38,465
-27,606

-23,124
-13,857
-9,267

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

6
7
8

9,250
9,837
-587

1,558
1,314
244

4,681
1,734
2,947

Wholesale trade
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

9
10
11

2,758
1,384
1,374

3,032
1,734
1,298

Merchant wholesalers
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

12
13
14

1,459
836
623

Nonmerchant wholesalers
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

15
16
17

1,299
548
751

Retail trade
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

18
19
20

Other
Durable goods 2 2
Nondurable goods

21
22
23




II

I

IV

-2.6

-1.6

IV

III
3.0

-25.4

-15.1

-2.8

-4.4

-9.4

-4.8

-7.8
50.6
-58.4

1.2
68.9
-67.7

7.4
43.4
-36.0

-16.0
32.3
-48.3

-10.4
39.3
-49.6

-20,559
-14,125
-6,434

4.4
8.3
-3.9

14.8
6.5
8.3

8.1
5.1
3.1

-11.7
-5.4
-6.2

-5.1
-.9
-4.2

1,470
1,350
120

-2,093
-1,047
-1,046

.4
-1.7
2.1

3.1
-1.3
4.5

9.9
5.9
4.0

1.9
-.6
2.5

-2.8
3.0
-5.8

3,770
2,014
1,756

1,683
1,436
247

150
163
-13

-2.0
-1.5
-.5

0
-1.4
1.4

8.5
5.9
2.6

6.2
.1
6.2

.3
3.5
-3.2

-738
-280
-458

-213
-86
-127

-2,243
-1,210
-1,033

2.3
-.2
2.6

3.1
.1
3.0

1.4
0
1.4

-4.4
-.7
-3.7

-3.2
-.6
-2.6

-2,504
-828
-1,676

-5,167
-5,299
132

4,986
1,810
3,176

-997
-995
-2

-8.6
-7.1
-1.6

-11.5
-10.3
-1.3

-3.2
-6.3
3.1

-2.3
-4.3
2.0

-3.6
-.3
-3.3

-912
95
-1,007

-3,889
-1,844
-2,045

-278
-1,265
987

525
678
-153

-3.9
-1.8
-2.1

-5.3
-1.8
-3.5

-7.4
-9.7
2.2

-3.9
.2
-4.2

1.1
3.8
-2.7

66

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 5.8.—Change in Business Inventories by Industry—Continued
Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates

1981

Line

III

IV

I

II

1

10.9

15.0

33.6

14.3

25.7

Farm

2

2.8

10.1

9.5

8.1

1.9

Nonfann
Change in book value
Inventory valuation adjustment 1

3
4
5

8.1
51.3
432

5.0
30.7
257

24.1
46.8
227

6.2
25.0
187

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

6
7
8

9.4
3.8
5.6

4.3
.7
3.6

15.0
12.5
2.5

Wholesale trade
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

9
10
11

.9
-1.6
2.5

19
3.0
49

Merchant wholesalers
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

12
13
14

-2.8
-1.7
-1.1

Nonmerchant wholesalers
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

15
16
17

Retail trade
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Other
Durable goods 2 2
Nondurable goods

Change in business inventories

1983

1982

II

I

III
11 2

IV

I

II

-39.4

-4.9

-56.4

-2.4

-2.6

-2.7

276
-21.4
63

-8.8
.7
95

-2.3
7.7
-10.0

-53.7
424
-11.3

-39.0
377
-1.3

86
.6
-9.2

-10.0
-10.1
.1

178
-13.3
-4.5

187
-7.4
-11.3

-13.3
-10.5
-2.9

-32.4
253
-7.1

-29.9
242
-5.7

1.3
2.2
10

1.5
2.6
12

5.5
1.4
4.1

11 6
-1.9
96

8.4
4.5
3.9

.5
2.8
-2.3

-5.7
-9.5
3.8

-18.1
-16.0
-2.0

53
-5.0
2

.6
3.1
-2.6

2.2
1.8
.4

6.8
2.5
4.3

-6.8
-1.1
-5.7

12.5
5.5
7.0

.1
3.8
-3.7

-5.1
75
2.4

-13.1
146
1.5

-4.4
-5.4
1.0

3.7
0
3.7

-2.5
-.2
-2.4

7
.8
-1.6

13
-1.1
-.2

-4.7
-.8
-3.9

41
-1.0
31

.4
-1.0
1.4

-.6
20
1.4

-5.0
14
-3.6

-.9
.3
-1.2

18
19
20

-1.6
-3.8
2.2

8.9
7.4
1.5

8.3
3.0
5.3

4.3
.7
3.7

-6.4
-6.5
.1

1
.1
-.3

-9.2
-10.4
1.3

6.9
3.5
3.4

-2.4
-6.4
4.1

21
22
23

-.6
.3
-.9

-.7
-4.1
3.5

6.5
1.8
4.7

8.2
.9
7.3

1.6
.3
1.3

-6.5
.2
-6.7

2.1
15
3.6

-2.2
6
-1.6

-6.3
-3.0
-3.3

11.7
12.8
11
12
1.3
-2.5

-10.6

-2.0

-.4

1
Beginning with 1973, the inventory valuation adjustment (IVA) shown in this table differs from that which adjusts business income. The IVA in this table reflects the mix of methods (first-in,
first-out; last-in, first-out, etc.) underlying book value inventories derived primarily from Census Bureau statistics. This mix differs from that underlying business income derived primarily from
Internal
Revenue Service statistics. Prior to 1973, the two IVA's are the same because information required for separate estimates is not available.
2
Prior to 1959, inventories held by construction establishments are included in line 23. In 1959, the change in business inventories for construction establishments was $329 million.

Table 5.9.—Change in Business Inventories by Industry in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1980

1979

1982

1981

1979

1981

1980

IV

I

II

-2.3

-.5

III

-1.3

-22.7

-15.4

-4.5

-1.2

-1.4

-1.6

-.3

-1.0

28

2.1

4.5

11.8

48
-2.2
26

-1.8
-.3
-1.5

3.6
1.6
2.0

1.5
.6
.9

7.4
5.4
2.0

-4.3
4.4
.1

-7.7
5.8
-1.9

3.0
2.4
.6

1.8
_2
2.1

-.5
1.3
-1.7

-.5
-1.1
.6

.4
1.6
-1.2

1.5
1.0
.5

2.6
.8
1.8

-2.8
6
-2.2

4.3
1.9
2.4

.4
1.4
-1.0

.8
.1
.6

2.6
2.3
.3

2.7
0
2.7

.1
1.5
13

-1.1
-1.2
.1

.6
1.6
-1.0

1.1
.6
.5

3.0
1.3
1.8

-1.8
-.3
-1.6

5.2
2.2
3.0

.2
_i
'.3

.8
.2
.6

.3
.1
.2

-.9
_2
6

-.6
-.2
4

.6
.1
.5

-.2
0
2

.4
.4
-.1

-.4
-.4
.0

-1.0
-.4
-.6

-.5
5
0

-4.6
-4.1
-.6

5.8
52
-.6

22
36
1.4

-1.6
26
.9

3
-1.5

-.6
-2.1
1.5

4.5
3.5
.9

3.9
1.2
2.7

1.7
.3
1.4

.4
.3
.1

17
9
-.8

22
g
-1.4

41
-4.7
.6

13
.1
-1.5

1.3
1.8
-.5

-.3
.1
-.5

-1.9
13
-.6

-.9
-1.8
.9

2.1
.8
1.3

2.0

4.3

3

4.9

-2.0

5.1

86

44

.6

1

59

4
5
6

5.2
5.6
-.4

.9
1.0
1

2.0
.8
1.2

84
-6.0
24

2.6
4.7
21

7.0
4.0
3.1

3.2
2.5
.7

7
8
9

1.2
.9
.3

1.5
.9
.6

1.0
.6
.4

-.1
3
.2

-.8
g
0

1.6
.3
1.3

Merchant wholesalers
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

10
11
12

.9
.6
.3

1.6
1.0
.6

.9
.6
.3

.6
.2
.4

-1.0
-.7
3

Nonmerchant wholesalers
Durable goods

13
14
15

.3
.3
0

-.1
1
0

.1
0
.1

-.8
-.5
2

16
17
18

-1.3
-.4
-.9

28
-2.9
.1

2.4
.7
1.6

19
20
21

-.2
.1
-.3

-1.6
-.9
_ Y

3
6
.3

Nondurable goods 1

-3.4

3.8

4.3

1.1

Other

6.0 -10.2

16.1

2.1

Nondurable goods

I

4.4

.8

Retail trade

IV

8.9

3.4

Wholesale trade
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

III

I

.9

8.5

-2.3

-1.8

II

II

IV

3.0

-10.1

-4.4

2.4

.

1983

1982
III

-1.9

-2.1

7.3

Manufacturing
Durable goods
.
Nondurable goods

II

I

-4.7

-9.4

1
2

Change in business inventories
Farm

IV

.9

-2.2

.1 -21.1

-6.7
-3.1
-3.6

-5.5 -13.6
-4.5 -10.6
-.9 -3.0

-15.1

34

123
-10.1
-2.2

.5
.8
-.3

-2.4
-3.8
1.4

-6.7
-6.7
0

-2.1
-2.1
0

.7
1.8
-1.1

-1.6
-3.0
1.4

-5.3
-6.1
.7

-2.1
-2.2
.1

-.9
-.4
-.5

-.3
-.4
.1

.9
-.8
0

-1.3
-.6
-.7

0
.1
-.1

-3.0
-3.1
.1

-.1
0
-.1

5.3
5.8
-.5

-4.1
-4.6
.5

3.1
1.7
1.4

-1.2
29
1.8

2.4
.4
2.0

.3
.1
.2

-.2
.6
-.7

-1.0
.1
-1.1

.8
6
1.4

-.7
3
-.4

2.1 -11.1

Prior to 1959, inventories held by construction establishments are included in line 21. In 1959, the constant dollar change in business inventories for construction establishments was $.4
billion.




July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

67

Table 5.10.—Inventories and Final Sales of Business
[Billions of dollars]
Seas onally ac justed qu arterly to tals
Line

1979
IV

1

19 30
I

19 31

II

III

IV

I

19 82

II

III

IV

I

19 83

II

III

IV

I

II

1

7050

723 1

7375

7567

7754

791 2

802 2

811 9

8193

8104

814 6

814 9

798 4

791 5

Farm

2

819

787

81 1

854

863

856

875

83 1

837

868

885

846

807

843

835

Nonfarm
Durable goods 2 2
Nondurable goods

3
4
5

623 1
3622
2610

6443
3704
2739

6564
372.6
2838

6713
3793
2920

6890
3903
2988

7056
3951
3104

7147
4039
3108

7288
4142
3147

7356
4166
319 0

7236
4114
3122

7261
4125
313 6

7303
4169
313 5

717 7
4073
3104

707 1
3998
307 3

708 5
3995
309 0

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

6
7
8

3066
2000
1066

3200
2069
113 1

3275
209.9
1177

3327
2131
1196

3414
2180
1233

3507
221 9
1288

3554
2260
1234

3629
2330
1299

3632
2328
1304

3557
229 1
1267

351 4
2276
1238

349 4
2260
1234

341 5
2202
121 4

3327
2143
118 4

334 4
216 1
1183

Wholesale trade
Durable goods .. .
Nondurable goods

9
10
11

1357
846
51.1

141 2
869
54.3

1459
894
56.4

151 5
917
59.7

1559
953
60.6

1596
964
63.2

1606
989
61.6

1625
101 4
61.1

164 6
1027
619

1606
1026
580

164 4
1044
600

165 0
1060
590

1635
104 1
595

159 1
1009
581

1590
1003
587

Merchant wholesalers
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

12
13
14

107.8
700
37.8

111.3
720
39.4

115.3
744
40.8

121.2
765
44.7

125.1
799
45.2

126.8
808
46.0

128.2
83 1
45.1

1300
851
449

1323
865
458

1306
867
439

1348
886
462

1352
904
448

1342
888
454

1318
860
458

1317
852
465

Nonmerchant wholesalers
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

15
16
17

27.8
145
13.3

29.8
149
14.9

30.6
150
15.6

30.3
152
15.1

30.7
154
15.3

32.8
156
172

32.3
159
16.5

32.5
163
162

323
162
161

30.0
159
14 1

296
158
138

299
156
142

293
152
14 1

273
150
123

273
151
122

Retail trade
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

18
19
20

121.0
585
62.6

1223
577
646

123.2
565
66.7

126.3
574
69.0

1280
585
69.6

1298
580
718

1334
606
728

1373
624
749

1394
632
762

1373
61 6
758

1390
622
768

1432
662
770

1413
643
77 1

1433
65 8
774

1434
64 4
790

Other

21

598

609

598

608

638

654

654

661

684

699

713

727

713

72 1

71 7

22
23

176.9
113.8

181.8
116.7

181.4
114.2

188.2
118.4

194.6
122.7

202.0
128.0

205.0
129.0

210.4
131.6

2127
131.9

215.1
132.2

217 1
132.1

2179
130.7

2230
133.8

226 2
135.2

231 9
138.1

24
25
26

3.99
3.52
5.47

398
3.54
5.52

4.07
3.62
5.75

4.02
3.57
5.67

3.98
3.54
5.62

3.92
3.49
5.51

3.91
3.49
5.54

386
3.46
5.54

385
3.46
5.58

377
3.36
5.47

375
3.34
5.50

374
3.35
5.59

358
3.22
5.36

350
3.13
5.23

342
3.06
5.13

Inventories

Final sales 3
Final sales of goods and structures

792 1

Ratio of inventories to final sales
Inventories to final sales
Nonfarm inventories to final sales
Nonfarm inventories to final sales of goods and
structures.

1
Inventories are as of the end of the quarter. The quarter-to-quarter change in inventories calculated from current-dollar inventories in this table is not the current-dollar change in business
inventories (CBI) component of GNP. The former is the difference between two inventory stocks, each valued at their respective end-of-quarter prices. The latter is the change in the physical volume
of inventories
valued at average prices of the quarter. In addition, changes calculated from this table are at quarterly rates, whereas CBI is stated at annual rates.
2
Prior to 1959, inventories held by construction establishments are included in line 5. In 1959, the value of inventories held by construction establishments was $2.6 billion.
3
Quarterly totals at monthly rates. Business final sales equals final sales less gross product of households and institutions, government, and rest of the world, and includes a small amount of
final sales by farms.

Table 5.11.—Inventories and Final Sales of Business in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Seasonally adjusted quarterly totals
Line

1979
IV

l

1980
I

III

IV

I

1983

1982

1981

II

II

III

IV

I

II

III

IV

I

II

1

343.6

343.5

342.9

340.4

339.2

340.0

342.2

346.2

347.7

345.2

344.3

344.0

338.3

334.5

Farm

2

43.2

42.9

42.4

41.3

40.9

41.1

42.2

43.3

44.2

44.5

44.2

43.8

43.4

43.3

43.1

Nonfarm ....
Durable goods 2 2
Nondurable goods ....

3
4
5

300.4
183.2
117.2

300.6
182.8
117.8

300.5
181.9
118.6

299.1
180.7
118.3

298.4
181.3
117.0

298.9
181.0
117.9

300.0
182.1
117.9

303.0
183.5
119.5

303.5
182.9
120.6

300.7
180.6
120.1

300.2
180.3
119.8

300.2
181.2
119.0

294.9
176.4
118.5

291.2
172.5
118.7

290.3
171.4
118.9

Manufacturing...
Durable goods
Nondurable goods ....

6
7
8

145.0
98.8
46.1

146.7
99.8
46.9

147.5
100.5
47.1

146.3
99.9
46.4

145.9
99.8
46.1

146.8
100.2
46.6

147.2
100.4
46.8

149.0
101.7
47.3

147.9
100.6
47.3

146.0
99.2
46.8

144.3
98.4
45.9

143.0
97.3
45.7

139.6
94.6
44.9

136.5
92.1
44.4

136.6
92.3
44.3

Wholesale trade
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

9
10
11

64.7
42.9
21.8

65.1
43.0
22.2

65.9
43.5
22.3

66.3
43.5
22.8

66.2
43.8
22.4

66.1
43.5
22.5

66.2
43.9
22.2

66.5
44.2
22.3

67.2
44.4
22.8

66.5
44.3
22.2

67.6
44.7
22.9

67.7
45.1
22.6

67.1
44.1
22.9

65.4
42.5
22.9

64.9
41.9
22.9

Merchant wholesalers
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

12
13
14

53.4
35.7
17.7

53.6
35.7
17.9

54.3
36.3
17.9

54.9
36.3
18.6

55.0
36.7
18.3

54.7
36.4
18.3

54.8
36.8
18.1

55.1
36.9
18.2

55.9
37.3
18.6

55.4
37.2
18.2

56.7
37.8
19.0

56.9
38.2
18.7

56.5
37.5
19.0

55.2
36.0
19.2

54.6
35.4
19.2

Nonmerchant wholesalers
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

15
16
17

11.3
7.2
4.1

11.5
7.2
4.3

11.6
7.2
4.4

11.4
7.2
4.2

11.2
7.1
4.1

11.4
7.2
4.2

11.3
7.2
4.2

11.4
7.3
4.2

11.3
7.2
4.2

11.1
7.1
4.0

10.9
7.0
3.9

10.8
6.9
3.9

10.6
6.6
3.9

10.2
6.5
3.7

10.2
6.5
3.7

Retail trade
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

18
19
20

66.1
32.1
33.9

64.6
30.8
33.8

64.1
29.9
34.2

63.7
29.3
34.4

63.2
29.2
34.0

63.1
28.7
34.4

64.2
29.6
34.6

65.2
29.9
35.3

65.6
30.0
35.6

64.9
29.2
35.7

64.8
29.2
35.6

66.1
30.6
35.5

65.1
29.5
35.7

65.9
29.9
36.0

65.6
29.2
36.4

Other

21

24.6

24.1

23.0

22.7

23.0

23.0

22.5

22.2

22.8

23.4

23.4

23.4

23.2

23.4

23.2

22
23

105.4
67.7

105.7
67.7

103.0
64.8

103.9
65.3

104.9
66.1

106.6
67.5

106.4
67.0

106.8
67.0

105.9
66.0

105.8
65.7

105.5
65.0

105.1
64.4

106.6
65.7

106.8
65.6

108.5
66.8

24
25
26

3.26
2.85
4.44

3.25
2.84
4.44

3.33
2.92
4.64

3.28
2.88
4.58

3.23
2.84
4.52

3.19
2.80
4.43

3.22
2.82
4.48

3.24
2.84
4.52

3.28
2.86
4.60

3.26
2.84
4.57

3.27
2.85
4.62

3.27
2.86
4.66

3.18
2.77
4.49

3.13
2.73
4.44

3.07
2.68
4.34

Inventories

Final sales s
.
Final sales of goods and structures

333.3

Ratio of inventories to final sales
Inventories to final sales
.
.
Nonfarm inventories to final sales
Nonfarm inventories to final sales of goods and
structures.

1
Inventories are as of the end of the quarter. Quarter-to-quarter changes calculated from this table are at quarterly rates, whereas the constant-dollar change in business inventories component
of GNP
is stated at annual rates.
2
Prior to 1959, inventories held by construction establishments are included in line 5. In 1959, the constant-dollar value of inventories held by construction establishments was $3.4 billion.
3
Quarterly totals at monthly rates. Business final sales equals final sales less gross product of households and institutions, government, and rest of the world, and includes a small amount of
final sales by farms.




68

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

6. Product, Income, and Employment by Industry
Table 6.1.—Gross National Product by Industry
[Billions of dollars]
Line
Gross national product
Domestic industries (gross domestic product)
Private industries
Agriculture, forestry and fisheries
.
Farms
Agricultural services forestry and fisheries
Mining

.

Construction
Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

.

.

.

Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Communication
Electric gas and sanitary services

..
.

.

.

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

24178

2631 7

2 954 1

3 073 0

2

2,375 2

2 586 4

2 904 5

3 0257

3

2,097 0

22760

2571 8

2 661 8

4
5
6

796
71 6
80

768
677
91

906
81 1
95

843
74 1
10 2
116 1

7

668

960

1265

8

1157

1198

1246

122 4

9
10
11

5632
3443
2189

581 5
3504
231 1

6444
3898
2546

6309
367 8
263 1

12
13
14
15

2096
91 5
605
576

2319
985
670
664

2624
1061
774
788

2797
1060
856
88 2

Wholesale trade

16

176.9

190.5

211.3

2103

Retail trade

17

2246

2382

2629

279 9

Finance insurance and real estate
Finance and insurance
Real estate
.

18
19
20

3583
1050
253.3

3987
1135
285.1

461 6
1355
3261

507 1
147 4
3598

21

3024

3426

3876

431 1

22

2796

308 1

337 5

363 4

23
24

2474
322

2730
351

2993
383

324 1
393

25

— 1.5

2.3

49

5

26

42.6

45.3

49.6

473

•

Services
Government and government enterprises
Government
Government enterprises

.

.

...

Statistical discrepancy

..
•

Rest of the world

..

..

...

Table 6.2.—Gross National Product by Industry in Constant Dollars
[Billions of 1972 dollars]
Line
Gross national product

.

1

1,479.4

1,475.0

1,513.8

1,485.4

1,453 2

1,449.3

1,488.2

1 462.3

3

1,288 0

1,275.0

1,318.6

1 291 0

4
5
6

389
34.2
47

399
35.0
49

456
40.6
50

442
39.0
52

7

208

216

22.5

216

8

582

52.2

50.5

47.7

9
10
11

3670
223.4
1436

351.0
210.2
140.8

361.1
217.2
144.0

336.1
197.4
1387

...

12
13
14
15

140.0
56.3
490
347

139.6
52.2
527
347

142.9
50.0
563
367

138.9
46.8
572
349

.

16

1065

104.2

108.3

1063

17
18

1442
229.4

141 7
235.6

1435
245.4

141 7
251.0

19
20

61 6
167.7

636
172.1

655
179.8

666
184.4

21

183.0

189.1

198.7

203.5

22

174.3

177.5

177.9

177.6

23
24

153.0
21 2

155.6
220

156.0
219

156.1
216

....

Private industries
Agriculture forestry and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services forestry and fisheries
Mining
...

..

...

.

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
.
.
Communication
Electric gas and sanitary services
Wholesale trade

. . . .

Retail trade
Finance insurance and real estate
Finance and insurance
Real estate
Services

.

Government and government enterprises
Government
Government enterprises
Statistical discrepancy
Residual

l

..

Rest of the world
1

25

-1.0

26

-8.1

27

26.3

1.3

-4.6
25.7

Equals GNP in constant dollars measured as the sum of incomes less GNP in constant dollars measured as the sum of gross product by industry.




1982

1981

2

.

Domestic industries (gross domestic product)

Construction

1980

1979

-2.5
-5.8
25.6

.2

-6.5
23.1

69

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 6.3B.—National Income Without Capital Consumption Adjustment by Industry
[Millions of dollars]
Line
National income without capital consumption adjustment
Domestic industries
Private industries.
Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries.
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries
Mining
Metal mining .
Coal mining....
Oil and gas extraction
Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels
Construction
Manufacturing ..
Durable goods
Lumber and wood products.
Furniture and fixtures
Stone, clay, and glass products.
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products.
Machinery, except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment.
Motor vehicles and equipment
Other transportation equipment.
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods.
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing....
Chemicals and allied products.
Petroleum and coal products .
Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products.
Leather and leather products .
Transportation and public utilities.
Transportation
Railroad transportation
Local and interurban passenger transit
Trucking and warehousing
Water transportation.
Transportation by air
Pipelines, except natural gas
Transportation services
Communication.
Telephone and telegraph .
Radio and television broadcasting
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate.
Banking
Credit agencies other than banks.
Security, commodity brokers and services.
Insurance carriers.
Insurance agents, brokers, and services.
Real estate
Holding and other investment companies
Services
Hotels and other lodging places
Personal services
Business services
Auto repair, services, and garages
Miscellaneous repair services
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation servces
Health services
Legal services.
Educational services
Social services and membership organizations.
Social services
Membership organizations
Miscellaneous professional services
Private households.
Government and government enterprises
Federal
Government....
Government enterprises
State and local...
Government....
Government enterprises
Rest of the world




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
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83

1979

1980
2,015,769
1,973,197
1,696,137
65,822
59,296
6,526
30,089
2,759
8,382
15,674
3,274
104,262
508,887
310,587
17,046
7,727
17,104
38,428
39,917
63,790
45,004
32,424
26,259
15,317
7,571
198,300
38,090
3,849
13,673
15,284
19,285
26,010
35,451
28,298
15,098
3,262
154,899
75,739
15,937
3,841
32,046
5,384
12,518
1,745
4,268
43,367
38,315
5,052
35,793
126,333
170,262
261,597
39,629
4,650
6,804
26,978
11,151
172,749
-364
273,986
12,623
12,454
46,527
10,425
5,811
4,106
8,120
86,109
18,443
14,029
22,434
8,286
14,148
26,444
6,461
277,060
93,301
75,672
17,629
183,759
171,772
11,987
42,572

1981
2,174,017
2,128,707
1,822,364
61,355
54,060
7,295
38,512
2,817
8,783
23,289
3,623
107,237
526,514
311,951
15,129
7,885
16,424
37,554
40,595
68,403
49,879
21,863
29,030
17,383
7,806
214,563
41,329
4,139
13,387
16,102
19,568
28,131
36,990
36,285
14,854
3,778
171,257
80,425
17,382
4,328
33,044
5,877
13,290
1,765
4,739
48,181
42,838
5,343
42,651
137,572
179,058
290,851
45,051
2,300
8,229
29,278
12,267
195,760
-2,034
310,008
13,826
13,278
53,027
11,242
6,813
3,841
9,033
99,625
21,310
15,438
24,949
9,455
15,494
31,041
6,585
306,343
102,767
82,947
19,820
203,576
190,015
13,561
45,310

1982
2,426,463
2,376,877
2,040,142
74,777
67,119
7,658
42,821
3,365
9,147
26,695
3,614
111,027
580,198
345,374
14,319
8,574
16,982
41,702
43,923
76,846
55,167
26,286
31,895
20,130
9,550
234,824
47,110
4,778
14,329
17,212
21,251
30,602
41,557
36,213
17,635
4,137
192,200
85,796
18,898
4,424
35,318
6,332
14,083
1,515
5,226
55,242
49,338
5,904
51,162
153,968
197,901
338,447
58,244
3,006
9,945
30,680
13,301
224,129
-858
348,803
15,340
14,048
60,504
12,528
6,943
4,097
10,311
114,301
23,659
17,052
26,977
10,485
16,492
36,001
7,042
336,735
115,273
92,759
22,514
221,462
206,508
14,954
49,586

2,492,406
2,445,130
2,081,625
68,374
60,297
8,077
39,803
2,405
9,946
23,978
3,474
106,694
548,918
316,727
12,630
8,404
14,898
26,879
40,756
69,917
55,395
23,941
33,569
21,192
9,146
232,191
47,205
4,938
13,499
17,093
20,430
32,547
41,421
33,653
17,205
4,200
199,861
82,952
17,369
4,481
34,011
5,910
13,988
1,428
5,765
60,224
53,704
6,520
56,685
152,441
209,747
369,805
58,526
5,388
14,141
30,313
14,466
245,151
1,820
385,982
16,152
14,958
66,419
13,522
7,170
4,479
11,238
130,188
27,499
18,401
29,035
11,015
18,020
39,295
7,626
363,505
124,324
101,121
23,203
239,181
223,010
16,171
47,276

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

70

July 1983

Table 6.4.—National Income Without Capital Consumption Adjustment by Industry
[Billions of dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

1981

1980
I

II

III

IV

I

II

1982
III

IV

I

II

1983
III

IV

I

1

2,015.8 2,174.0 2,426.5 2,492.4 2,076.7 2,130.3 2,129.7 2,177.1 2,259.0 2,350.3 2,390.6 2,476.6 2,488.3 2,467.9 2,493.7 2,499.8 2,508.1 2,553.0

Domestic industries

2

1,973.2 2,128.7 2,376.9 2,445.1 2,029.7 2,082.0 2,083.3 2,131.6 2,218.0 2,302.7 2,343.9 2,426.8 2,434.0 2,421.0 2,444.1 2,453.3 2,462.1 2,508.7

Private industries

3

1,696.1 1,822.4 2,040.1 2,081.6 1,742.2 1,787.6 1,781.4 1,823.3 1,897.2 1,974.7 2,011.5 2,088.9 2,085.4 2,066.7 2,084.3 2,087.7 2,087.8 2,127.5

National income without capital
consumption adjustment.

Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Mining
Construction

4
5
6

65.8
30.1
104.3

61.4
38.5
107.2

74.8
42.8
111.0

68.4
39.8
106.7

65.1
32.7
108.3

60.0
36.4
109.5

57.0
37.5
105.0

63.0
38.2
105.3

65.5
42.0
109.1

69.2
42.6
111.9

73.0
38.8
110.8

79.9
44.6
111.2

77.0
45.2
110.3

73.8
46.5
107.7

63.6
42.1
107.2

62.7
36.7
105.7

73.4
33.9
106.2

69.7
34.6
108.4

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

7
8
9

508.9
310.6
198.3

526.5
312.0
214.6

580.2
345.4
234.8

548.9
316.7
232.2

509.1
305.1
204.0

529.4
313.4
216.0

509.3
297.9
211.4

520.8
307.4
213.4

546.6
329.1
217.5

568.5
340.4
228.1

582.7
353.1
229.7

595.3
349.8
245.6

574.2
338.2
235.9

554.4
322.4
232.0

555.2
325.7
229.6

555.8
320.3
235.5

530.3
298.5
231.7

551.9
318.9
233.0

Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
..
Communication
Electric, gas, and sanitary services-

10
11
12
13

154.9
75.7
43.4
35.8

171.3
80.4
48.2
42.7

192.2
85.8
55.2
51.2

199.9
83.0
60.2
56.7

158.9
78.4
44.9
35.6

165.6
80.2
46.3
39.1

166.6
77.4
46.2
42.9

174.2
80.3
48.8
45.1

178.7
83.7
51.4
43.5

186.1
86.5
52.5
47.1

187.6
84.3
53.4
49.8

196.6
87.1
56.8
52.7

198.6
85.3
58.3
55.0

199.8
82.2
60.3
57.3

203.1
85.5
60.7
57.0

198.9
82.7
60.2
56.0

197.7
81.5
59.7
56.5

198.8
82.1
60.0
56.8

Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate
Services

14
15
16
17

126.3
170.3
261.6
274.0

137.6
179.1
290.9
310.0

154.0
197.9
338.4
348.8

152.4
209.7
369.8
386.0

131.3
172.5
274.9
289.5

133.8
172.4
282.6
297.9

139.1
176.3
285.2
305.4

135.2
181.8
290.7
314.1

142.2
185.7
304.9
322.6

148.6
192.0
319.2
336.5

151.2
196.8
329.1
341.4

155.2
202.1
350.1
353.9

160.8
200.6
355.3
363.4

153.8
203.9
357.0
369.8

153.4
208.2
369.9
381.5

151.5
211.0
372.8
392.5

151.0
215.8
379.5
400.1

151.1
218.8
386.6
407.6

Government and government enterprises.

18

277.1

306.3

336.7

363.5

287.5

294.4

301.9

308.3

320.8

328.1

332.4

337.9

348.5

354.3

359.8

365.6

374.3

381.2

19

42.6

45.3

49.6

47.3

47.0

48.3

46.4

45.5

41.1

47.6

46.6

49.8

54.3

46.9

49.6

46.6

46.0

44.3

.

Rest of the world




II

43.4

July 1983

Table 6.5B.—Compensation of Employees by Industry

Table 6.6B.—Wages and Salaries by Industry

[Millions of dollars]

[Millions of dollars]

Line
Compensation of employees
Domestic industries
Private industries
Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries..
Mining
Metal mining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Nonmetallic minerals except fuels
Construction
Manufacturing
Durable goods
Lumber and wood products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone clay and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment
Motor vehicles and equipment
Other transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products..
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products.
Leather and leather products
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Railroad transportation
Local and interurban passenger transit
Trucking and warehousing
Water transportation
Transportation by air
Pipelines except natural gas
Transportation services
Communication
Telephone and telegraph
Radio and television broadcasting
Electric gas and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
.
Finance, insurance, and real estate
Banking
Credit agencies other than banks
Security, commodity brokers and services
Insurance carriers
Insurance agents, brokers, and services
Real estate
Holding and other investment companies
Services
Hotels and other lodging places
Personal services
Business services
Auto repair, services, and garages
Miscellaneous repair services
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services
Health services
Legal services
Educational services
Social services and membership organizations.
Social services
Membership organisations
Miscellaneous professional services
Private households
Government and government enterprises
Federal
Government
Civilian
Military l
Government enterprises
State and local
Government
Education
Other
Government enterprises
Rest of the world
Addenda:
Households and institutions
Nonfarm business
1

71

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Includes Coast Guard.




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

1979

1981

2,747
116309
65331
15,027

72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87

8,181

3,313

26,691
4647
12,052

541

3,060
31,789

28 186

3,603

19189
97967
140,094
81,632
22,776

8241
6,018
21 616
7,549

13 113
2,319
216,185
9576

8,221

37358

7,261

4,224
3,283
7,072
69,565
8297
13,462
22,524
14,343

18881
6,461
277,060
93,301
75,672
47,523
28,149
17629
183,759

171 772

92654
79,118

11987
-37

75,599

3,257
140 637
75 197
16,062
3,897
29,728
5848
14984

149,306
75 179
15,178
4,036
29,391
5776
15561

3992
40,612
36069
4,543
24828
120 542
163 083
105,488
29,708
10217
10,043
26780
9,438
15855
3,447
283,658
12558
9605
51 135
8,427
5,263
3,954
8,903
95,510
12162
16,517
27,143

4,470
45,924
40719
5,205
28203
127 187
172719
117,881
33,849
11212
11,702
29579
10,343
16853
4,343
315,557
13572
10,209
56657
9,131
5,409
4,139
9,793
109,722
14660
17,830
29,140

13561

10,352
16,791
25439
7,042
336,735
115,273
92,759
55,975
36,784
22,514
221,462
206 508
111,259
95,249
14,954

10,870
18,270
27,669
7,626
363,505
124,324
101,121
59,398
41,723
23203
239,181
223 010
119,780
103,230
16,171

— 72

-35

-89

2,926

126 900
69926
15,630
3,669
27,648
5224

13619
639

3497
35,364
31335
4,029

21 610
108 518
150,592
93,197
25,982

9 191

8,228
24051
8,520

14391

2,834
248,000

11025
8,838
43924
7707
4,733

3,551

8,046
81,712
9999
14,837
25,064
9,344
15,720

21 979
6,585
306,343
102,767
82,947

51 830

31,117
19820
203,576

190 015
101,903
88,112

85,288

686

96,231

Line

1982

1,458,139 1,599,630 1,769,248 1,865,656
1 458 176 1 599 702 1 769 283 1 865 745
1 181 116 1 293 359 1 432 548 1 502 240
16009
17 740
14 501
17066
11090
10112
11 578
11922
4,919
5,818
4,389
5,488
35049
28149
23,174
37064
2,895
2,639
2,637
3,376
6997
7982
7563
8809
20904
15014
11036
22864
2787
2677
2752
2504
91 683
86707
90 876
82 594
408,660 435 287 475 342 473,910
265,943 280,961 307 004 299,086
12 149
11 757
11309
12 114
6985
7556
7,508
6,758
14323
15113
14471
13928
33 144
30,500
36052
32,956
37648
35966
33506
34851
64844
58719
62,915
53383
43,810
39,490
48,174
50,651
27973
28056
25548
25787
34,008
26,309
33,183
30,086
15092
18671
17225
13087
7,300
7,087
6,646
6,356
142717 154 326 168 338 174 824
33 179
30594
35654
37,365
2019
1 704
1 518
2172
12617
11 967
11963
11528
14,137
14,811
13,425
15,176
17643
18320
16212
14965
27,240
20,594
25,215
22,945
32338
29406
34644
26595
8,009
9,653
7,250
9,045
15,525
15,374
13,841
13,501

36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71

88
89

1980

3,131

767

107,030

1 125 021 1 230 362 1,362,207 1,422,662

Wages and salaries
Domestic industries
Private industries
Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries..
Mining
Metal mining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels
Construction
Manufacturing
Durable goods
Lumber and wood products .
Furniture and fixtures
Stone clay, and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment
Motor vehicles and equipment
Other transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products.
Leather and leather products
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation . .
Railroad transportation
Local and interurban passenger transit
Trucking and warehousing
Water transportation
Transportation by air
Pipelines except natural gas
Transportation services
Communication
Telephone and telegraph ....
Radio and television broadcasting
Electric gas and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate
Banking
Credit agencies other than banks
Security, commodity brokers and services
Insurance carriers
Insurance agents, brokers, and services
Real estate
Holding and other investment companies
Services
Hotels and other lodging places
Personal services
Business services
Auto repair, services, and garages
Miscellaneous repair services
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services
Health services
Legal services
Educational services
Social services and membership organizations.
Social services
Membership organizations
Miscellaneous professional services
Private households
Government and government enterprises
Federal
Government
Civilian l
Military
Government enterprises
State and local
Government
Education
Other
Government enterprises . .
...
Rest of the world
1

Includes Coast Guard.

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
36

37
38
39
40
41

42
43
44

45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60

61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72

73
74
75
76
77

78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87

1979

1980

1981

1982

,237,436 ,356,645 1,493,241 1,568,091
,237,473 ,356,717 ,493,276 1,568,180
,001,469 ,096,463 ,208,820 1,262,207
14,130
15,595
14,945
12,775
9,760
10,467
8,902
10,109
4,370
5,128
4,836
3,873
29,587
31,028
19,550
23,745
2,117
2,370
2,134
2,752
6,034
6,833
5,585
6,325
19,742
13,046
18,128
9,676
2,382
2,336
2155
2,295
75,666
79,708
78,781
72,195
333,880 354,579 385,269 383,820
216 466 227,798 247 844 241,508
9,964
9,264
10,012
9,673
6,247
5,842
6,296
5,676
11,638
12,224
11,680
11,369
23,487
25,812
27,957
25,982
30,527
29,075
28,320
27,283
48,606
53,446
51,715
44,261
40,124
33,041
36,571
42,108
19,013
18,824
20,463
21,451
24,211
26,502
27,238
20967
14,394
15,563
12,688
11,046
6,118
5,947
5,378
5,613
117414 126,781 137,425 142,312
30,328
27,137
28,999
25,100
1,254
1,460
1,560
1088
10,088
10,205
10,673
9,853
12,944
12,646
11,542
12,135
15,040
12,379
13,384
14,519
19,606
21,418
23,103
17,646
24,077
28,038
21,772
26,281
6,340
4,729
5,323
5,959
12,561
11,202
12,455
10,985
2,320
94,400
54,462
12195
2,942
22,438
4,034
9,763
489
2,601
24498
21,327
3,171
15440
85,710
123,241
68,544
18282
7,040
5,395
17,974
6,502
11,493
1,858
191,174
8,393
7,412
33005
6,464
3675
2,879
6,165
60,072
7,291
11776
20,758

2,458
103,254
58,432
12831
3,240
23,222
4,552
11,015
576
2,996
27398
23,842
3,556
17,424
95,070
132,387
78,512
20991
7,868
7,295
20,098
7,355
12,667
2,238
219,120
9,688
8,002
38863
6,878
4,134
3,076
6,985
70,364
8,840
12,927
23,105

2,717
113,583
62,427
13049
3,408
24,821
5,080
12,058
614
3,397
31259
27,264
3,995
19,897
105,138
142,832
88,436
23,877
8,694
8,875
22,273
8,102
13,918
2,697
249,322
10,986
8,653
45,036
7,474
4,557
3,418
7,708
81,868
10,686
14,331
24,924

2,608
118,830
61,773
12159
3,519
24,284
4,986
12,362
686
3,777
34743
30,196
4,547
22,314
110,312
149,639
97,934
26,865
9,462
10,291
24,399
8,815
14,712
3,390
276,268
11,816
9,181
49,717
8,065
4,655
3,567
8,460
93,591
12,846
15,484
26,738

7,512
13,246
16,931
6353
236,004
82,054
67,231
40,271
26,960
14,823
153,950
143,744
76,595
67,149
10,206

8,602
14,503
19,783
6,475
260,254
90,257
73,526
43,709
29,817
16,731
169,997
158,477
83,966
74,511
11,520

9,463
15,461
22,779
6,902
284,456
100,875
81,818
46,700
35,118
19,057
183,581
170,975
90,890
80,085
12,606

9,948
16,790
24,690
7,458
305,973
108,493
89,147
49,313
39,834
19,346
197,480
183,905
97,478
86,427
13,575

-37

-72

35

-89

72

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Table 6.8B.—Full-Time Equivalent Employees by Industry1

Table 6.7B.—Full-Time and Part-Time Employees by Industry

[Thousands]

[Thousands]

Full-time and part-time employees
Domestic industries
Private industries
Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries..
Mining
Metal mining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels
Construction
Manufacturing
Durable goods
Lumber and wood products
Furniture and fixtures
. ..
Stone, clay, and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment
Motor vehicles and equipment
Other transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products.
Leather and leather products
....
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Railroad transportation
Local and interurban passenger transit
Trucking and warehousing
Water transportation
Transportation by air
Pipelines except natural gas
Transportation services
Communication
Telephone and telegraph
Radio and television broadcasting
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate
Banking
Credit agencies other than banks...
Security, commodity brokers, and services
Insurance carriers
...
Insurance agents, brokers, and services
Real estate
Holding and other investment companies
Services
Hotels and other lodging places
Personal services
Business services
Auto repair, services, and garages
Miscellaneous repair services
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services
Health services
Legal services
Educational services
Social services and membership organizations.
Social services
Membership organizations
Miscellaneous professional services
Private households
Government and government enterprises
Federal
Government
Civilian l
Military
Government enterprises
State and local
Government
Education
Other
Government enterprises
Rest of the world
1

Includes Coast Guard.




July 1983

Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

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

96,795
96,815
77,669
1,714
1,274
440
948
100
255
467
126
4,543
21,100
12,801
773
496
713
1,253
1,712
2,503
2,126
1,000
1,084
690
451
8,299
1,736
69
889
1,303
707
1,239
1,117
207
785

97,148
97,172
77,620
1,770
1,313
457
1,035
100
251
558
126
4,326
20,354
12,226
695
467
667
1,151
1,614
2,487
2,106
798
1,109
707
425
8,128
1,712
67
851
1,267
691
1,259
1,115
203
727

97,958
97,980
78,504
1,705
1,232
473
1,152
103
237
693
119
4,171
20,226
12,143
670
465
643
1,128
1,595
2,497
2,106
795
1,107
726
411
8,083
1,681
69
824
1,248
686
1,274
1,112
211
737

96,459
96,484
77,044
1,634
1,152
482
1,125
74
241
700
110
3,871
18,885
11,115
596
434
578
934
1,436
2,269
2,023
707
1,038
714
386
7,770
1,647
68
752
1,164
664
1,282
1,084
195
693

36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71

247
5,12to
3,009
535
267
1,342
209
444
20
192
1,311
1,122
189
806
5,235
15,063
5,100
1,505
557
202
1,248
436
1,048
104
18,840
1,072
904
2,906
586
288
222
740
5,023
461
1,271
2,631

236
5,129
2,951
512
268
1,279
211
457
22
202
1,354
1,155
199
824
5,282
15,066
5,276
1,576
571
225
1,276
454
1,067
107
19,382
1,102
902
3,090
574
293
222
769
5,293
497
1,315
2,698

241
5,169
2,925
484
267
1,265
219
457
22
211
1,392
1,183
209
852
5,400
15,216
5,427
1,633
586
259
1,291
469
1,076
113
20,038
1,141
917
3,255
578
298
222
785
5,578
533
1,339
2,708

221
5,077
2,779
419
265
1,206
201
447
21
220
1,426
1,206
220
872
5,324
15,208
5,500
1,661
586
274
1,299
480
1,071
129
20,420
1,158
934
3,304
592
289
214
812
5,814
567
1,317
2,702

72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87

1,038
1,593
983
1,753
19,146
5,867
5,004
2,114
2,890
863
13,279
12,546
6,795
5,751
733
-20

1,097
1,601
1,029
1,598
19,552
5,996
5,126
2,207
2,919
870
13,556
12,807
6,957
5,850
749
-24

1,119
1,589
1,078
1,606
19,476
5,993
5,122
2,120
3,002
871
13,483
12,739
6,999
5,740
744
-22

1,115
1,587
1,082
1,635
19,440
6,063
5,194
2,103
3,091
869
13,377
12,642
6,920
5,722
735
-25

Full-time equivalent employees
Domestic industries
Private industries
Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheriesMining
Metal mining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels
Construction
Manufacturing
Durable goods
..
Lumber and wood products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone, clay, and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment
Motor vehicles and equipment
Other transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products .
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
.. ..
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products.
Leather and leather products
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Railroad transportation
Local and interurban passenger transit
Trucking and warehousing
Water transportation
Transportation by air
Pipelines except natural gas
Transportation services .
Communication
Telephone and telegraph
.. .
Radio and television broadcasting
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate
Banking
Credit agencies other than banks
Security, commodity brokers, and services
Insurance carriers
.
Insurance agents, brokers and services
Real estate
.
Holding and other investment companies
Services
Hotels and other lodging places
....
Personal services
Business services
Auto repair services, and garages
Miscellaneous repair services
..
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services
Health services
Legal services
Educational services
Social services and membership organizations.
Social services
Membership organizations
Miscellaneous professional services
Private households
Government and government enterprises ..
Federal
Government
Civilian 2
Military
Government enterprises
State and local
Government
Education
Other
Government enterprises
Rest of the world

Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

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

85,938
85,958
69,867
1,500
1,119
381
927
100
250
454
123
4,301
20,530
12,566
744
480
700
1,241
1,675
2,462
2,100
988
1,071
678
427
7,964
1,660
68
864
1,237
697
1,129
1,104
205
766

85,925
85,949
69,621
1,542
1,153
389
1,013
100
246
544
123
4,074
19,736
11,970
658
449
651
1,134
1,579
2,446
2,075
787
1,096
695
400
7,766
1,625
66
820
1,200
681
1,138
1,099
202
708

86,699
86,721
70,433
1,493
1,082
411
1,126
103
232
675
116
3,917
19,648
11,904
631
448
631
1,109
1,560
2,461
2,075
787
1,096
714
392
7,744
1,606
68
794
1,184
678
1,153
1,098
210
723

84,712
84,737
68,555
1,418
1,012
406
1,088
73
234
675
106
3,608
18,212
10,836
563
413
559
902
1,398
2,220
1,989
698
1,025
704
365
7,376
1,563
66
715
1,087
650
1,149
1,068
193
676

36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71

234
4,902
2,885
530
244
1,292
197
420
20
182
1,241
1,071
170
776
5,008
12,204
4,772
1,436
531
191
1,187
415
913
99
15,723
956
763
2,589
543
264
169
578
4,522
423
1,113
2,091

227
4,902
2,826
506
245
1,231
198
432
22
192
1,281
1,102
179
795
5,051
12,087
4,949
1,507
545
213
1,217
433
932
102
16,267
982
753
2,745
530
268
168
602
4,764
457
1,156
2,143

230
4,927
2,793
476
243
1,215
205
432
22
200
1,314
1,126
188
820
5,174
12,186
5,104
1,565
561
246
1,234
448
942
108
16,858
1,018
773
2,911
537
274
170
613
5,028
491
1,170
2,142

209
4,811
2,636
411
240
1,151
187
419
21
207
1,336
1,140
196
839
5,079
12,116
5,176
1,592
561
260
1,242
459
938
124
17,047
1,024
781
2,940
544
263
161
625
5,215
517
1,144
2,115

72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87

876
1,215
909
803
16,091
5,034
4,209
2,020
2,189
825
11,057
10,357
5,354
5,003
700
-20

924
1,219
944
755
16,328
5,101
4,265
2,056
2,209
836
11,227
10,512
5,440
5,072
715
24

938
1,204
991
740
16,288
5,130
4,286
2,027
2,259
844
11,158
10,448
5,473
4,975
710
22

925
1,190
991
727
16,182
5,133
4,309
2,016
2,293
824
11,049
10,349
5,414
4,935
700
25

1
Full-time equivalent employees equals the number of employees on full-time schedules plus
the number of employees on part-time schedules converted to a full-time basis. The conversion is
made by multiplying the number of employees on part-time schedules by the ratio of average
weekly hours per employee on part-time schedules to average weekly hours per employee on
full-time
schedules in each industry.
2
Includes Coast Guard.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

73

Table 6.1 OB.—Self-Employed Persons by Industry

Table 6.9B.—Wages and Salaries per Full-Time Equivalent Employee by
Industry

[Thousands]

[Dollars]

Wages and salaries per full-time equivalent employee.
Domestic industries
. .
. . .
Private industries..
Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries..
Mining
....
Metal mining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Nonmetallic minerals except fuels
Construction
.•
Manufacturing
Durable goods
Lumber and wood products
Furniture and fixtures. ...
Stone clay and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery except electrical
••
Electric and electronic equipment
Motor vehicles and equipment
...
Other transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
...
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products .
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
....
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products.
Leather and leather products
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Railroad transportation ..
Local and interurban passenger transit
Trucking and warehousing
..
Water transportation
Transportation by air
Pipelines except natural gas
Transportation services
Communication
Telephone and telegraph
Radio and television broadcasting
Electric gas and sanitary services . . .
Wholesale trade
..
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate
Banking
Credit agencies other than banks
Security, commodity brokers, and services
Insurance carriers
....
Insurance agents, brokers, and services
Real estate
Holding and other investment companies
Services

Line
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

14,399

15,789

17,223

18,511

2

14,396
14,334
8,517
7955
10,165
21,090
21,340
22,340
21,313
17,520
16,786
16,263
17,226
13457
11,825
16241
20,936
16288
17,978
15734
21,712
19,577
16,292
12,595
14,743
15,120
16,000
11,404
9,331
17,760
15,630
19721
23,068
14,341

15,785
15,749
9,163
8465
11,234
23,440
23,700
24528
23,982
18659
18,573
17,966
19,031
14701
13,011
17877
22,762
17935
19,872
17625
23,919
22,090
18,256
14,033
16,325
16,700
19,000
12,445
10,113
19,653
17,228
21,908
26,351
15,822

17,219
17,163
10,010
9343
11,766
26,276
26,718
27,263
26,856
20,534
20,349
19,609
20,820
15,791
14,054
19,372
25,209
19,569
21,717
19337
26,001
24,181
20,160
15,171
17,746
18,057
21,471
13,442
10,932
21,414
18,576
23,935
28,376
17,227

18,506
18,412
10,998
10343
12,631
28,518
29,000
29,201
29,247
22,038
21,835
21,075
22,288
16,455
15,126
20,894
26,039
20,798
23,295
21,170
27,239
26,574
22,107
16,762
19,294
19,404
23,636
14,109
11,634
23,138
20,107
26,253
32,850
18,581

9,915
19,257
18878
23,009
12,057
17,367
20,477
23245
24,450
14291
19,741
19,913
18 653
19,897
17,115
10,098
14,364
12731
13,258
28,246
15,142
15,667
12,588
18,768
12,159
8,779
9,714
12,748
11,904
13,920
17,036
10,666
13,284
17,236
10,580
9,927

10,828
21,064
20677
25,358
13,224
18,864
22,990
25498
26,182
15604
21388
21,635
19866
21,917
18,822
10,953
15,864
13,929
14,437
34,249
16,514
16,986
13,591
21,941
13,470
9,866
10,627
14,158
12,977
15,425
18,310
11,603
14,770
19,344
11,183
10,782

11,813
23,053
22,351
27,414
14,025
20,429
24,780
27912
27,909
16985
23,789
24,213
21,250
24,265
20,320
11,721
17,327
15,257
15,497
36,077
18,049
18,085
14,775
24,972
14,790
10,792
11,194
15,471
13,918
16,631
20,106
12,574
16,282
21,764
12,249
11,636

12,478
24,700
23,434
29,584
14,663
21,098
26,663
29,504
32,667
18,246
26,005
26,488
23,199
26,596
21,719
12,351
18,921
16,875
16,866
39,581
19,645
19,205
15,684
27,339
16,206
11,539
11,755
16,911
14,825
17,700
22,155
13,536
17,947
24,847
13,535
12,642

8,575
10,902
18,626
7,912
14,667
16,300
15,973
19,936
12,316
17,967
13,923
13,879
14,306
13,422
14,580

9,310
11,897
20,957
8,576
15,939
17,694
17,239
21,259
13,498
20,013
15,142
15,076
15,435
14,691
16,112

10,088
12,841
22,986
9,327
17,464
19,664
19,090
23,039
15,546
22,579
16,453
16,364
16,607
16,097
17,755

10,755
14,109
24,914
10,259
18,908
21,136
20,689
24,461
17,372
23,478
17,873
17,770
18,005
17,513
19,393

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

36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
Personal services
Business services
• • 63
64
Auto repair services and garages
65
Miscellaneous repair services
66
Motion pictures
67
Amusement and recreation services
68
Health services
• •
Legal services
••
•• • 69
70
Educational services
Social services and membership organiza- 71
tions.
72
73
Membership organizations
74
Miscellaneous professional services ...
75
76
Government and government enterprises
77
Federal
78
Government
79
Civilian l. ..
80
Military
81
82
State and local
Government
••• 83
84
Education
85
Other
86
Government enterprises
87
Rest of the world
1

Includes Coast Guard.




1979

1980

1981

1982

Self-employed persons 1

1

8,394

8665

8759

8927

Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries

2
3
4

1642
1 425
217

1689
1 465
224

1684
1 462
222

1681
1 418
'263

Mining

5

Construction

6

1 164

1 186

1 166

1 131

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

7
8
9

344
212
132

363
221
142

366
221
145

358
215
143

Transportation and public utilities

10

277

282

298

308

Wholesale trade

11

279

294

297

284

Retail trade

12

1 590

1 628

1 612

1 610

Finance, insurance, and real estate

13

449

463

456

496

Services

14

2,628

2732

2854

3025

21

28

26

34

1
Consists of active proprietors or partners who devote a majority of their working hours to
their unincorporated businesses.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

74

July 1983

Table 6.1 IB.—Persons Engaged in Production by Industry1

Table 6.14.—Employer Contributions for Social Insurance by Industry

[Thousands]

[Millions of dollars]

Persons engaged in production
Domestic industries
Private industries
Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries..
Mining
Metal mining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels
Construction
Manufacturing
Durable goods
Lumber and wood products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone, clay, and glass products
Primary metal industries
. .. .
Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment
Motor vehicles and equipment ..
Other transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products.
Leather and leather products
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Railroad transportation
Local and interurban passenger transit
Trucking and warehousing
Water transportation
Transportation by air
Pipelines, except natural gas
Transportation services
Communication . . .
Telephone and telegraph
Radio and television broadcasting
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate .
Banking
Credit agencies other than banks
Security, commodity brokers, and services
Insurance carriers
Insurance agents, brokers, and services
Real estate
Holding and other investment companies
Services
Hotels and other lodging places
Personal services
Business services
Auto repair, services, and garages
Miscellaneous repair services
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services
Health services
Legal services
. .
Educational services
Social services and membership organizations.
Social services
Membership organizations
Miscellaneous professional services
Private households
Government and government enterprises
Federal
Government
Civilian 2
. .
Military
Government enterprises
State and local
Government
Education
Other
Government enterprises
Rest of the world

Line

1979

1980

1981

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

94332
94,352
78,261
3,142
2544
598
948
101
252
468
127
5,465
20,874
12778
829
487
715
1,244
1,693
2,499
2,103
989
1,076
683
460
8,096
1,687
68
869
1256
698
1,194
1,107
205
773

94 590
94614
78,286
3,231
2618
613
1,041
101
247
564
129
5,260
20,099
12191
752
460
666
1 136
1,594
2487
2,082
787
1,103
698
426
7908
1,650
67
826
1 222
682
1,213
1,104
202
714

95 458
95,480
79,192
3,177
2544
633
1,152
104
233
696
119
5,083
20,014
12125
716
462
644
1,112
1,574
2,496
2,083
789
1,102
719
428
7889
1,633
68
801
1202
678
1,232
1,101
210
731

36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71

239
5,179
3,146
530
280
1 494
203
424
20
195
1,245
1,073
172
788
5,287
13,794
5,221
1,436
532
219
1 187
525
1 222
100
18,351
1,224
1,260
2857
784
467
250
631
4,878
615
1251
2,124

228
5,184
3,095
506
289
1434
201
439
22
204
1285
1,104
181
804
5,345
13715
5,412
1,508
546
249
1217
541
1 248
103
18999
1,252
1270
3045
786
461
243
665
5,119
643
1296
2,180

233
5,225
3,072
476
287
1 427
209
440
22
211
1320
1,129
191
833
5,471
13798
5,560
1,566
563
280
1 234
583
1 224
110
19 712
1,303
1 276
3237
815
506
264
678
5,370
683
1325
2,176

72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87

887
1237
1,207
803
16,091
5,034
4,209
2,020
2,189
825
11,057
10357
5,354
5003
700
-20

934
1246
1,284
755
16,328
5,101
4,265
2056
2,209
836
11,227
10512
5,440
5072
715
-24

945
1231
1,339
740
16,288
5,130
4,286
2,027
2,259
844
11,158
10448
5,473
4,975
710
-22

Line

1982

1979

1980

1981

1982

Employer contributions for social insur- 1
105,791 114,984 132,466 140,944
93 639
ance.
93 664
2
Domestic industries
.
105,791 114,984 132 466 140 944
77,482
3
72,257
77533
Private industries
94921
90208
3,099
2430
4
970
Agriculture forestry, and fisheries
1 254
1050
1209
669
5
Mining
...
...
1229
2031
1 470
1 928
1,122
74
6
5848
6073
6704
Construction
6487
235
704
7
29153
24652
25432
Manufacturing .
. . .
29189
109
8
16,030
18,672
18,294
16,240
Durable goods
9
8,622
9 192
10859
10517
Nondurable goods. .
4,739
18,570
7425
7936
9245
Transportation and public utilities
10
9762
11
4,932
5,144
Transportation
5,949
5,851
11051
Communication ..
12
1519
1695
2054
2300
635
974
13
1,097
1,340
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
1,513
427
569
5862
14
6434
7558
Wholesale trade
7955
905
1,411
9416
15
10025
11397
12997
Retail trade
2256
2,000
4,585
5,170
16
6,793
6,106
Finance, insurance, and real estate
700
1,037
17
12270
13943
16872
Services
18489
708
403
18
42258
Government and government enterprises
46023
33,534
37451
7519
1,587
19
Rest of the world
66
720
1 103
652
Table 6.15.—Other Labor Income by Industry and by Type
1,233
1,072
[Millions of dollars]
194
679
1979
1980
Line
1981
1982
213
1
5,119
114,912 128,001 143,541 156,621
Other labor income
2,931
By
industry
411
286
114,912 128,001 143,541 156,621
2
Domestic industries
. . . •
1383
190
107,390
119,363 133,520 145,112
3
Private
industries
423
21
756
4
912
829
891
Agriculture
forestry,
and
fisheries
217
1 341
1 142
199
847
5,363
13 726
5672
1 593
563
306
1242
610
1 234
124
20 072
1335
1273
3313
'851
501
259
687
5553
729
1324
2,151
939
1212
1,369
727
16,182
5133
4,309
2,016
2,293
824
11,049
10349
5,414
4935
700
-25

5

2,395

2,934

3,534

Construction

6

4,551

4,968

5,271

5,608

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

7
8
9

50,128
33,447
16,681

55,276
36,923
18,353

60,884
40,488
20,396

60,937
39,284
21,653

Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Communication
Electric, gas, and sanitary services

10
11
12
13

14,484
5,937
5,772
2,775

15,710
6,350
6,271
3,089

17,809
6,919
7,299
3,591

20,714
7,457
8,881
4,376

Wholesale trade

14

6,395

7,014

7,846

8,920

Retail trade

15

7,437

8,180

8,854

10,083

Mining

...

.

4,005

Finance, insurance, and real estate

16

8,503

9,515

10,946

13,154

Services

17

12,741

14,937

17,464

20,800

18

7,522

8,638

10,021

11,509

Employer contributions to private pension and 20
welfare funds.

113,327

126,130

141,500

154,465

21
22
23
24
25
26

48,903
50,006
44,171
5,835
13,999
419

54,242
56,139
49,780
6,359
15,248
501

61,061
64,091
57,330
6,761
15,971
377

65,237
72,860
65,687
7,173
15,936
432

27

1,585

1,871

2,041

2,156

Benefits paid by private pension and welfare 28
funds.

88,329

102,269

117,993

29
30
31
32
33

27,272
47,163
5,092
8,331
471

31,258
54,539
5,819
9,656
997

38,239
62,053
6,510
10,768
423

Government and government enterprises

19

Rest of the world
By type

Pension and profit-sharing
Group insurance
Group health insurance
Group life insurance
Workers' compensation
Supplemental unemployment
Other
Addenda:

Pension and profit-sharing
Group health insurance
Group life insurance
Workers' compensation
Supplemental unemployment

1
Equals the number of full-time equivalent employees (table 6.8.) plus the number of selfemployed
persons (table 6.10.). Unpaid family workers are not included.
2
Includes Coast Guard.

Table 6.12.—Hours Worked by Full-Time and Part-Time Employees by Industry and Table 6.13.—
Hours
 Worked by Persons Engaged in Production by Industry have been discontinued pending the
availability of recent data on hours of work by industry.


SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

75

Table 6.18B.—Inventory Valuation Adjustment to Nonfarm Incomes by
Legal Form of Organization and Industry

Table 6.16B.—Nonfarm Proprietors' Income by Industry
[Millions of dollars]

[Millions of dollars]

1979

1980

1

103,186

Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries

2

Mining

Line

1981

1982

100,254

90,122

84 159

1,513

1,721

1,474

1,624

3

2725

2082

1 503

4 966

Construction

4

15464

14 167

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

5
6
7

2838
1 941
897

2650
2164
486

2180
1 598
582

1 271
'966
305

Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Communication
Electric, gas, and sanitary services

8
9
10
11

4,551
4078
19
492

4,183
3925
6
264

3,925
3678
84
331

3,053
2723
71
401

Nonfarm proprietors' income.. .

Line

12667

9 060

Wholesale trade

12

7 193

8023

5964

4688

Retail trade

13

15749

14400

14004

13977

Finance, insurance, and real estate.

14

8576'

5274

2098

Services .
Health
Legal
Other

15
16
17
18

44577
13,890
9866
20,821

47754
14,688
11014
22,052

49313
15,373
11 092
22,848

1 385

54067
16922
12406
24739

Table 6.17B.—Noncorporate Capital Consumption Allowances by
Industry
[Millions of dollars]
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

Inventory valuation adjustment to nonfarm incomes.

1979

1980

1

-46,017 -45,976 -25,165

2

-43,110

42,872

23620

1 277

608

485

179

Construction

4

-1438

1047

848

228

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

5
6
7

19219
18946
-10,361 -10,733
-8585 -8486

11788
-8,341
3447

-2802
-3,036
234

Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Communication
Electric, gas, and sanitary services

8
9
10
11

-4576
-983
-401
-3,192

-3,406
-732
-171
-2,503

-2383
-368
-81
-1,934

-1,359
250
_1
- 1,608

Wholesale trade .. .

12

-8,082

-8,649

-2,895

-1,508

-8,496

-4,188

-1,879

-395
-601

13

Retail trade
Other

. .

-7,559

14

-1,232

-1,447

- 1,033

15

-2,907

-3,104

-1,545

16

-26

-12

-10

-4

Construction

17

-196

143

116

-31

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

18
19
20

-162
-113
49

-167
-109
58

-95
-76
19

-29
-30
1

Wholesale trade

21

559

Retail trade

22

1 548

Other

23

-416

581

135

1741

858

460

331

79,776

91,627

Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries

2
3
4

9,269
8578
691

10434
9518
916

11,083
10239
844

11,785
10868
917

Table 6.19B.—Net Interest by Industry

Mining

5

2115

3118

4604

6045

[Millions of dollars]

Construction

6

1 980

2046

2248

2807

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

7
8
9

1 129
708
421

1 558
896
662

1 459
844
615

1 755
1 096
659

Transportaion and public utilities .
Transportation
Communication
Electric, gas, and sanitary services

10
11
12
13

2645
2,161
134
350

2791
2,249
160
382

2962
2,352
184
426

3287
2569
241
477

779

793

739

871

Retail trade

15

2,841

2916

3,741

4335

Finance, insurance, and real estate
Finance and insurance
Real estate
Owner-occupied nonfarm housing
Other

16
17
18
19
20

32870
686
32,184
17099
15,085

•36713
694
36019
18495
17524

41955
1485
40470
19956
20,514

47470
1 297
46173
21 285
24888

Services

21

7,203

8315

10,985

13272




8,350

Mining

Noncorporate business

68,684

14

-8,951

3

60,831

Wholesale trade

1982

Mining

Corporate business

1

Noncorporate capital consumption allowances.

1981

Line

1979

1980

1981

-78

-385
-74

1982

1

153,773

192,624

249,893

261,110

2

141,770

177,127

223,932

235,546

Agriculture, forestry a n d fisheries . . .

3

10,850

14,109

17,274

18,960

Mining

4

1,992

2,462

3,305

3,376

Construction

5

1,900

1903

1,998

1,993

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

6
7
8

11 993
5,690
6303

15841
8,556
7285

16083
8,202
7881

14,754
6,936
7,818

Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Communication
Electric, gas, and sanitary services

9
10
11
12

18 186
3,065
4,456
10,665

23029
3,933
5,469
13,627

28963
4,666
6,898
17,399

29,991
4,757
7,062
18,172

Wholesale trade

13

4,669

5,755

6,650

6,576

Retail trade

14

5,889

8,066

9,770

9,930

Finance insurance and real estate .
Finance
Real estate
Other

15
16
17
18

81,133
99,634
- 12 898 -11,475
96,471 114,491
-2,440 -3,382

132,160
1,879
135,356
5,075

142,046
-2,444
148,748
-4,258

Net interest .

.

Domestic industries

Services
Rest of the world

19

5,158

6,328

7,729

7,920

20

12,003

15,497

25,961

25,564

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

76

July 1983

Table 6.20B.—Corporate Profits by Industry
[Billions of dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

Corporate profits with inventory
valuation and capital consumption adjustments.

1980
I

1981

II

III

IV

I

1983

1982

II

III

IV

I

II

III

IV

I

II

1

194.8

175.4

192.3

164.8

183.1

187.3

168.3

170.6

175.6

194.7

185.0

197.6

192.0

162.0

166.8

168.5

161.9

181.8

2

164.2

145.5

168.7

143.0

148.8

152.5

136.5

141.0

152.1

170.1

163.6

175.8

165.2

141.4

145.0

147.8

137.8

161.6

Financial
Nonfinancial

3
4

29.5
134.7

25.3
120.3

18.4
150.2

19.0
124.0

29.1
119.6

28.7
123.8

25.4
111.1

22.9
118.2

24.1
128.0

22.0
148.1

18.6
145.1

17.0
158.8

16.2
149.0

13.6
127.7

18.6
126.5

20.2
127.5

23.5
114.3

27.8
133.9

Rest of the world

5

30.6

29.9

23.7

21.8

34.4

34.8

31.8

29.5

23.5

24.6

21.4

21.8

26.9

20.7

21.7

20.7

24.1

20.2

6

209.6

191.7

203.3

165.9

199.2

202.4

184.6

187.8

192.2

207.1

196.4

208.3

201.5

167.7

170.3

168.3

157.2

168.0

Domestic industries

Corporate profits with inventory
valuation adjustment.

7

179.0

161.9

179.7

144.1

164.8

167.6

152.8

158.3

168.7

182.5

175.0

186.5

174.7

147.0

148.5

147.6

133.1

147.8

Financial
Federal Reserve Banks
Other

8
9
10

30.3
9.6
20.7

26.9
11.9
15.0

20.3
14.5
5.8

20.9
15.4
5.5

30.1
10.7
19.4

29.9
11.7
18.2

26.9
12.5
14.4

24.7
11.3
13.4

26.1
12.2
13.9

23.9
13.3
10.6

20.4
14.1
6.4

18.8
15.2
3.7

18.1
15.6
2.5

15.5
15.3
.3

20.4
15.9
4.6

22.2
15.7
6.5

25.5
14.9
10.6

29.8
14.4
15.4

Nonfinancial

11

148.6

134.9

159.4

123.2

134.7

137.7

125.9

133.5

142.6

158.6

154.6

167.7

156.5

131.5

128.1

125.4

107.6

118.0

12

85.6

72.9

86.7

59.0

75.6

81.9

63.4

69.5

76.9

88.5

88.0

93.3

76.9

60.9

61.4

65.5

48.3

53.7

Durable goods
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment.
Motor vehicles and equipment
Other

13
14
15
16
17

37.1
3.5
5.2
8.9
5.1

20.4
2.7
4.2
7.4
5.2

28.6
3.8
4.6
9.7
6.4

9.8
-5.4
3.2
4.8
4.3

26.3
1.6
5.0
8.2
4.1

23.9
4.0
5.2
7.4
5.3

12.0
2.6
2.6
7.4
4.1

18.9
.4
3.8
7.3
5.8

26.7
3.7
5.1
7.6
5.7

30.7
6.6
4.2
8.9
7.3

34.8
4.5
5.8
9.7
6.0

27.7
3.8
5.0
9.8
6.1

21.3
.3
3.4
10.2
5.9

10.4
-3.3
4.0
8.7
4.4

14.5
-6.7
3.4
5.0
5.3

12.9
-5.6
3.1
3.5
5.1

1.2
-6.0
2.1
1.8
2.4

10.0
-1.6
2.8
1.1
3.5

18
19

4.7
9.8

-3.8
4.7

-.6
4.9

.4
2.5

-.1
7.5

-2.7
4.7

-8.8
4.2

-2.9
4.5

-.8
5.3

-2.0
5.6

3.0
5.9

-2.2
5.2

-1.3
2.7

-3.8
.3

3.4
4.1

3.3
3.5

-1.2
2.2

3.0
1.2

Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Other

20
21
22
23
24

48.4
5.7
7.1
20.7
14.8

52.5
6.0
6.0
28.2
12.3

58.0
8.9
7.2
27.8
14.1

49.2
7.3
4.9
24.8
12.2

49.3
4.9
5.4
26.6
12.5

58.0
6.2
6.6
31.4
13.9

51.3
5.7
5.0
29.2
11.5

50.6
5.0
5.8
28.1
11.7

50.2
7.3
6.6
24.1
12.1

57.9
10.0
8.2
25.1
14.5

53.1
8.3
6.6
23.7
14.5

65.6
9.1
6.9
36.3
13.3

55.6
8.3
7.2
26.0
14.1

50.5
6.7
6.2
27.2
10.4

46.9
7.3
5.7
21.9
11.9

52.6
8.0
4.6
26.8
13.2

47.1
7.2
3.0
23.5
13.4

43.6
6.9
4.8
15.9
16.0

Transportation and public utilities
Wholesale and retail trade
Other

25
26
27

15.9
27.1
20.1

17.1
23.6
21.3

18.7
32.8
21.1

17.5
27.6
19.1

12.6
25.4
21.1

16.0
19.3
20.5

14.4
27.1
21.1

19.6
22.6
21.8

18.6
25.4
21.7

20.1
29.0
21.0

15.7
31.3
19.7

19.1
33.3
21.9

19.8
37.8
22.0

18.0
30.2
22.4

19.8
27.4
19.5

17.3
25.2
17.4

14.9
27.5
16.9

17.4
27.8
19.2

28

30.6

29.9

23.7

21.8

34.4

34.8

31.8

29.5

23.5

24.6

21.4

21.8

26.9

20.7

21.7

20.7

24.1

20.2

Domestic industries

Manufacturing

Rest of the world




July 1983

Table 6.22B.—Federal, State, and Local Corporate Profits Tax Liability

Table 6.21B.—Corporate Profits Before Tax by Industry

by Industry

[Millions of dollars]
Line
Corporate profits before tax
Domestic industries
Agriculture forestry and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries
Mining
Metal mining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Nonmetallic minerals except fuels
Construction
Manufacturing
Durable goods
Lumber and wood products.
Furniture and fixtures
Stone clay and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment.
Motor vehicles and equipment
Other transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products
Leather and leather products
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Railroad transportation
Local and interurban passenger transit
Trucking and warehousing
Water transportation
Transportation by air
Pipelines, except natural gas
Transportation services
Communication
Telephone and telegraph
Radio and television broadcasting
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate ...
Banking
Federal Reserve banks
Commercial and mutual banks
Credit agencies other than banks
Security, commodity brokers and services
Insurance carriers
Insurance agents, brokers, and services
Real estate
Holding and other investment companies
Services
Hotels and other lodging places
Personal services
Business services.. . .
..
.. .
Auto repair, services, and garages
Miscellaneous repair services
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services
Other services
Health services
Legal services
Educational
services
Other 1
2
Rest of the world
Receipts from rest of the world
Less: Payments to rest of the world

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
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76

1979

1980

1981

1982

252,676
222,070
1,178
889
289
3,501
281
434
1,885
901
5,938
104,504
47,487
3,908
921
2,891
5,459
6,404
11,379
6,443
5,223
806
2,589
1,464
57,017
7,142
2,042
1,998
1,617
4,480
5,125
9,324
23,157
1,544
588
20,429
4,248
990
245
1,446
306
-132
1,014
379
7,542
6,049
'1,493
8,639
25,145
17,637
34,239
18,142
9,566
8,576
5,334
425
6,913
1,141
2,399
-115
9,499
995
577
2,567
294
242
829
641
3,354
2,121
310
90
833
30,606
37,987
7,381

234,614
204,729
576
412
164
6,439
244
497
4,777
921
5,650
92,122
31,112
1,495
825
1,700
4,120
5,049
10,182
6,848
-3,094
137
2,715
1,135
61,010
8,157
2,086
1,408
1,825
3,363
4,661
8,106
29,828
848
728
20,551
3,373
1,507
256
1,168
266
-1,074
962
288
7,525
6,410
1,115
9,653
24,506
16,237
29,011
17,574
11,949
5,625
356
1,707
6,960
1,072
871
471
9,637
811
606
2,159
220
297
680
593
4,271
2,696
326
202
1,047
29,885
38,545
8,660

226,959
203,299
524

174,205
152,404
164

6,465

4,512

5,643
98,476
36,987

5,024
61,814
12,805

61,489

49,009

21,058
2,623

18,870
43

7,897

7,310

10,538
23,842
16,090
21,879

11,517
15,576
15,385
22,102

9,322

8,957

23,660
32,205
8,545

21,801
26,833
5,032

1
Consists of social services, membership organizations, and miscellaneous professional
services.
2
Consists of receipts by all U.S. residents, including both corporations and persons, of
earnings of unincorporated foreign affiliates, dividends from their incorporated foreign affiliates,
and their share of reinvested earnings of their incorporated foreign affiliates, net of corresponding outflows.




77

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

[Millions of dollars]

Corporate profits tax liability
Domestic industries
Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries
Mining
Metal mining
Coal mining...
Oil and gas extraction
Nonmetallic minerals except fuels
Construction .
Manufacturing
Durable goods
Lumber and wood products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone clay and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment
Motor vehicles and equipment
Other transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products
Leather and leather products
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Railroad transportation
Local and interurban passenger transit ...
Trucking and warehousing
Water transportation
Transportation by air
Pipelines except natural gas
Transportation services
Communication
Telephone and telegraph
Radio and television broadcasting
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate
Banking
Federal Reserve banks
Commercial and mutual banks
Credit agencies other than banks
Security, commodity brokers and services
Insurance carriers
Insurance agents, brokers, and services
Real estate
Holding and other investment companies
Services
Hotels and other lodging places
Personal services
Business services
Auto repair services and garages
Miscellaneous repair services
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services
Other services
Health services..
Legal services
Educational services
Other 1
Rest of the world
1

Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

87597
87,597
408
318
90
1,368
94
136
923
215
2,071
41,866
20,508
902
425
1041
1 870
2,618
4,989
3 182
2,634
791
1 372
684
21,358
3303
991
769
706
1 525
2 165
3992
7003
622
282
5,713
1,614
357
47
502
164
66
360
118
1,844
1 163
681
2,255
6,736
5990
20,502
11,591
9279
2,312
1707
334
4737
415
1 220
498
2943
411
180
967
112
64
174
313
722
388
37
38
259
0

84,785
84,785
405
344
61
1,841
115
141
1365
220
2,126
39,223
15,119
364
431
691
1 574
2,334
4,137
2922
-35
578
1 505
618
24,104
4,032
926
618
820
1 140
2061
3508
10,175
465
359
6,220
1,676
399
51
561
196
48
310
111
1,915
1 277
638
2,629
6,815
5327
19,821
13,416
11 706
1,710
86
842
3420
419
970
668
3007
344
179
894
86
88
131
346
939
506
38
48
347

82,842
82,842
304

59,155
59,155
-109

2,074

1,173

2,674
38,600
15,232

1,278
24,114
6,726

23,368

17,388

4,852
909

1,382
-475

1,698

922

2,245
6,958
5,773
18,662

935
5,502
5,495
18,162

2945

2 158

0

0

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
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74

o

Consists of social services, membership organizations, and miscellaneous professional
services.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

78

July 1983

Table 6.23B.—Corporate Profits After Tax by Industry

Table 6.24B.—Net Corporate Dividend Payments by Industry

[Millions of dollars]

[Millions of dollars]

Corporate profits after tax
Domestic industries
Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services forestry and fisheries
Mining
Metal mining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels
Construction
Manufacturing
Durable goods
Lumber and wood products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone clay and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment
Motor vehicles and equipment
Other transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
.
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products
Leather and leather products
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Railroad transportation
Local and interurban passenger transit
Trucking and warehousing
Water transportation
Transportation by air
....
Pipelines except natural gas
Transportation services
Communication
Telephone and telegraph
Radio and television broadcasting
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate
Banking
Federal Reserve banks
Commercial and mutual banks
Credit agencies other than banks ....
Security commodity brokers and services
Insurance carriers ..
Insurance agents brokers and services
Real estate
Holding and other investment companies
Services
....
Hotels and other lodging places
Personal services
Business services
Auto repair services and garages .
Miscellaneous repair services
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services
Other services
Health services
Legal services
.
Educational services
Other l
Rest of the world 2
Receipts from rest of the world
Less* Payments to rest of the world

L,ine

1979

1980

1981

1982

1
o
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
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76

165,079
134 473

149,829
119,944

144,117
120,457

115,050
93,249

770
571
199

171
68
103

220

273

2133

4,598

4391

187
298
962
686

129
356

3,412

3,867
62,638
26,979
3006

3,524
52,899
15,993
1 131

1850
3589
3786
6390
3261

1009
2,546
2715
6,045
3926
-441
3059
1,210

496

15

2589
1,217

701

780

517

36,906
4,125
1160

3,746
37,700
6,079

38121

31,621

16,206
1,714

17,488

790

2,955
2960
5,332
16154

1005
2,223
2600
4,598
19653

922
306

383
369

14,716
2634

14,331
1,697
1,108

633
198
944
142

2,969
59,876
21,755

394

35659
3,839
1051
1,229

911

3,339

518

205
607
70

-198

-1,122

654
261

652
177

5,698
4886

5,610
5133

6,199

6,388

6,384
18,409
11,647
13,737
6,551

7,024
17,691
10,910
9,190
4,158

8,293
16,884
10,317
3,217

10,582
10,074
9,890
3,940

6264
3,627

3915

2,176

3,540

6,377

6,799

23,660
32,205
8,545

21,801
26,833
5,032

812

287

91

477

243
270
865

1 179

653
99

6,556

-197
6,630

584
397

467
427

726

613

1,600

1,265

2632
1733

3,332
2190

30,606
37987
7,381

29,885
38,545
8,660

182
178
655
328

273
52
574

134
209
549
247

288
154
700

1
Consists of social services, membership organizations, and miscellaneous professional services.
2
Consists of receipts by all U.S. residents, including both corporations and persons, of
earnings of unincorporated foreign affiliates, dividends from their incorporated foreign affiliates,
and their share of reinvested earnings of their incorporated foreign affiliates, net of corresponding outflows.




jine
Net corporate dividends
Domestic industries
Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries..
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries
Mining
Metal mining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels
Construction
Manufacturing
Durable goods ..
Lumber and wood products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone clay and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery except electrical .
Electric and electronic equipment
Motor vehicles and equipment... .
Other transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products...
Leather and leather products
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Railroad transportation
Local and interurban passenger transit
Trucking and warehousing
Water transportation
..
Transportation by air
Pipelines except natural gas
Transportation services
Communication
Telephone and telegraph
Radio and television broadcasting
Electric gas and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance insurance and real estate
Banking
Federal Reserve banks
Commercial and mutual banks
Credit agencies other than banks
Security, commodity brokers and services
Insurance carriers
Insurance agents, brokers, and services
Real estate
Holding and other investment companies
Services
Hotels and other lodging places
Personal services.
Business services.
Auto repair, services, and garages
Miscellaneous repair services.
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services.
Other services
Health services
Legal services.
Educational
services
Other 1
Rest of the world 2
Receipts from rest of the world
Less' Payments to rest of the world

4
>
i
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
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76

1979

1980

1981

1982

52,670
37,560
303
246
57
-2,647
112
302
-3,173
112
440
18,137
7,618
496
89
415
1,114
715
1,377
1,463
1,102
183
509
155
10,519
1,644
475
365
138
752
699
3,583
2,578
212
73
13,214
1,382
555
14
201
105
177
219
111
4,800
4,586
214
7,032
5,170
2,446
-1,031
2,644
67
2,577
616
93
-5,324
319
718
-97
1,528
189
131
389
52
13
94
116
544
216
62
48
218
15,110
18,445
3,335

58,589
40,417
251
196
55
86
241
224
-524
145
624
16,666
6,074
532
84
421
878
584
1,424
899
827
50
298
177
10,592
1,993
446
172
299
716
580
3,385
2,779
141
81
14,751
1,544
821
20
258
42
46
201
156
4,981
4,747
234
8,226
5,840
2,844
-1,997
2,029
70
1,959
584
91
-6,762
315
632
1,114
1,352
189
96
357
125
-3
88
108
392
193
60
22
117
18,172
22,054
3,882

64,658
50,287
280

68,666
54,428
306

1,313

2,013

807
21,225
7,564

918
21,405
8,565

13,661

12,840

16,837
1,849

18,809
1,968

5,761

6,182

9,227
6,288
3,262
-1,240

10,659
6,592
3,371
-691

1,515

1,705

14,371
19,184
4,813

14,238
19,405
5,167

1
Consists of social services, membership organizations, and miscellaneous professional services.
2
Consists of receipts by U.S. residents of dividends paid by their incorporated foreign
affiliates and of earnings of their unincorporated foreign affiliates, net of the corresponding
payments.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

79

Table 6.25B.—Undistributed Corporate Profits by Industry

Table 6.26B.—Corporate Capital Consumption Allowances by Industry

[Millions of dollars]

[Millions of dollars]

Line
Undistributed corporate profits
Domestic industries
Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries
Mining
Metal mining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
.
. . . .
Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels
Construction
Manufacturing
Durable goods
Lumber and wood products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone clay and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment
Motor vehicles and equipment
Other transportation equipment
Instruments and related products.
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products.
Leather and leather products
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Railroad transportation
Local and interurban passenger transit. ..
Trucking and warehousing
Water transportation
.. .
...
Transportation by air
Pipelines except natural gas ..
Transportation services
Communication
Telephone and telegraph
Radio and television broadcasting
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance insurance and real estate
Banking
.
Federal Reserve banks
Commercial and mutual banks
Credit agencies other than banks
Security, commodity brokers and services
Insurance carriers
Insurance agents brokers and services
Real estate
Holding and other investment comanies
Services
Hotels and other lodging places
Personal services
Business services
Auto repair services and garages
Miscellaneous repair services
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services
Other services
Health services
Legal services
Educational
services
Other l
2
Rest of the world
Receipts from rest of the world
Less* Payments to rest of the world

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
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57

58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76

1979

1980

1981

1982

112,409
96913
467
325

91,240
79 527
-80
128

79459
70 170

46,384
38 821

-60

-33

4 780

4 512

3 078

1 326

142

48

75
-4

112
132

4 135

3936

3 427
44,501
19 361
2*510

2 900
36233
9 919

574

407

556

599
310

2 162
38651
14 191

2 828
16295
2 486

24460

18781

631
135

1,321
-1450

438

206

934

77

10,596
7 055
4 457

3,482
6 519
4 631

4862

5,094

9,289
13,021
3732

7,563
7,428
-135

588
1435
2,475
1668
3071
2 131
5,013
4621
1 798
3027
1,487 -3886
-168 • -391
708
625

912
340

25140
2,195

26314
2,132

2203
2261
1749
13,576

1,507
2020
1213
16,874

576
864
773

710
233

714
618
706

78
184
743
37

242
288
420
153
287
185
349
28

-375

-1,168

1 502
1252

435
150
898
300
598

451
21
629
386
243

-648
13,239
9 201
14768
3907

1202
11,851
8066
11 187
2129

3687
3,011
-2
7,500

1956
-314
774
10,302

5,028

-731
1311
5,278

220

407
461
516
395
266

1,211

130
165
561
212

173

338

278
331
908
9
212
461
139

2088
1,517

2940
1,997

15,496
19,542
4046

11,713
16,491
4,778

211
4
356

228
132
583

1
Consists of social services, membership organizations, and miscellaneous professional
services.
2
Consists of receipts by U.S. residents of their share of the reinvested earnings of their
incorporated foreign affiliates, net of the corresponding payments to foreign residents for their
share of the reinvested earnings of their incorporated U.S. affiliates.




Line
Corporate capital consumption allowances...
Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Farms
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries
Mining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Nonmetallic minerals except fuels
Construction
Manufacturing. .
.
Durable goods
Lumber and wood products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone clay and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment
Motor vehicles and equipment
Other transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing industries
Nondurable goods
..
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
.
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products.
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products
Leather and leather products
Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Railroad transportation
Local and interurban passenger transit
Trucking and warehousing
Water transportation
Transportation by air
Pipelines except natural gas
Transportation services
Communication .
.
....
Telephone and telegraph
Radio and television broadcasting .
Electric gas and sanitary services
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance insurance, and real estate
Banking
Federal Reserve banks
Commercial and mutual banks..
Credit agencies other than banks
Security commodity brokers and services
Insurance carriers
Insurance agents brokers and services
Real estate
Holding and other investment companies
Services
.
Hotels and other lodging places
Personal services
Business services
Auto repair services and garages
Miscellaneous repair services
Motion pictures
Amusement and recreation services
Other services
Health services
Legal services
Educational
services
Other l

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
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72

1979

1980

142,729 163,013
2,296
2,039
1,877
1,676
419
363
4,638
3,790
335
290
942
904
2,627
2,036
734
560
5,380
4,777
59,949
68,940
34,887
30,147
2,255
1,944
368
338
2,269
1,989
5,580
5,077
3,007
2,592
5,407
6,511
5,446
4,488
6,342
5,449
1,106
1,188
1,233
1,077
770
598
34,053
29,802
4,724 . 5,314
606
500
1,228
1,171
484
432
2,564
2,128
2,131
1,800
7,302
6,525
13,056
11,134
1,241
1,218
147
150
36,857
32,859
10,217
8,875
2,313
2,004
299
236
3,161
2,812
838
783
2,026
2,379
393
442
621
785
13,494
11,895
12,822
11,319
576
672
12,089
13,146
8,150
6,931
11,692
10,109
10,829
11,765
4,268
4,775
9
12
4,763
4,259
900
924
209
230
1,613
1,645
250
279
3,222
3,503
433
343
13,295
11,446
1,077
1,023
565
664
4,200
3,428
3,142
3,088
157
223
465
490
1,027
829
2,497
1,866
1,370
1,083
135
100
104
99
888
584

1981

1982

191,870
2,684

220,941
3,370

5,782

6,629

5,790
82,069
40,372

6,986
93,159
44,959

41,697

48,200

44,257
12,353

51,505
14,487

16,099

18,886

15,805
9,237
12,631
13,790

18,132
10,807
13,976
16,152

15,630

18,357

1
Consists of social services, membership organizations, and miscellaneous professional
services.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

80

July 1983

7. Implicit Price Deflators and Price Indexes
Table 7.1.—Implicit Price Deflators for Gross National Product
[Index numbers, 1972 = 100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

I

II

III

IV

I

II

1983

1982

1981

1980

III

IV

I

II

III

IV

I

II

163.42 178.42 195.14 206.88 168.05 171.94 176.46 180.24 185.13 189.83 192.56 196.94 201.22 203.36 206.15 208.03 210.00 212.83 215.17

Gross national product

1

Personal consumption expenditures

2

162.5

179.0

194.1

205.3

168.1

172.7

176.9

181.1

185.3

189.1

192.3

195.9

199.2

201.7

203.6

206.9

209.0

210.1

212.9

3
4
5

145.0
169.9
162.3

156.2
188.1
178.8

167.3
202.5
195.8

174.8
209.0
211.6

148.1
176.6
167.8

152.0
181.7
172.2

154.5
185.8
176.3

157.7
190.1
181.1

160.8
194.8
185.4

162.9
199.1
189.5

166.1
201.4
193.1

169.3
203.8
197.9

171.2
205.5
202.5

172.9
206.8
206.3

174.2
207.6
209.4

176.1
210.2
213.4

176.1
211.2
217.2

177.3
210.6
219.8

177.8
213.7
223.7

178.5
170.8
200.2
158.8
200.5
202.7
202.7
140.3

193.4
186.2
227.4
169.1
218.5
221.6
218.1
149.2

208.4
201.9
254.2
179.5
233.5
237.1
234.0
159.3

215.3
209.7
265.8
183.1
240.2
244.0
245.9
168.7

184.3
176.5
209.2
162.5
207.6
210.2
208.7
142.7

188.4
181.1
217.0
165.9
212.4
215.1
214.9
145.2

191.3
184.6
223.7
167.9
217.1
220.6
219.2
147.8

195.1
188.0
232.0
169.9
221.7
225.2
221.5
150.8

198.8
191.6
237.5
172.7
223.2
226.3
222.5
153.0

202.4
194.9
242.6
175.1
228.8
232.1
225.5
155.4

207.2
200.5
250.5
179.3
231.6
234.9
231.4
158.1

210.0
203.7
255.9
181.0
235.7
239.4
235.8
161.0

214.1
208.5
266.6
182.4
239.2
243.3
239.2
162.9

213.7
208.1
266.4
181.5
240.8
245.0
240.6
165.8

216.6
211.1
267.1
184.4
240.9
244.8
246.5
168.2

215.3
209.6
264.3
183.3
240.9
244.9
242.4
169.8

215.7
209.9
265.4
183.2
238.4
241.5
249.9
171.1

215.9
207.7
264.0
181.8
244.9
248.2
248.2
171.7

217.0
207.3
263.6
183.2
247.6
250.7
250.7
171.8

17
18

192.5
246.1

212.9
289.4

230.8
293.4

236.0
278.9

198.6
267.5

204.0
281.6

209.1
289.8

215.9
292.0

223.3
294.7

228.7
298.5

229.7
298.5

231.2
289.4

233.8
287.7

236.1
281.8

236.0
273.6

236.3
281.8

235.6
278.5

238.0
265.4

239.7
269.5

19

170.4

189.2

207.9

222.5

177.0

182.3

186.7

189.8

197.9

201.8

205.4

209.3

215.1

217.6

221.0

224.4

226.8

231.3

233.8

20
21
22
23

164.8
166.0
162.5
173.7

185.2
187.5
180.8
191.5

207.7
209.3
204.5
208.1

222.0
227.7
210.0
222.9

172.0
174.6
166.9
179.9

177.7
180.0
173.2
185.0

182.0
184.3
177.9
189.6

183.2
186.7
176.5
193.8

198.3
199.1
196.7
197.7

201.0
201.9
199.3
202.2

204.2
206.4
199.7
206.1

207.9
208.3
207.0
210.2

217.0
220.0
211.2
213.8

218.0
222.7
209.1
217.3

221.3
225.1
212.3
220.9

223.8
228.3
213.9
224.7

224.4
234.3
205.7
228.5

230.9
234.9
221.7
231.6

232.4
236.2
222.6
234.8

II

III

IV

Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Gross private domestic investment
Fixed investment
Nonresidential
Structures
Producers' durable equipment
Residential
Nonfarm structures
Farm structures
Producers' durable equpment
Change in business inventories...
Net exports of goods and services
Exports
Imports
Government
services.

purchases of goods and

Federal
National defense
Nondefense .
State and local

6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16

NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1.

Table 7.2.—Fixed-Weighted Price Indexes for Gross National Product, 1972 Weights
[Index Numbers, 1972 = 100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

1981

1980
I

II

III

IV

181.9

186.0

191.1

I

1983

1982

II

III

IV

I

I

II

195.8

199.5

203.8

208.0

210.7

213.1

216.2

218.7

220.6

223.4

196.4

199.9

203.6

207.0

209.4

211.3

214.7

217.4

218.3

221.3

Gross national product

1

167.8

184.2

201.8

214.7

173.5

177.8

Personal consumption expenditures

2

166.3

184.8

201.7

213.2

172.7

178.2

182.5

186.9

191.5

3
4
5

147.9
174.3
165.1

160.3
195.8
182.9

172.6
212.7
201.5

181.2
219.0
218.9

151.5
182.1
171.2

155.5
188.8
176.0

158.7
193.4
180.5

161.8
197.8
185.4

165.0
202.9
189.9

167.4
209.0
194.6

171.1
211.8
198.8

174.6
214.0
204.0

177.2
216.1
208.8

178.8
217.0
212.9

180.8
217.0
216.4

182.3
220.1
220.8

182.9
221.7
225.3

183.9
220.0
228.5

184.7
223.2
232.0

185.4
177.2
196.0
166.4
200.8

204.1
195.9
219.0
182.7
219.5

221.1
213.7
236.6
200.6
235.0

231.5
225.7
246.2
214.0
242.4

192.3
184.0
204.8
172.1
208.2

197.3
188.9
211.2
176.1
213.2

202.4
194.0
217.3
180.6
218.4

207.2
198.8
222.0
185.5
223.1

210.1
202.7
225.9
189.3
224.3

215.1
207.2
230.5
193.9
230.0

219.1
211.9
234.6
198.9
232.9

223.3
215.7
238.4
202.7
237.5

227.2
219.8
241.9
207.1
241.2

229.7
222.4
243.7
210.2
243.4

231.5
225.2
246.1
213.2
243.4

232.8
227.2
246.9
215.9
243.3

232.5
228.6
248.2
217.4
240.0

235.6
229.9
248.1
219.4
246.5

236.7
230.3
247.5
220.5
248.7

14
15

197.2
244.5

218.4
304.4

238.3
319.4

244.1
309.4

203.8
268.3

210.2
290.7

214.2
301.5

220.9
310.9

228.7
316.3

235.2
321.9

237.6
324.3

239.5
316.2

241.3
315.7

243.7
315.6

244.8
309.1

244.2
306.7

243.9
306.1

245.8
303.2

246.7
298.0

16

173.2

193.8

212.2

226.4

181.0

186.5

191.4

194.9

202.2

206.1

210.1

213.4

219.3

222.2

224.6

227.5

231.4

233.7

235.5

17
18
19
20

169.5
171.7
164.0
175.7

192.7
196.7
182.6
194.5

215.0
220.1
201.7
210.4

230.6
236.7
215.0
223.6

179.1
182.2
171.3
182.2

184.5
188.1
175.2
187.9

189.2
193.6
177.9
192.8

191.9
196.0
181.4
196.9

204.7
209.0
193.6
200.5

208.0
212.3
196.9
204.9

212.4
217.5
199.4
208.5

215.0
220.0
202.2
212.4

224.5
230.6
208.7
215.8

227.1
233.2
211.6
218.9

228.8
234.9
213.0
221.9

230.8
236.6
215.8
225.3

235.6
241.9
219.7
228.6

237.0
242.9
221.7
231.5

236.9
242.7
222.2
234.5

Gross domestic purchases 1
Final sales ..
Final sales to domestic purchasers 1
Personal consumption expenditures,
food.
Personal consumption expenditures,
energy.
Other personal consumption expenditures.

21
22
23
24

170.8
167.7
170.8
178.7

189.8
184.1
189.7
193.0

207.0
201.8
207.0
208.8

218.9
214.7
218.9
217.3

177.6
173.4
177.6
183.0

183.0
177.7
183.0
185.5

187.5
181.8
187.5
189.3

191.8
186.0
191.8
195.6

196.7
191.0
196.7
201.8

201.4
195.8
201.4
205.6

205.1
199.5
205.1
207.5

208.8
203.8
208.8
210.5

212.8
208.0
212.8
211.6

215.3
210.7
215.4
215.1

217.3
213.1
217.3
217.5

220.2
216.3
220.3
218.2

222.7
218.8
222.8
218.4

224.3
220.6
224.3
219.5

226.7
223.4
226.8
222.9

25

240.6

315.5

358.6

363.7

272.7

301.0

315.0

319.7

326.3

349.5

358.0

359.9

367.0

361.5

351.6

366.8

374.9

357.0

363.7

26

155.8

170.3

185.2

198.1

160.5

164.7

168.2

172.1

176.0

179.5

183.2

187.2

190.9

193.8

196.5

199.7

202.6

205.1

207.7

Gross domestic product
Business
Nonfarm

27
28
29

167.8
168.7
167.5

184.3
185.5
185.0

201.8
203.0
202.8

214.7
215.2
215.2

173.5
174.3

177.9
179.0

182.0
183.2

186.1
187.5

191.2
192.1

195.9
197.0

199.6
200.9

203.9
205.3

208.0
208.9

210.8
211.4

213.2
213.8

216.3
216.8

218.8
218.8

220.6
220.8

223.5
223.6

Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Gross private domestic investment
Fixed investment
Nonresidential
Structures
Producers' durable equipment
Residential
Change in business inventories
Net exports of goods and services
Exports
Imports
Government
services.

purchases of goods and

Federal
National defense
Nondefense
State and local

6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

Addenda:

1
Gross domestic purchases equals gross national product less exports plus imports; final sales to domestic purchasers equals final sales less exports plus imports.
NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1.




July 1983

81

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
Table 7.3.—Implicit Price Deflators for Gross National Product by Major Type of Product
[Index numbers, 1972-100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

IV

Gross national product

1

Final sales
Change in business inventories
Goods

1980

1979
I

1981
III

II

IV

I

II

1982
III

IV

I

II

1983
III

IV

II

I

163.42 178.42 195.14 206.88 168.05 171.94 176.46 180.24 185.13 189.83 192.56 196.94 201.22 203.36 206.15 208.03 210.00 212.83 215.17

2
3

163.3

178.6

195.0

207.2

168.0

172.0

176.0

180.7

185.6

189.5

192.7

196.8

201.1

203.7

206.4

208.2

210.6

213.3

215.2

4

157.2

170.7

186.5

193.6

160.6

164.2

169.7

172.3

176.8

182.4

184.0

188.4

191.2

191.8

194.2

194.5

194.0

196.7

198.4

Final sales
Change in business inventories

5
6

156.8

171.1

186.1

194.5

160.4

164.4

168.6

173.5

177.9

181.6

184.2

188.0

190.8

192.7

194.9

194.8

195.8

198.1

198.7

Durable goods
Final sales
Change in business inventories

7
8
9

152.3
151.9

165.6
165.9

179.6
179.3

185.7
187.0

155.0
155.3

159.2
160.6

165.2
165.0

166.9
167.6

171.3
170.8

174.5
174.1

178.4
178.3

182.7
181.5

182.7
183.4

182.7
184.2

186.7
186.9

188.6
188.5

184.9
188.5

184.8
188.1

187.7
188.2

Nondurable goods
Final sales
Change in business inventories

10
11
12

161.3
160.8

174.6
174.9

191.6
191.3

199.0
199.8

164.9
164.5

168.2
167.4

172.9
171.3

176.3
177.9

181.2
183.2

188.3
187.4

188.3
188.7

192.7
192.8

197.1
196.1

198.0
198.7

199.5
200.5

198.7
199.2

199.9
200.8

204.6
205.1

206.1
206.4

Services

13

162.5

178.1

195.6

212.2

167.7

171.6

175.6

180.0

185.3

189.3

192.8

197.4

202.6

206.6

209.9

213.9

218.2

221.3

224.7

Structures

14

200.3

223.2

243.0

251.9

208.6

215.1

221.3

227.1

230.1

235.1

240.3

245.2

252.1

253.0

253.0

251.4

250.2

252.0

252.8

15
16

166.7
166.6

183.0
183.2

199.1
199.0

209.8
210.1

172.5
172.4

177.0
177.0

181.4
181.0

184.4
184.9

189.4
189.8

193.9
193.6

196.9
197.1

200.7
200.6

204.7
204.6

206.2
206.6

208.6
208.9

211.4
211.5

212.9
213.5

214.7
215.1

217.5
217.5

III

IV

Addenda:
Gross domestic purchases 1
Final sales to domestic purchasers

l

1
Gross domestic purchases equals gross national product less exports plus imports; final sales to domestic purchasers equals final sales less exports plus imports.
NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1.

Table 7.4.—Implicit Price Deflators for Gross National Product by Sector
[Index numbers, 1972=100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

Gross national product
Gross domestic product

1

1980
I

1981
III

II

IV

I

II

1983

1982
III

IV

I

II

I

II

163.42 178.42 195.14 206.88 168.05 171.94 176.46 180.24 185.13 189.83 192.56 196.94 201.22 203.36 206.15 208.03 210.00 212.83 215.17

2

163.4

178.5

195.2

206.9

168.1

172.0

176.5

180.3

185.2

189.9

192.6

197.0

201.3

203.4

206.2

208.1

210.0

212.9

215.2

Business
Nonfarm
Nonfarm less housing
Housing
Farm
Statistical discrepancy

3
4
5
6
7
8

163.4
162.1
163.8
147.8
209.4
163.4

178.5
178.1
180.1
160.9
193.3
178.5

195.1
195.0
197.5
174.8
199.6
195.1

206.0
206.5
208.9
188.1
190.2
206.0

167.9
166.9
168.5
152.8
205.3
167.9

171.9
171.5
173.3
155.6
187.6
171.9

176.6
176.8
179.0
158.8
171.6
176.6

180.5
179.8
182.0
162.5
204.9
180.5

185.0
184.3
186.5
166.4
211.2
185.0

189.9
189.3
191.7
169.5
210.7
189.9

192.5
192.3
194.7
172.7
199.0
192.5

197.1
196.9
199.5
176.5
201.0
197.1

201.0
201.4
204.1
180.5
189.8
201.0

202.8
203.3
205.9
183.7
187.8
202.8

205.5
206.0
208.6
186.2
188.7
205.5

207.1
207.3
209.7
189.7
198.6
207.1

208.5
209.3
211.5
192.7
186.5
208.5

211.3
212.0
214.2
195.0
191.2
211.3

213.6
214.4
216.7
197.2
188.2
213.6

Households and institutions. . .
Private households
Nonprofit institutions . .
. . .

9
10
11

169.7
180.1
168.7

187.5
203.7
186.2

207.4
224.6
206.1

229.2
234.2
228.8

175.8
184.3
175.0

180.4
193.8
179.3

185.6
201.0
184.4

189.1
207.6
187.7

194.6
213.5
193.2

199.8
217.8
198.5

204.6
222.2
203.4

209.9
227.1
208.6

215.1
231.1
213.9

221.9
233.6
221.0

226.5
234.4
225.9

231.9
234.5
231.7

236.4
234.5
236.5

238.0
234.7
238.3

241.1
238.4
241.3

Government
Federal
State and local

12
13
14

161.7
154.6
165.0

175.5
167.3
179.3

191.9
185.6
194.8

207.7
200.4
211.2

167.0
161.5
169.5

169.9
162.5
173.3

172.7
163.1
177.3

175.6
163.6
181.3

183.5
179.9
185.2

186.8
181.3
189.4

189.4
182.0
192.9

192.2
182.6
196.8

199.2
196.7
200.4

202.5
198.3
204.5

205.5
198.8
208.6

208.8
199.2
213.4

214.1
205.4
218.3

217.7
207.8
222.5

220.5
208.1
226.5

15

161.8

176.5

193.3

205.1

166.2

170.0

174.5

178.2

183.3

188.1

190.7

195.0

199.3

201.5

204.4

206.2

208.4

211.6

214.2

16

164.8

180.1

197.1

207.7

Rest of the world
Addendum:
Gross domestic business product less
housing.

NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1.

Table 7.5.—Implicit Price Deflators for the Relation of Gross National Product, Net National Product, and National Income
[Index numbers, 1972=100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

Gross national product

1

1980
I

II

IV

I

II

1983

1982

1981
III

III

rv

I

II

III

IV

I

II

163.42 178.42 195.14 206.88 168.05 171.94 176.46 180.24 185.13 189.83 192.56 196.94 201.22 203.36 206.15 208.03 210.00 212.83 215.17

Less: Capital consumption allowances 2
with capital consumption adjustment.

179.0

195.7

211.3

221.0

185.1

189.4

193.9

198.0

201.1

204.9

209.0

213.5

217.8

218.7

220.4

222.5

222.5

223.1

223.0

3

161.8

176.5

193.3

205.1

166.2

170.0

174.5

178.2

183.3

188.1

190.7

195.0

199.3

201.5

204.4

206.2

208.4

211.6

214.2

Less: Indirect business tax and nontax 4
liability plus business transfer payments less subsidies plus current surplus of government enterprises.

137.8

154.4

173.5

178.5

141.0

146.3

154.0

156.8

160.4

170.8

172.6

174.2

176.5

176.1

178.3

180.5

179.0

181.9

187.4

Equals* Net national product

Statistical discrepancy

5

163.4

178.5

195.1

206.0

167.9

171.9

176.6

180.5

185.0

189.9

192.5

197.1

201.0

202.8

205.5

207.1

208.5

211.3

Equals: National income • .

6

164.6

179.1

195.7

208.5

169.2

172.8

176.9

180.8

186.1

190.2

192.9

197.6

202.1

204.7

207.7

209.5

212.1

215.3




82

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 7.6.—Implicit Price Deflators for Net National Product and National Income by Sector
[Index numbers, 1972=100]

1979

Line

1980

1981

1982

1

161.8

176.5

193.3

205.1

2

161.8

176.5

193.3

205.1

3

161.4

176.2

192.9

203.8

Nonfarm
Nonfarm less housing
Housing
Farm
Statistical discrepancy

4
5
6
7
8

160.1
162.7
134.3
217.0
163.4

175.9
179.0
146.2
187.5
178.5

192.9
196.5
160.6
191.2
195.1

204.6
208.0
176.2
174.3
206.0

Households and institutions
Government

9
10

169.7
161.7

187.5
175.5

207.4
191.9

229.2
207.7

11

161.8

176.5

193.3

205.1

12

164.6

179.1

195.7

208.5

13

164.7

179.2

195.7

208.5

14

164.9

179.4

195.8

207.7

Nonfarm
Nonfarm less housing
Housing
Farm

15
16
17
18

164.1
165.2
148.8
193.8

179.9
180.9
167.3
162.8

196.5
197.2
188.1
176.4

209.2
209.4
207.0
164.7

Households and institutions
Government

19
20

169.7
161.7

187.5
175.5

207.4
191.9

229.2
207.7

21

161.8

176.5

193.3

22
23

163.7
165.7

178.8
179.9

195.8
195.9

Net national product
Net domestic product
Business

Rest of the world
National income
Domestic income
Business

Rest of the world
Addenda:
Net domestic business product less housing
Domestic business income less housing

206.3
207.1

Table 7.7.—Current-Dollar Cost and Profit per Unit of Constant-Dollar Gross Domestic Product of Nonfinancial Corporate Business
[Dollars]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1980

1979

IV

Net domestic product
Indirect business tax and nontax liability plus business transfer payments less subsidies.
Domestic income
Compensation of employees
Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption
adjustments.
Profits tax liability
Profits after tax with inventory
valuation and capital consumption adjustments.
Net interest
1

IV
1.934

1982

IV

III

1.979

2.024

2.042

2.069

2.079

.217

.229

.236

.242

.247

.254

IV

1.960

.171

.198

.217

.245

.180

.186

.198

.203

1.447

1.595

1.744

1.827

1.481

1.539

1.583

1.608

1.649

1.698

1.721

1.762

1.795

1.806

1.827

1.832

1.843

1.872 .

.149

.172

.199

.209

.154

.159

.170

.177

.181

.195

.198

.199

.204

.204

.207

.209

.215

.218.

1.298
1.094
.154

1.423
1.218
.140

1.545
1.302

1.618
1.397
.145

1.327
1.136
.137

1.380
1.174
.142

1.413
1.215
.131

1.431
1.227
.138

1.467
1.255
.148

1.503
1.272
.168

1.523
1.290
.163

1.563
1.306
.177

1.591
1.342
.169

1.602
1.374
.148

1.620
1.394
.147

1.623
1.403
.148

1.627
1.419
.135

1.654 .
1.428 .
.156.

.079
.075

.078
.062

.074
.095

.048
.097

.075
.062

.087
.055

.067
.064

.077
.062

.081
.067

.081
.086

.071
.092

.075
.102

.068
.101

.053
.095

.051

.049
.099

.040
.095

.049 .
.108 .

.050

.065

.074

.076

.055

.067

.066

.064

.064

.070

.081

.080

.080

.079

.072

.073

.070.

.207

Equals the deflator for gross domestic product of nonfinancial corporate business with the decimal point shifted two places to the left.




1983

III

1.793

Current-dollar cost and profit per
unit of constant-dollar
gross
domestic product J .
Capital consumption allowances with
capital consumption adjustment.

1981

III

83

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 7.8.—Implicit Price Deflators for Auto Output
[Index numbers, 1972=100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

1980
I

1981

II

III

IV

I

1982

II

III

IV

I

1983

II

III

IV

I

II

1

144.7

154.4

165.4

173.1

148.1

151.0

154.3

154.4

157.8

158.9

164.3

168.7

170.4

170.2

173.9

175.3

172.5

174.0

178.3

Final sales
Personal consumption expenditures
New autos
...
Net purchases of used autos
Producers' durable equipment . .
New autos
Net purchases of used autos . . . .
Net exports
Exports
Imports
Government purchases of goods and
services.

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12

145.5
158.0
149.3

154.1
169.0
161.2

165.8
186.3
170.9

173.4
199.1
177.8

147.9
160.3
152.7

151.8
163.7
156.8

152.4
167.3
160.0

153.6
169.8
163.3

158.5
175.5
165.1

159.9
177.2
165.6

165.2
184.8
170.4

169.5
189.5
173.3

169.8
195.7
175.3

170.7
195.5
176.0

172.2
197.8
177.1

175.7
203.2
179.1

174.7
199.9
178.9

176.0
203.7
181.0

179.2
204.2
181.1

133.0
149.2

144.2
161.3

140.2
171.0

132.4
177.8

137.9
152.8

142.2
156.8

146.8
160.0

148.9
163.3

139.8
165.1

137.7
165.6

144.0
170.5

141.0
173.3

138.0
175.3

134.3
176.0

134.1
177.1

132.4
179.1

128.9
178.9

128.4
180.9

130.3
184.0

147.0
196.5
136.9

158.9
214.2
145.6

172.0
234.1
146.0

182.0
241.0
147.9

150.1
200.2
139.4

154.2
205.0
143.1

157.7
211.6
145.0

161.1
223.3
147.4

164.2
216.5
145.8

166.3
230.3
144.9

171.2
230.8
146.2

174.8
231.4
147.4

177.8
243.6
146.1

180.2
243.7
146.2

180.0
237.2
146.5

185.1
238.8
149.9

182.6
245.1
148.5

187.2 ""l87"9
244.3 244.9
150.1 151.1

Change in business inventories of new
and used autos.

13

149.0
149.4

161.0
161.3

170.8
171.0

177.8
177.8

152.7
152.7

156.7
156.8

159.6
160.0

163.0
163.3

164.5
165.1

165.4
165.6

170.2
170.3

173.3
173.2

175.4
175.3

175.7
175.9

177.1
177.2

179.5
179.1

178.4
179.0

181.0
180.9

II

III

IV

Auto output

Addenda:
Domestic output of new autos2 1
Sales of imported new autos
1
2

14
15

182.3
181.6

Consists of final sales and change in business inventories of new autos produced in the United States.
Consists of personal consumption expenditures, producers' durable equipment, and government purchases.

Table 7.9.—Implicit Price Deflators for Truck Output
[Index numbers, 1972=100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

1980
I

1982

1981

II

III

IV

I

II

III

IV

I

1983
I

II

l

1

169.1

188.5

207.3

212.9

174.2

182.9

186.2

191.4

194.3

200.6

205.5

209.4

213.8

211.2

211.1

215.8

213.8

216.4

213.4

Final sales
Personal consumption expenditures
Producers' durable equipment
Net exports
Exports
Imports
Government purchases of goods and
services.

2
3
4
5
6
7
8

169.1
149.3
177.2

188.4
161.0
196.3

208.0
171.4
221.8

213.1
177.7
234.9

174.7
152.5
183.7

182.8
156.8
191.3

185.4
160.1
192.2

191.3
163.2
198.8

195.2
165.1
204.3

200.6
165.7
211.4

206.9
170.5
219.9

209.3
173.4
225.0

216.0
175.3
232.0

212.2
176.0
232.6

212.3
177.1
234.2

214.9
179.1
237.8

213.4
178.9
235.9

217.4
181.1
243.3

213.5
181.2
243.0

177.5
163.7
177.5

196.7
176.7
196.9

221.4
196.1
221.7

234.9
209.4
235.3

isi.4

191.3
170.5
191.3

192.2
172.0
192.1

198.9
178.0
198.8

204.3
186.0
204.3

211.4
186.7
211.4

219.9
193.7
219.9

225.0
200.2
225.1

232.1
202.8
232.0

232.7
202.9
232.6

234.2
211.0
234.2

237.9
213.1
237.8

235.8
211.3
235.9

243.3
215.3
243.3

242.9
215.9
243.0

Change in business inventories

9

Truck output

1

Includes new trucks only.




164.4
183.7

84

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 7.10.—Implicit Price Deflators for Total Farm Output, Gross Product, and Income
[Index numbers, 1972=100]

1979

Line

1980

1981

1982

1

201.4

207.1

217.1

210.7

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

193.9
198.3
190.1
369.8
193.1
186.2

199.1
212.3
186.7
464.6
190.2
221.1

205.5
228.4
185.8
570.3
199.6
249.8

197.5
208.0
187.5
692.9
192.9
258.7

Less' Intermediate goods and services purchased
Intermediate goods and services, other than rent
Rent paid to nonoperator landlords

11
12
13

194.6
192.2
218.2

220.3
218.9
234.0

237.1
235.8
249.8

232.8
232.6
234.7

Farm Output
Cash receipts from farm marketings and net Commodity Credit Corporation loans
Crops
Livestock
Gross rental value of farm housing
Farm products consumed on farms
Other farm income
Change in farm inventories
....
Crops
Livestock

Equals* Gross farm product

14

209.4

193.3

199.6

190.2

Less* Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment
Indirect business tax and nontax liability
Plus' Subsidies to operators

15
16
17

187.2
141.0

209.8
160.5

229.2
128.1

242.8
109.1

Equals* Income

18

193.8

162.8

176.4

164.7

.

Table 7.11.—Implicit Price Deflators for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product
[Index numbers, 1972 = 100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

Personal
tures.

consumption

expendi-

Durable goods
Motor vehicles and parts
Furniture and household equipment
Other
Nondurable goods
Food
Clothing and shoes
Gasoline and oil
Other nondurable goods. . . .
Fuel oil and coal
Other
.
Services

. .

....

Housing
Household operation
Electriciy and gas
Other
Transportation
.
Other




.

.

1980
I

1981

II

III

IV

I

1982

II

III

IV

I

1983

II

III

IV

I

II

179.0

194.1

205.3

168.1

172.7

176.9

181.1

185.3

189.1

192.3

195.9

199.2

201.7

203.6

206.9

209.0

210.1

212.9

145.0

156.2

167.3

174.8

148.1

152.0

154.5

157.7

160.8

162.9

166.1

169.3

171.2

172.9

174.2

176.1

1T6.1

177.3

177.8

154.2
135.4
145.1

166.6
143.4
165.0

181.5
151.3
175.5

191.3
156.5
181.3

157.6
137.8
150.9

161.7
140.2
157.4

164.9
142.4
163.7

167.8
144.7
167.9

172.5
146.4
171.3

174.2
148.4
173.0

180.1
150.4
174.6

184.2
152.5
176.0

188.3
153.9
178.5

188.6
155.3
180.0

190.5
156.4
180.5

194.1
156.9
181.8

192.0
157.6
182.7

194.5
157.8
183.9

194.4
157.4
184.4

1

162.5

2
3
4
5
6

169.9

188.1

202.5

209.0

176.6

181.7

185.8

190.1

194.8

199.1

201.4

203.8

205.5

206.8

207.6

210.2

211.2

210.6

213.7

7
8
9
10
11
12

177.0
129.2
243.2
168.4
340.2
156.4

190.7
134.3
337.9
187.3
470.8
170.8

206.7
138.5
375.8
204.9
572.1
185.5

215.7
141.1
357.1
218.8
565.6
200.4

181.2
130.7
284.3
175.5
409.8
160.5

183.2
132.9
325.3
180.9
448.5
164.7

187.0
133.4
340.0
185.5
469.1
169.1

193.4
134.6
339.8
189.8
477.5
172.9

199.6
136.3
346.3
193.2
489.7
176.4

203.3
136.9
371.3
199.1
554.0
180.1

205.4
138.0
377.0
203.4
576.9
183.9

208.6
139.4
373.4
206.8
575.6
187.3

209.7
139.8
381.5
210.1
582.4
190.6

213.1
140.3
363.6
212.8
565.7
194.6

215.8
141.0
341.9
216.2
544.1
198.5

216.7
141.7
361.7
220.6
563.9
201.6

217.1
141.5
361.5
225.5
590.0
206.8

218.7
141.7
331.2
226.9
541.1
211.4

222.1
142.8
344.5
231.1
521.3
213.8

13

162.3

178.8

195.8

211.6

167.8

172.2

176.3

181.1

185.4

189.5

193.1

197.9

202.5

206.3

209.4

213.4

217.2

219.8

223.7

14
15
16
17
18
19

152.5
165.2
203.8
140.5
160.8
170.3

166.5
181.5
237.0
145.9
184.2
187.6

181.2
203.8
269.8
161.1
202.4
204.8

195.0
227.0
306.3
175.9
215.4
220.3

158.1
170.2
214.6
142.3
168.7
175.3

161.1
173.6
222.1
143.6
174.6
181.0

164.3
178.0
233.4
143.1
180.7
185.3

168.2
184.9
241.5
147.2
187.1
190.1

172.4
189.0
249.9
149.8
194.7
193.9

175.6
194.0
256.2
154.0
198.7
198.5

179.0
199.3
263.7
157.9
200.6
202.1

182.8
207.8
275.8
163.6
204.0
206.8

187.1
214.3
283.1
169.0
206.5
211.5

190.3
221.0
295.5
171.4
209.7
214.9

192.8
225.3
301.1
174.9
213.2
217.8

196.7
228.6
308.6
177.7
218.2
222.0

200.2
233.4
321.0
179.7
220.8
226.1

202.6
235.7
322.8
184.3
224.6
228.9

205.0
242.9
330.4
186.0
229.1
232.8

July 1983

85

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
Table 7.12.—Implicit Price Deflators for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product
[Index numbers, 1972 = 100]
Line

Personal consumption expenditures
Durable goods
Motor vehicles and parts
New autos (65)
Net purchases of used autos (66)
Other motor vehicles (67)
Tires, tubes, accessories, and other parts (68)
Furniture and household equipment
Furniture, including matresses and bedsprings (29)
Kitchen and other household appliances (30)
China, glassware, tableware, and utensils (31)
Radio and television receivers, and musical instruments (87)
Other durable house furnishings (32)
Other
Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (46)
Wheel goods, durable toys, sports equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (86)
Jewelry and watches (18)
Books and maps (83)
Nondurable goods
Food
Food purchased for off-premise consumption (3)
Purchased meals and beverages (4)
Food furnished employees (including military) and food produced and consumed on
farms (5 + 6).
Addenda: Food excluding alcoholic beverages (8)
Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-prem ise consumption (9)
Other alcoholic beverages (10)
Clothing and shoes
Shoes and other footwear (12)
Women's and children's clothing and accessories (14)
Men's and boys' clothing and accessories (15 + 16)
Gasoline and oil (70)
Fuel oil and coal (40)
Other
Tobacco products (7)
Toilet articles and preparations (21)
Semidurable house furnishings (33)
Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and
paper products (34).
Drug preparations and sundries (45)
Nondurable toys and sports supplies (85)
Stationery and writing supplies (35)
Net foreign remittances (105 less 107)
Other (84 + 89)
Services
Housing
Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings space rent (24)
Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings—rent (25)
Rental value of farm dwellings (26)
Other (27)
Household operation
Electricity (37)
Gas (38)
Water and other sanitary services (39)
Telephone and telegraph (41)
Domestic service (42)
Other (43)
Transportation
User-operated transportation (69 + 71 + 72)
Purchased local transportation
Transit systems (74)
Other (75 + 76)
Purchased intercity transportation
Railway (excluding commutation) (78)
Bus (79)
Airline (80)
Other (81)
Other
Personal care
Cleaning, storage, and repair of clothing and shoes (17)
Barbershops, beauty parlors, baths, and health clubs (22)
Other (19)
Medical care
Physicians (47)
Dentists (48)
Other professional services (49)
Privately controlled hospitals and sanitariums (50)
Health insurance (51)
Personal business
Brokerage charges and investment counselling (56)
Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rentals (57)
Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers (58).
Other (59+ 60+ 61+ 62)
Recreation
Admissions to spectator amusements (90)
Other (88 + 94 + 95 + 96 + 97)
Private education and research
Higher education (99)
Elementary and secondary schools (100)
Other (101)
Religious and welfare activities (102)
Net foreign travel (104 less 106)

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23

162.5
145.0
154.2
149.3
193.6
149.1
145.0
135.4
146.3
141.7
177.3
111.0
140.2
145.1
149.1
140.8
141.5
160.7
169.9
177.0
177.3
175.6
185.9

179.0
156.2
166.6
161.2
197.5
161.1
162.3
143.4
158.6
148.8
195.7
113.3
153.2
165.0
162.6
153.9
176.7
177.1
188.1
190.7
190.1
191.9
200.3

167.3
181.5
170.9
246.2
171.3
172.3
151.3
168.9
157.4
215.3
115.6
166.9
175.5
173.6
163.0
183.8
196.7
202.5
206.7
205.6
209.1
217.3

205.3
174.8
191.3
177.8
285.5
177.7
176.6
156.5
176.0
167.0
224.3
115.6
177.8
181.3
181.3
168.5
179.5
219.7
209.0
215.7
213.5
220.7
227.6

24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37

182.4
143.7
152.4
129.2
141.5
124.2
132.7
243.2
340.2
156.4
141.0
161.5
157.0
205.3

196.6
155.5
163.5
134.3
152.4
127.2
139.5
337.9
470.8
170.8
152.0
176.2
170.4
229.2

213.4
166.0
177.8
138.5
160.4
129.2
146.9
375.8
572.1
185.5
164.2
194.4
181.7
252.3

222.3
173.0
187.7
141.1
164.5
130.4
152.2
357.1
565.6
200.4
182.8
210.5
197.8
267.8

38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80

145.7
131.3
168.5
224.1
160.3
162.3
152.5
147.8
147.8
369.8
173.7
165.2
185.9
249.2
175.1
116.6
180.1
171.2
160.8
163.2
143.6
127.3
161.1
161.5
172.5
186.2
159.2
156,2
170.3
183.2
177.9
194.6
161.6
173.2
181.6
162.3
176.9
181.4
126.0
172.7
192.0
143.0
180.9

159.1
140.3
180.5
250.8
178.5
178.8
166.5
160.9
160.9
464.6
195.0
181.5
214.8
297.0
186.1
118.7
203.7
179.1
184.2
179.5
166.3
146.3
187.7
214.6
203.1
212.7
217.0
196.1
187.6
203.5
202.4
210.9
183.2
193.5
200.5
181.6
197.3
203.9
139.7
186.4
206.3
163.2
185.8

176.6
147.8
194.3
259.8
196.6
195.8
181.2
174.8
174.9
570.3
215.8
203.8
246.7
335.6
208.4
130.1
224.6
201.5
202.4
189.8
195.7
184.7
207.8
266.9
241.5
242.8
273.5
243.2
204.8
222.6
225.4
227.2
202.5
218.2
222.6
198.9
215.8
230.4
170.5
195.7
207.2
190.5
181.3

194.7
151.9
207.4
265.4
212.1
211.6
195.0
188.1
188.1
692.9
237.6
227.0
271.2
404.4
233.1
143.4
234.2
219.2
215.4
200.4
214.9
209.3
221.3
294.5
270.6
264.0
302.1
270.0
220.3
237.4
242.3
241.0
216.9
239.7
243.5
214.3
230.1
252.8
196.4
214.2
231.8
219.7
196.8

81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90

167.3
142.6
147.6
141.4
177.4
163.7
193.7
182.0
176.5
181.6

187.2
153.1
156.9
152.2
198.2
180.6
217.1
206.9
199.4
202.6

206.6
162.8
164.5
162.4
217.9
199.2
237.4
228.5
218.9
220.7

225.9
171.2
174.8
170.6
230.9
214.9
248.8
238.7
227.4
131.6

NOTE.—The figures in parentheses are the line numbers of the corresponding items in table 2.4


http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
411-122
83 Louis
- 6 QL 3
Federal Reserve
Bank0of- St.

1982

1981

1979

86

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 7.13.—Implicit Price Deflators for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product
[Index numbers, 1972=100]
Nondurable goods

Durable goods
Personal
consumption
expenditures

Year and month

Total

Motor
vehicles
and
parts

Furniture and
household
equipment

Other

Total

Food

Services

Clothing
and
shoes

Gasoline
and oil

Other

Total

Housing

Household
operation

Transportation

Other

1979

162.5

145.0

154.2

135.4

145.1

169.9

177.0

129.2

243.2

168.4

162.3

152.5

165.2

160.8

170.3

1980
1981
1982

179.0
194.1
205.3

156.2
167.3
174.8

166.6
181.5
191.3

143.4
151.3
156.5

165.0
175.5
181.3

188.1
202.5
209.0

190.7
206.7
215.7

134.3
138.5
141.1

337.9
375.8
357.1

187.3
204.9
218.8

178.8
195.8
211.6

166.5
181.2
195.0

181.5
203.8
227.0

184.2
202.4
215.4

187.6
204.8
220.3

August
September
October
November
December

155.8
157.1
158.0
159.3
160.5
161.8
162.9
164.1
165.5
167.0
168.0
169.3

141.2
142.0
143.0
143.7
144.2
144.1
145.4
145.5
146.5
146.9
148.1
149.3

149.0
150.1
151.7
153.0
153.7
154.3
155.6
155.1
156.1
156.4
157.6
158.8

133.0
133.6
134.0
134.5
134.7
134.6
135.2
135.6
136.0
136.8
137.9
138.7

139.2
140.6
141.3
142.3
142.9
143.6
144.7
146.0
147.6
149.5
151.0
152.1

160.9
163.0
164.3
166.1
167.8
169.6
170.9
172.4
173.9
175.3
176.6
177.9

170.6
173.1
174.3
175.1
176.3
176.9
177.6
177.4
178.4
180.0
181.0
182.5

126.9
127.2
128.2
128.5
129.2
129.0
129.2
129.5
130.3
130.4
130.5
131.3

193.0
197.5
204.4
217.5
228.1
244.2
254.9
266.1
273.5
278.6
284.3
290.0

159.8
161.6
162.3
163.7
165.3
167.0
169.2
171.6
172.9
173.7
176.1
176.8

156.7
157.6
158.2
159.0
160.1
161.3
162.4
163.7
165.1
166.9
167.6
168.9

147.0
147.8
148.1
148.8
150.4
151.3
152.4
153.9
155.2
157.4
158.1
158.8

160.1
161.5
161.3
162.0
162.9
164.3
165.2
166.6
167.7
168.2
170.1
172.3

152.4
152.1
153.5
156.3
157.7
160.2
161.8
163.2
165.4
168.6
167.6
170.0

164.7
166.0
166.9
167.4
168.1
169.3
170.4
171.5
172.9
174.5
175.0
176.4

1980
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

170.8
172.7
174.7
175.7
176.9
178.0
179.3
181.1
182.9
184.0
185.3
186.6

150.6
152.0
153.4
153.7
154.3
155.6
156.3
157.7
159.1
160.0
160.9
161.5

160.1
162.0
163.4
164.5
165.1
165.1
165.6
168.0
170.0
171.0
172.8
173.7

139.4
140.1
141.2
141.5
142.4
143.3
143.9
144.7
145.6
146.0
146.5
146.8

154.3
157.4
160.9
161.8
163.2
166.3
166.0
168.1
169.6
170.0
171.7
172.3

179.8
181.3
184.0
184.8
185.8
186.9
188.0
190.1
192.2
193.2
194.7
196.3

182.7
182.4
184.5
185.9
187.2
187.9
190.1
193.6
196.4
197.9
199.7
201.1

132.6
132.8
133.3
133.5
133.3
133.5
134.1
134.4
135.2
136.1
136.6
136.3

311.5
324.5
340.4
339.7
340.8
339.4
339.1
339.9
340.4
342.8
346.0
350.0

177.6
181.2
183.8
183.2
185.4
187.8
188.3
190.0
191.1
191.6
192.6
195.4

170.4
172.4
173.9
174.9
176.4
177.5
179.6
181.1
182.8
184.2
185.5
186.6

159.9
161.2
162.2
162.5
164.2
166.1
167.0
167.9
169.6
171.3
172.4
173.5

179.0
181.4
182.6
183.9
185.4
186.6
188.4
190.1
191.8
193.1
194.1
194.3

172.4
174.7
176.8
179.2
180.4
182.4
184.2
186.8
190.3
192.7
194.6
196.9

179.0
181.4
182.6
183.9
185.4
186.6
188.4
190.1
191.8
193.1
194.1
194.3

1981
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

187.9
189.0
190.3
191.3
192.4
193.1
194.6
195.7
197.3
198.2
199.3
200.2

162.2
163.1
163.4
164.8
166.3
167.1
168.2
169.1
170.5
170.6
171.2
171.8

174.1
174.3
174.2
177.7
180.6
182.0
182.9
183.1
186.6
187.8
188.0
189.1

147.4
148.7
149.0
149.9
150.3
151.1
152.0
152.4
153.1
153.3
154.0
154.4

173.1
172.7
173.1
173.9
174.8
175.1
175.4
176.0
176.5
177.9
178.5
179.1

197.6
198.7
200.9
201.0
201.6
201.6
202.9
203.6
205.0
205.0
205.4
206.0

202.1
203.0
204.7
205.3
205.1
205.7
207.6
208.6
209.5
209.5
209.6
210.1

136.3
137.1
137.4
137.8
138.0
138.2
138.8
139.5
139.9
139.8
139.5
140.0

358.6
370.9
385.1
379.2
378.0
373.9
371.5
372.8
375.9
379.3
382.0
383.2

198.3
198.2
200.9
201.5
203.9
204.8
206.0
206.5
208.1
208.9
210.1
211.3

188.2
189.5
190.8
191.9
193.2
194.2
196.1
198.1
199.5
201.0
202.6
203.9

174.7
175.6
176.6
177.7
179.2
180.0
180.9
183.1
184.5
185.9
187.0
188.3

196.7
198.7
200.0
201.2
201.9
203.2
205.1
206.9
208.5
210.1
211.8
212.6

198.0
198.6
199.5
200.3
200.5
200.9
203.7
203.7
204.6
205.4
206.5
207.7

196.7
198.7
200.0
201.2
201.9
203.2
205.1
206.9
208.5
210.1
211.8
212.6

1982
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September ..
October
November
December

201.6
201.5
201.9
202.6
203.2
205.1
206.2
206.8
207.6
208.8
209.0
209.1

173.0
173.0
172.8
173.3
173.7
175.4
175.6
176.0
176.8
176.1
175.6
176.5

189.7
188.1
187.9
189.5
188.6
193.7
193.7
194.3
194.2
192.3
190.6
193.2

155.0
155.4
155.4
155.8
156.6
156.7
157.1
156.8
156.9
158.1
157.4
157.2

179.7
180.5
179.9
180.2
180.4
181.0
181.8
181.9
181.8
183.4
182.4
182.3

207.6
206.4
206.4
206.3
207.1
209.5
210.1
210.0
210.5
211.4
211.3
210.9

212.4
213.5
213.4
214.3
215.9
217.2
217.3
216.2
216.6
216.9
217.1
217.2

139.8
140.2
140.8
140.9
140.9
141.1
141.5
141.9
141.8
141.8
141.7
141.2

378.0
360.3
352.5
333.1
337.8
355.2
361.3
362.0
361.7
362.5
362.8
359.0

212.8
212.6
212.9
215.2
216.1
217.4
219.6
220.1
221.9
225.3
225.4
225.9

205.5
206.2
207.2
208.5
209.2
210.5
212.2
213.3
214.6
216.2
217.5
218.0

189.5
190.2
191.1
191.6
193.1
193.8
195.7
196.8
197.6
199.3
200.4
200.9

214.1
214.8
215.7
216.7
217.7
219.2
220.7
221.7
223.6
225.3
226.4
226.7

208.2
209.6
211.2
212.0
212.8
214.9
216.8
218.3
219.5
220.1
220.9
221.3

214.1
214.8
215.7
216.7
217.7
219.2
220.7
221.7
223.6
225.3
226.4
226.7

1983
January
February
March
April
May
June

209.8
210.0
210.4
212.2
212.8

177.4
178.0
176.5
177.9
177.4

194.7
196.3
192.6
195.1
193.6

157.9
157.7
157.8
157.7
157.2

183.9
183.9
183.9
183.8
184.5

211.1
209.9
210.9
212.6
213.9

218.1
218.0
220.1
221.4
222.2

141.1
142.2
141.8
142.1
142.9

347.7
325.5
321.1
333.8
347.3

226.5
226.5
227.7
231.4
230.4

219.0
219.9
220.6
222.9
223.5

202.3
202.8
202.7
204.3
204.9

227.9
228.9
229.9
231.8
232.7

223.4
224.7
225.9
227.2
229.3

227.9
228.9
229.9
231.8
232.7

1979
January
February
March
April
May
June
July

,
,




SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

87

Table 7.14B.—Implicit Price Deflators for Government Purchases of Goods and Services by Type
[Index numbers, 1972=100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1980

1979
IV

I

1981

II

III

IV

I

1983

1982

II

HI

IV

I

II

III

IV

I

II

170.4

189.2

207.9

222.5

177.0

182.3

186.7

189.8

197.9

201.8

205.4

209.3

215.1

217.6

221.0

224.4

226.8

231.3

233.8

Federal
2
3
National defense
4
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
...
5
6
Services
Compensation of employees
7
Military
8
Civilian
9
10
Other services
11
Structures
Nondefense
12
13
Durable goods
14
Nondurable goods
Commodity Credit Corporation in- 15
ventory change.
16
Other nondurables
17
Services
Compensation of employees
18
19
Other services
20
Structures

164.8
166.0
164.3
298.1
159.9
152.2
147.4
159.0
177.1
183.5
162.5
126.5

185.2
187.5
184.0
437.8
175.5
165.2
161.0
171.2
196.7
205.0
180.8
173.6

207.7
209.3
205.8
488.4
195.9
185.2
184.7
185.9
217.1
221.2
204.5
193.4

222.0
227.7
228.4
488.3
213.6
201.9
205.7
196.4
234.8
224.3
210.0
210.0

172.0
174.6
170.4
363.6
166.7
159.3
155.0
165.5
183.4
192.1
166.9
8.9

177.7
180.0
176.1
425.6
168.8
160.1
155.3
167.0
187.0
199.7
173.2
167.7

182.0
184.3
183.8
428.1
171.6
160.6
155.7
167.7
193.2
202.8
177.9
172.7

183.2
186.7
185.4
438.2
173.2
161.0
156.1
168.1
198.5
205.1
176.5
175.4

198.3
199.1
191.0
458.5
188.2
178.7
176.7
181.7
208.3
212.2
196.7
179.7

201.0
201.9
196.0
457.1
190.1
180.1
177.9
183.2
210.9
215.4
199.3
187.7

204.2
206.4
202.6
496.7
191.8
180.7
178.4
184.0
214.1
220.6
199.7
189.7

207.9
208.3
208.3
496.2
194.0
181.2
179.0
184.5
219.0
224.0
207.0
194.3

217.0
220.0
215.7
503.8
207.2
198.5
203.1
191.8
223.4
223.9
211.2
202.4

218.0
222.7
218.8
486.4
209.8
199.7
203.5
194.3
229.2
227.0
209.1
205.6

221.3
225.1
226.2
472.5
211.5
200.1
203.8
194.9
233.1
226.0
212.3
208.4

223.8
228.3
232.5
491.1
213.2
200.5
204.0
195.5
235.6
222.2
213.9
212.0

224.4
234.3
235.1
501.9
219.4
207.1
211.5
200.9
240.6
222.8
205.7
213.9

230.9
234.9
234.8
471.7
221.6
208.9
211.8
204.8
243.3
225.2
221.7
213.8

232.4
236.2
238.1
465.8
223.1
209.2
212.0
205.1
246.1
225.9
222.6
215.2

184.8
161.6
159.1
165.3
186.0

195.6
176.3
171.2
183.8
208.1

332.9
193.0
186.6
202.9
223.5

302.0
205.6
197.5
218.7
231.7

178.8
168.0
165.5
171.4
194.5

167.0
170.7
167.0
175.9
200.8

166.1
172.8
167.6
180.4
206.4

168.5
175.7
168.4
186.3
211.0

270.9
186.5
182.0
193.1
214.1

263.6
188.8
183.5
196.9
218.6

360.3
190.9
184.5
200.7
222.1

344.4
193.1
185.3
205.1
225.3

366.7
199.5
193.2
209.2
228.5

311.1
202.3
195.3
213.5
230.6

304.7
203.8
196.1
216.9
231.9

293.9
205.8
196.6
220.9
232.5

296.6
210.3
201.9
223.6
231.9

293.6
213.7
205.6
226.1
233.1

313.2
214.6
205.9
228.1
233.3

21
22
23
24
25
26
27

173.7
167.1
202.2
168.0
165.0
177.3
197.5

191.5
183.2
239.2
183.7
179.3
197.5
220.7

208.1
200.9
265.5
200.7
194.8
218.9
230.5

222.9
212.8
267.1
218.5
211.2
241.0
231.9

179.9
171.6
218.2
173.1
169.5
184.1
206.1

185.0
176.6
229.6
177.4
173.3
189.9
213.8

189.6
181.1
236.5
181.6
177.3
195.3
220.7

193.8
185.4
242.2
185.8
181.3
200.1
223.9

197.7
189.7
248.0
189.9
185.2
204.6
225.0

202.2
194.9
260.1
194.2
189.4
209.4
227.4

206.1
199.5
265.5
198.4
192.9
215.6
229.9

210.2
203.0
267.5
203.1
196.8
222.8
231.7

213.8
206.3
268.9
207.1
200.4
228.1
233.3

217.3
209.8
265.9
211.6
204.5
233.9
233.1

220.9
211.9
265.9
216.0
208.6
239.1
232.5

224.7
214.1
267.9
220.7
213.4
243.3
231.9

228.5
215.5
268.7
225.5
218.3
247.8
230.1

231.6
217.2
259.4
229.8
222.5
252.2
232.2

234.8
218.5
260.2
233.6
226.5
255.5
232.8

Government purchases of goods 1
and services.

State and local
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Compensation of employees
Other services
Structures

NOTE.—The implicit price deflator for purchases of nondefense, nondurable goods excluding the Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change (line 16) is shown for the first time in this issue
of the Survey.

Table 7.15.—Implicit Price Deflators for National Defense Purchases
[Index numbers, 1972 = 100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1980

1979
I

IV

1981

II

III

IV

I

1982

II

III

IV

I

1983

II

III

IV

I

II

1

166.0

187.5

209.3

227.7

174.6

180.0

184.3

186.7

199.1

201.9

206.4

208.3

220.0

222.7

225.1

228.3

234.3

234.9

236.2

Durable goods
Military equipment
Aircraft
Missiles
Ships
Vehicles
Electronic equipment
Other
Other durable goods

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

164.3
165.6
167.0
155.7
190.7
172.0
150.9
153.4
159.7

184.0
185.7
189.2
176.4
209.4
195.4
167.6
170.0
178.0

205.8
208.6
215.9
203.1
229.9
237.6
176.9
186.7
197.1

228.4
233.7
252.9
231.0
243.8
278.5
183.7
196.8
208.8

170.4
171.6
171.9
170.8
196.2
175.1
155.1
157.3
165.8

176.1
177.2
179.2
166.9
202.4
182.4
161.1
164.2
172.2

183.8
185.9
192.9
171.8
206.2
195.9
166.7
168.3
176.6

185.4
187.2
189.4
179.4
211.9
197.4
170.3
171.4
178.9

191.0
192.9
196.3
187.6
218.5
208.8
171.8
175.8
184.2

196.0
198.4
204.0
187.2
222.3
226.3
174.6
181.0
189.0

202.6
205.6
213.7
200.7
225.5
229.4
176.0
184.1
193.3

208.3
210.3
218.9
201.0
232.7
238.5
177.8
188.9
202.5

215.7
218.9
225.9
224.1
237.1
255.3
179.2
191.6
204.3

218.8
222.1
238.7
204.4
241.5
258.1
183.2
194.3
206.6

226.2
231.3
246.4
231.9
242.4
280.8
183.8
196.1
208.0

232.5
238.1
261.5
234.4
244.6
285.0
182.6
198.4
209.3

235.1
241.9
262.1
253.5
247.0
285.5
185.3
197.9
211.2

234.8
240.5
277.7
217.6
248.1
293.3
186.6
198.5
211.6

238.1

Nondurable goods
Bulk petroleum products
Ammunition
Clothing and textiles
Other nondurable goods

11
12
13
14
15

298.1
502.4
196.6
155.7
181.7

437.8
858.6
217.0
165.1
202.5

488.4
984.6
238.8
178.6
215.7

488.3
923.7
265.8
184.0
225.6

363.6
658.5
206.4
159.2
188.1

425.6
794.2
208.8
159.8
196.2

428.1
852.3
210.5
163.0
198.2

438.2
890.3
219.3
167.0
202.6

458.5
898.2
229.3
169.0
212.8

457.1 496.7 496.2
928.7 1,017.4 1,012.4
232.8 235.4 241.2
174.5 178.2 180.5
210.6 213.2 221.0

503.8
980.2
246.4
181.8
218.1

486.4
965.6
252.7
183.0
224.6

472.5
926.2
261.5
185.2
223.9

491.1
897.0
270.4
184.5
225.0

501.9
911.4
278.3
183.2
228.8

471.7
859.2
277.1
184.3
225.8

465.8

16
Services
Compensation of employees
17
Military
18
Civilian
19
Other services
20
Contractual research and develop- 21
ment.
Travel
22
Transportation
23
Communications
24
Depot maintenance
25
Other
26

159.9
152.2
147.4
159.0
177.1
175.7

175.5
165.2
161.0
171.2
196.7
195.7

195.9
185.2
184.7
185.9
217.1
216.4

213.6
201.9
205.7
196.4
234.8
236.0

166.7
159.3
155.0
165.5
183.4
181.4

168.8
160.1
155.3
167.0
187.0
187.1

171.6
160.6
155.7
167.7
193.2
192.3

173.2
161.0
156.1
168.1
198.5
198.1

188.2
178.7
176.7
181.7
208.3
204.9

190.1
180.1
177.9
183.2
210.9
208.8

191.8
180.7
178.4
184.0
214.1
213.2

194.0
181.2
179.0
184.5
219.0
217.9

207.2
198.5
203.1
191.8
223.4
225.1

209.8
199.7
203.5
194.3
229.2
228.7

211.5
200.1
203.8
194.9
233.1
233.1

213.2
200.5
204.0
195.5
235.6
238.6

219.4
207.1
211.5
200.9
240.6
243.2

221.6
208.9
211.8
204.8
243.3
245.3

223.1
209.2
212.0
205.1
246.1

153.4
186.1
120.4
178.4
185.5

191.1
224.0
124.1
188.1
202.0

236.4
237.4
151.8
215.4
217.4

238.1
243.2
172.4
246.0
234.2

160.2
204.1
120.3
179.8
192.7

170.3
211.6
122.5
180.8
191.7

177.4
224.6
123.6
183.5
199.0

182.9
229.9
124.5
187.6
204.9

238.7
229.5
125.9
199.5
213.5

231.9
232.8
129.9
206.2
214.8

233.9
238.2
144.1
210.4
215.3

240.2
233.3
165.0
217.5
219.1

238.8
245.8
169.7
227.3
219.8

236.5
242.4
171.3
233.1
230.1

238.4
244.6
172.8
241.3
233.6

238.3
243.7
174.8
244.4
234.0

239.1
242.3
170.3
261.7
238.4

235.1
240.8
1804
273.2
240.0

Structures
Military facilities
Other

183.5
183.4
183.6

205.0
202.8
209.6

221.2
218.0
226.3

224.3
217.7
235.3

192.1
192.3
191.8

199.7
198.7
201.8

202.8
200.4
207.6

205.1
202.6
211.5

212.2
209.7
216.7

215.4
211.8
220.9

220.6
217.4
226.3

224.0
221.5
227.7

223.9
220.5
229.6

227.0
222.4
234.7

226.0
219.5
236.2

222.2
214.9
234.3

222.8
215.2
236.1

225.2
215.9
240.4

II

III

IV

National defense purchases

27
28
29

225.9

NOTE.—This table contains quarterly estimates for the first time in this issue of the Survey.

Table 7.16.—Implicit Price Deflators for Exports and Imports of Goods and Services
[Index numbers, 1972=100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979
IV

Exports of goods and services
Merchandise
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Factor income
Other
Imports of goods and services
Merchandise
goods
Digitized for Durable
FRASER
Nondurable goods
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Services
Factor Bank
incomeof St.
Federal Reserve

Louis

1980
I

1981

II

III

IV

I

1982

II

III

IV

I

1983
I

II

1

192.5

212.9

230.8

236.0

198.6

204.0

209.1

215.9

223.3

228.7

229.7

231.2

233.8

236.1

236.0

236.3

235.6

238.0

239.7

2
3
4
5
6
7

213.7
203.9
229.1
164.0
162.1
167.4

236.4
229.6
246.6
179.8
176.2
186.2

256.4
256.4
256.4
197.2
193.3
204.3

257.0
269.2
242.4
210.0
205.1
218.8

221.2
209.1
239.6
168.4
166.2
172.6

227.4
217.9
243.1
172.4
170.0
177.0

231.5
225.9
240.0
177.5
174.5
183.0

239.0
233.7
246.8
182.6
178.2
189.7

248.1
242.2
256.6
187.6
183.3
195.0

255.3
249.4
263.3
192.0
188.1
199.0

255.8
254.1
258.4
194.9
190.7
202.5

257.1
259.5
253.7
198.9
195.0
206.0

257.6
263.3
250.4
202.9
199.3
209.5

259.9
266.6
251.7
205.9
201.5
213.5

258.1
269.7
244.3
209.2
204.4
218.0

256.5
270.8
238.9
211.5
206.2
220.9

253.1
270.0
233.7
214.0
208.4
223.4

254.3
271.2
234.7
217.4
211.6
226.2

256.1
272.1
236.9
218.8
214.2
226.1

8

246.1

289.4

293.4

278.9

267.5

281.6

289.8

292.0

294.7

298.5

298.5

289.4

287.7

281.8

273.6

281.8

278.5

265.4

269.5

9
10
11
12
13

272.2
210.1
370.9
183.3
162.2

326.9
228.7
505.0
207.3
176.4

328.0
237.0
502.6
219.3
193.2

306.8
236.1
441.3
221.4
205.0

300.8
217.1
436.7
191.2
166.2

320.0
223.6
490.1
198.8
170.0

328.2
224.7
512.4
205.1
174.5

326.7
230.6
506.9
212.0
178.2

333.0
236.3
511.6
213.9
183.3

337.1
236.1
523.7
217.0
188.1

337.6
239.2
528.1
217.7
190.7

322.6
234.8
493.7
219.4
195.0

315.7
238.0
467.0
223.4
199.3

310.7
237.3
463.8
222.0
201.5

300.1
238.4
423.3
221.3
204.4

310.8
235.9
446.2
220.8
206.2

305.4
232.7
433.0
221.7
208.4

283.8
234.5
376.9
223.1
211.6

288.1
236.1
386.6
225.4
214.2

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 7.17.—Implicit Price Deflators for Merchandise Exports and Imports by Type of Product and by End-Use Category
[Index numbers, 1972 = 100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980

1982

1981

1979
IV

1981

1980
I

II

III

IV

I

1982

II

III

IV

I

1983

II

III

IV

I

II

Merchandise exports

1

213.7

236.4

256.4

257.0

221.2

227.4

231.5

239.0

248.1

255.3

255.8

257.1

257.6

259.9

258.1

256.5

253.1

254.3

256.1

Foods, feeds and beverages
Industrial supplies and materials
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Capital goods, except autos
Autos
Consumer goods
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Other
Durable goods
.
Nondurable goods

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

222.6
251.8
251.9
251.7
189.1
215.8
187.5
203.4
174.6
213.1
213.1
213.0

235.0
282.9
282.9
282.8
212.4
249.6
195.9
228.2
169.1
235.7
235.7
235.7

246.6
293.2
293.2
293.2
243.0
291.0
200.7
244.1
173.1
256.4
256.5
256.4

218.0
284.3
284.3
284.4
259.6
316.7
200.1
250.9
172.6
256.8
256.8
256.9

229.1
269.5
269.5
269.5
190.2
222.6
192.5
212.5
176.3
221.1
221.3
221.0

228.7
285.1
285.1
285.1
196.0
234.8
193.1
219.3
163.8
227.5
227.5
227.5

221.6
282.8
282.8
282.8
207.5
242.0
187.7
226.8
159.4
231.5
231.5
231.5

234.1
280.5
280.5
280.5
218.2
255.9
201.1
232.3
176.9
239.1
239.1
239.1

255.4
283.1
283.1
283.1
228.0
267.3
202.5
238.8
176.4
248.1
248.1
248.1

263.1
292.6
292.6
292.6
235.1
279.0
199.5
237.5
173.5
255.3
255.3
255.3

256.2
293.4
293.4
293.4
239.9
288.5
197.4
242.9
169.2
255.8
255.8
255.8

239.1
294.2
294.2
294.2
246.1
295.6
201.9
248.5
172.5
257.1
257.1
257.1

228.0
292.6
292.6
292.6
251.7
302.1
204.3
248.5
177.5
257.6
257.6
257.6

228.6
291.0
291.0
291.0
255.7
308.9
205.9
249.9
179.8
259.9
259.9
259.9

223.3
287.8
287.8
287.8
259.5
315.7
197.8
247.5
170.4
258.2
258.2
258.2

212.2
280.7
280.7
280.7
261.7
320.2
199.9
254.2
171.7
256.5
256.5
256.5

205.4
277.1
277.1
277.1
262.2
323.4
197.1
252.6
169.0
253.1
253.1
253.2

213.7
275.1
275.0
275.1
262.6
325.4
197.5
255.9
167.4
254.1
254.1
254.1

220.1
273.7
273.7
273.7
263.0
325.3
197.4
252.9
168.1
256.1
256.1
256.1

Merchandise imports

14

272.2

326.9

328.0

306.8

300.8

320.0

328.2

326.7

333.0

337.1

337.6

322.6

315.7

310.7

300.1

310.8

305.4

283.8

288.1

15
Foods feeds and beverages
Industrial supplies and materials, ex- 16
cluding petroleum.
17
Durable goods
18
Nondurable goods
19
Petroleum and products
20
Capital goods except autos
21
Autos
22
Consumer goods
23
Durable goods
24
Nondurable goods
25
Other
26
Durable goods
27
Nondurable goods

228.3
245.2

270.1
293.1

259.3
296.8

239.3
286.7

247.2
270.0

260.4
286.4

266.7
293.5

275.9
297.0

277.4
296.6

277.0
297.4

268.2
299.8

254.4
296.5

238.2
293.5

243.4
296.2

239.4
290.3

235.2
282.7

240.2
277.5

234.3
273.6

236.6
271.3

245.9 292.9 296.8 288.0
244.0 293.3 296.7 285.3
703.4 1,155.3 1,297.2 1,206.4
178.6 197.5 200.9 203.0
231.8 248.4 284.9 298.3
203.7 219.6 223.1 222.0
186.4 195.1 196.4 192.1
237.2 274.8 283.0 284.8
216.8 243.0 248.9 245.3
216.9 243.0 248.8 245.3
216.7 242.9 249.0 245.3

271.5 286.5 294.0 297.4 295.4 296.3 300.1 297.1 293.7 296.7 290.8 284.7 278.8 273.7 271.5
267.7 286.2 292.8 296.5 298.3 298.9 299.3 295.7 293.2 295.5 289.7 280.9 276.3 273.4 271.1
893.2 1,059.7 1,163.1 1,191.9 1,231.3 1,319.5 1,349.2 1,268.3 1,246.8 1,248.3 1,180.8 1,196.2 1,200.1 1,158.6 1,072.0
182.7 191.0 198.9 199.1 201.0 201.6 201.8 198.8 201.6 205.4 204.4 202.2 199.4 200.6 200.6
233.5 239.3 235.0 252.3 267.4 277.0 282.4 280.3 299.8 299.5 298.6 295.9 299.8 302.2 302.7
205.6 211.7 214.6 226.7 225.8 223.9 223.7 221.4 223.7 220.3 224.1 223.0 220.7 222.2 220.9
187.7 189.9 190.2 197.7 202.8 198.5 197.0 194.1 196.2 192.4 193.5 192.4 190.1 191.8 190.0
242.2 260.6 271.0 293.0 275.7 281.4 283.4 283.1 283.9 285.3 286.4 285.0 282.7 279.6 279.6
227.1 236.6 239.6 246.4 250.4 250.9 251.4 246.6 247.4 247.4 247.3 244.2 242.4 243.1 243.9
227.1 236.5 239.6 246.4 250.4 250.9 251.4 246.5 247.4 247.4 247.3 244.2 242.4 243.3 243.9
227.1 236.6 239.6 246.4 250.4 250.8 251.3 246.6 247.4 247.4 247.3 244.2 242.4 243.0 243.9

Addenda:
Exports of agricultural products l
Exports of nonagricultural products
Imports of non petroleum products
1

28
29
30

222.4
211.6
218.0

234.3
236.9
243.1

246.1
259.0
249.0

218.2
267.3
245.6

229.0
219.2
227.9

229.8
226.9
236.6

Includes parts of line 2 and line 5.

Table 7.18.—Implicit Price Deflators for Gross Private Domestic Investment, Capital Consumption Allowances with Capital Consumption
Adjustment, and Net Private Domestic Investment by Major Type of
Investment
[Index numbers, 1972 = 100]
Line
Gross private domestic investment

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

179.0

195.7

211.3

221.0

4
Fixed investment
Less: Capital consumption allowances with capi- 5
tal consumption adjustment.
6
Equals' Net fixed investment

178.5
179.0

193.4
195.7

208.4
211.3

215.3
221.0

177.6

187.9

201.1

192.9

7
8

170.8
174.5

186.2
190.8

201.9
206.9

209.7
217.7

Less: Capital consumption allowances with capital 2
consumption adjustment.
Equals' Net private domestic investment

Nonresidential
Less: Capital consumption allowances with
capital consumption adjustment.
Equals' Net non residential

3

9

163.0

173.7

188.8

177.5

Structures
Less: Capital consumption allowances with
capital consumption adjustment.
Equals* Net structures

10
11

200.2
198.0

227.4
223.2

254.2
243.8

265.8
259.5

12

204.4

236.5

274.3

278.8

Producers' durable equipment
Less: Capital consumption allowances with
capital consumption adjustment.
Equals: Net producers' durable equipment

13
14

158.8
165.2

169.1
178.5

179.5
193.1

183.1
202.3

15

145.1

140.7

137.1

64.8

Residential
Less: Capital consumption allowances with
capital consumption adjustment.
Equals* Net residential

16
17

200.5
197.8

218.5
216.5

233.5
230.9

240.2
236.0

18

202.9

221.5

238.3

255.4

Nonfarm structures
Less: Capital consumption allowances with
capital consumption adjustment.
Equals: Net nonfarm structures

19
20

202.7
201.1

221.6
220.2

237.1
235.3

244.0
240.3

21

203.9

223.7

240.0

255.9

Farm structures
Less: Capital consumption allowances with
capital consumption adjustment.
Equals* Net farm structures

22
23

202.7
201.5

218.1
231.7

234.0
234.9

245.9
240.7

24

189.9

363.1

236.3

229.9

Producers' durable equipment
Less: Capital consumption allowances with
capital consumption adjustment.
Equals: Net producers' durable equipment

25
26

140.3
140.3

149.2
149.0

159.3
160.2

168.7
167.6

27

140.2

150.0

154.5

181.2

Change in business inventories




28

220.7
234.1
239.7

234.0
240.3
246.5

253.5
246.8
249.9

261.8
253.6
250.4

254.3
256.2
251.5

239.3
261.3
246.8

229.1
265.2
247.5

227.8
268.3
247.6

222.0
268.4
247.5

212.8
267.2
244.7

208.5
265.0
242.7

214.3
265.5
243.0

220.7
265.4
243.8

89

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 7.19.—Implicit Price Deflators for Purchases of Structures by
Type

Table 7.20.—Implicit Price Deflators for Private Purchases of
Producers' Durable Equipment by Type

[Index numbers, 1972 = 100]

[Index numbers, 1972 = 100]

Line
Purchases of structures..
Private ........................................
Nonresidential
New

1979

1980

1981

Line

1982

200.3

223.1

243.0

252.0

201.5

224.6

246.5

257.0

200.2

227.4

254.2

265.8

Private purchases of producers' durable
equipment.

1979
158.5

Nonresidential...

1980
168.7

1981
179.1

1982
182.8

158.8

169.1

179.5

183.1

Furniture and fixtures
Fabricated metal productsEngines and turbines
Tractors

181.7
175.9
188.9
197.8

195.4
188.0
206.1
223.2

212.4
213.4
240.7
249.3

225.4
228.8
262.9
270.8

Agricultural machinery, except tractors...
Construction machinery, except tractors..
Mining and oilfield machinery
Metalworking machinery

191.6
196.4
229.7
187.6

213.2
222.6
261.7
211.3

235.8
246.5
309.9
235.0

252.4
267.7
347.2
251.2

200.2

227.4

254.2

265.8

Nonresidential buildings, excluding farm
Industrial
Commercial
Religious, educational,
hospital and institutional, and other 1.

187.4
187.0
187.5
188.1

209.8
209.7
209.8
209.8

221.0
221.1
220.9
221.0

227.6
227.6
227.5
227.8

Public utilities
Railroads
Telephone and telegraph
Electric light and power
Gas
Petroleum pipelines

191.1
197.5
174.0
196.5
201.0
201.0

210.2
223.9
193.1
214.9
221.0
221.0

227.5
230.4
207.8
234.0
240.9
240.9

236.8
229.7
218.2
244.6
244.3
244.8

Special industry machinery, n.e.c
General industrial, including materials handling, equipment.
Office, computing, and accounting machinery
Service industry machinery

199.6
185.7

220.9
205.9

246.1
227.4

262.1
245.4

101.7
159.4

102.8
177.3

100.9
193.9.

101.2
208.4

Farm
Mining exploration, shafts, and wells...
Petroleum and natural gas
Other
Other 2

186.9
294.9
308.4
187.1
197.8

209.9
338.6
352.9
210.4
222.8

221.0
419.3
440.3
221.2
230.1

227.7
465.0
487.7
227.2
229.9

Electrical and communication equipment
Electrical transmission, distribution, and industrial apparatus.
Communication equipment
Electrical equipment, n.e.c

144.7
170.7

150.6
184.3

166.5
205.4

182.4
226.4

129.7
186.8

133.5
208.3

146.2
236.8

161.6
251.6

Brokers' commissions on sale of structures
Net purchases of used structures

186.9
187.4

210.2
208.5

220.6
222.4

228.1
231.1

202.7

221.6

237.0

244.0

202.5

221.3

236.8

244.0

Trucks, buses, and truck trailers
Autos
Aircraft
Ships and boats
Railroad equipment
Instruments
Other

177.2
133.0
182.2
184.5
212.8
138.7
162.2

196.3
144.2
204.3
206.8
238.3
148.0
181.2

221.8
140.2
227.4
227.7
262.1
156.9
200.6

235.0
132.4
247.4
238.8
274.7
160.8
213.1

202.5
204.2
174.3
204.2
200.0

221.4
223.3
189.6
223.7
223.1

236.8
239.3
197.8
240.1
239.0

244.0
244.1
204.4
254.7
242.9

271.4

271.4

257.8

187.0

159.3

168.7

29

202.8

218.0

233.8

246.1

30
31

204.1
204.5

223.7
224.2

239.4
239.9

244.1
244.6

Government structures and new construction 32
force-account compensation.

195.1

217.9

228.9

232.2

Residential .

New
Nonfarm
Structures
Mobile homes
Additions
and alterations
Other 3
Farm
Brokers' commissions on sale of structures
Net purchases of used structures

24
25
27

195.0

217.8

228.8

232.0

34
35
and 36

182.8
201.8
180.9

204.7
222.6
202.6

219.4
239.3
216.7

227.7
244.0
225.3

Highways and streets
Military facilities
Conservation and development

37
38

219.0
183.4
184.0

251.3
201.5
204.3

246.1
218.4
223.2

231.9
230.0
236.5

Sewer and water systems
Sewer systems
Water supply facilities
Other 5

40
41
42
43

195.1
194.2
197.6
199.1

212.0
210.4
215.6
225.1

226.5
223.7
232.1
234.7

236.8
235.3
239.6
236.6

Net purchases of used structures

44

199.3

220.9

234.9

239.2

New

Buildings, excluding military
Residential
Industrial,
educational, hospital
other 4.

1

Consists of hotels and motels, buildings used primarily for social and receational activities,
and buildings, not elsewhere classified, such as passenger terminals, greenhouses, and animal
hospitals.
2
Consists of streets, dams and reservoirs, sewer and water facilities, parks, airfields, etc.
3
Consists of dormitories, fraternity and sorority houses, nurses' homes, etc.
4
Consists of general office buildings, police and fire stations, courthouses, auditoriums,
garages,
passenger terminals, etc.
5
Consists of electric and gas facilities, transit systems, airfields, etc.




Less: Sale of equipment scrap, excluding autos
Residential
n.e.c. Not elsewhere classified.

27

90

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 7.21.—Implicit Price Deflators for Inventories and Final Sales of Business
[Index numbers, 1972 = 100]
Seasonally adjusted
Line

1979
IV

Inventories 1

1981

1980
III

IV

1982
III

IV

1983
III

IV

205.2

210.5

215.0

222.3

228.6

232.7

234.4

234.5

235.6

234.8

236.6

236.9

236.0

236.6

Farm..

189.6

183.5

191.2

206.5

211.3

208.4

207.5

192.1

189.3

195.3

200.4

193.1

186.1

194.7

194.0

Nonfarm
Durable goods 2 2
Nondurable goods ..

207.4
197.7
222.7

214.4
202.6
232.6

218.4
204.8
239.3

224.5
209.9
246.7

230.9
215.2
255.3

236.1
218.4
263.2

238.2
221.8
263.5

240.6
225.7
263.4

242.4
227.8
264.5

240.6
227.8
259.9

241.9
228.7
261.7

243.3
230.1
263.3

243.3
230.9
261.9

242.9
231.8
259.0

244.1
233.1
259.8

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods..

211.5
202.4
231.1

218.1
207.2
241.2

222.0
208.9
249.9

227.3
213.3
257.5

234.0
218.4
267.8

238.9
221.4
276.6

241.5
225.2
276.4

243.6
229.1
274.7

245.5
231.3
275.7

243.6
231.0
270.4

243.4
231.3
269.6

244.4
232.4
270.0

244.7
232.7
270.0

243.7
232.7
266.6

244.8
234.2
266.9

Wholesale trade
Durable goods
Nondurable goods..

209.6
197.2
234.0

216.8
202.2
245.0

221.5
205.3
253.1

228.4
210.9
261.7

235.4
217.5
270.5

241.6
221.6
280.4

242.6
225.2
277.2

244.2
229.4
273.6

245.0
231.2
271.7

241.5
231.9
260.7

243.2
233.3
262.5

243.8
235.2
261.1

243.8
235.9
259.1

243.3
237.8
253.4

245.1
239.3
255.7

Merchant wholesalersDurable goods
Nondurable goods

202.0
196.2
213.6

207.7
201.4
220.3

212.4
204.9
227.6

220.6
210.7
239.9

227.7
217.8
247.4

231.9
222.2
251.0

233.8
225.9
249.9

235.9
230.3
247.1

236.8
232.3
245.8

235.6
233.1
240.7

237.6
234.6
243.5

237.6
236.5
239.7

237.5
237.1
238.3

239.2
238.4

241.1
240.8
241.7

Nonmerchant wholesalers..
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

245.9
202.3
321.6

259.0
206.2
347.8

263.9
207.3
358.0

266.0
212.0
358.4

273.5
216.1
373.4

288.6
218.2
407.7

285.5
221.5
395.2

284.7
224.4
389.9

285.3
225.9
387.3

271.1
225.5
351.2

272.4
226.3
355.0

276.9
227.6
363.3

277.8
229.0
360.6

266.8
230.1
330.6

266.5
231.4
328.5

Retail trade
Durable goods
Nondurable goods..

183.2
182.0
184.3

189.2
187.0
191.2

192.2
188.7
195.3

198.4
195.8
200.6

202.5
200.0
204.6

205.7
201.9
208.9

207.7
204.7
210.4

210.6
208.8
212.2

212.5
210.9
213.8

211.8
211.0
212.4

214.5
213.1
215.6

216.5
216.0
216.9

217.0
218.0
216.1

217.3
220.1
215.0

218.6
220.7
216.9

Other

242.9

252.9

259.3

267.9

276.9

285.0

290.9

297.2

300.5

299.1

304.2

310.5

307.8

308.9

309.3

167.9
168.2

172.0
172.3

176.1
176.4

181.1
181.3

185.5
185.8

189.5
189.7

192.7
192.6

196.9
196.3

200.8
199.7

203.2
201.1

205.8
203.2

207.3
202.9

209.2
203.6

211.9
206.0

213.7
206.7

Final sales 3
Final sales of goods and structures..
1
2
3

237.6

Inventories are as of the end of the quarter.
Prior to 1959, inventories held by construction establishments are included in line 5.
Business final sales equals final sales less gross product of households and institutions, government, and rest of the world, and includes a small amount of final sales by farms.

Table 7.22.—Implicit Price Deflators for Gross National Product by
Industry
[Index numbers, 1972=100]
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

163.42

178.42

195.14

206.88

2

163.4

178.5

195.2

206.9

3

162.8

178.5

195.0

206.2

Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
4
Farms
5
Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries.. 6

204.7
209.4
170.7

192.6
193.3
187.8

198.7
199.6
190.9

190.8
190.2
196.0

Gross national product
Domestic industries (Gross domestic product)
Private industries

Mining

7

320.6

445.1

561.6

537.2

Construction

8

198.7

229.3

246.7

256.8

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Nondurable goods

9
10
11

153.5
154.1
152.5

165.7
166.7
164.1

178.4
179.5
176.9

187.7
186.3
189.7

Transportation and public utilities
Transportation
Communication
Electric, gas, and sanitary services

12
13
14
15

149.7
162.4
123.5
166.1

166.2
188.7
127.1
191.4

183.6
212.4
137.6
215.0

201.4
226.3
149.7
252.7

Wholesale trade

16

166.1

182.8

195.1

197.9

Retail trade

17

155.8

168.1

183.3

197.4

Finance, insurance, and real estate
Finance and insurance
Real estate

18
19
20

156.2
170.4
151.0

169.2
178.6
165.7

188.1
206.8
181.3

202.1
221.4
195.1
211.8

Services
Government and government enterprises
Government
Government enterprises
Rest of the world




21

165.3

181.1

195.0

22

160.5

173.5

189.8

204.6

23
24

161.7
151.5

175.5
159.9

191.9
174.8

207.7
182.1

25

161.8

176.5

193.3

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

91

8. Supplementary Tables
Table 8.1.—Percent Change From Preceding Period in Gross National Product in Current and Constant Dollars, Implicit Price Deflators, and Price
Indexes
[Percent]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1979

1980
I

IV

Gross national product:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
. . .
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed- weighted price index

II

1981
III

IV

I

II

1982
III

IV

I

II

1983
III

IV

II

I

1
2
3
4
5

11.7
2.8
8.6
8.9
9.5

8.8
3
9.2
8.9
9.8

12.2
2.6
9.4
9.4
9.5

4.0
19
6.0
6.5
6.4

8.1
.7
7.3
8.2
9.4

11.7
1.9
9.6
9.1
10.5

.9
90
10.9
9.0
9.4

9.7
.8
8.9
9.7
9.4

15.5
3.8
11.3
11.3
11.3

20.5
9.0
10.6
9.6
10.2

6.6
.7
5.9
7.6
7.9

13.3
3.6
9.4
9.0
8.9

3.7
-4.9
9.0
8.2
8.4

14
-5.5
4.3
5.6
5.3

6.6
1.0
5.6
5.2
4.7

2.7
-1.0
3.7
5.9
5.9

2.5
-1.3
3.8
5.0
4.7

8.2
2.6
5.5
3.6
3.4

13.5
8.7
4.5
5.1
5.2

6
7
8
9
10

11.9
2.7
9.0
9.3
9.7

10.7
.5
10.2
10.7
11.1

11.3
2.7
8.4
9.0
9.2

7.3
1.4
5.8
5.9
5.7

13.6
3.4
9.9
10.2
10.7

11.2
-.2
11.4
12.6
13.3

1.5
-7.7
10.0
9.7
10.0

14.8
4.3
10.0
10.1
10.1

14.7
4.6
9.6
10.1
10.2

14.7
5.9
8.3
9.9
10.6

7.5
.5
7.0
7.3
7.5

11.4
3.5
7.7
7.8
7.5

3.9
-3.0
7.0
7.0
6.8

7.5
2.4
5.0
5.2
4.8

7.2
3.1
4.0
3.9
3.5

7.5
.9
6.5
6.4
6.7

7.8
3.6
4.1
5.1
5.1

5.2
2.9
2.2
2.3
1.6

16.0
10.0
5.5
5.4
5.6

Durable goods:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed-weighted price index

11
12
13
14
15

6.6
.3
6.3
6.9
6.9

.6
-6.6
7.7
.8.4
8.3

10.0
2.7
7.1
7.5
7.7

3.5
-.9
4.5
4.7
5.0

-1.4
-7.3
6.4
7.4
7.6

7.8 -31.5
-2.8 -35.9
10.9
6.8
8.6
11.0
8.5
11.1

28.7
18.6
8.5
8.1
8.0

19.4
10.4
8.2
8.2
8.1

26.2 -5.9
19.8 -12.8
7.9
5.3
8.3
5.9
9.2
6.0

18.6 -19.4
22 9
9.9
7.9
4.6
7.7
5.9
6.2
8.2

15.9
11.3
4.2
3.8
3.7

6.0
3.0
2.9
4.0
4.4

.7
37
4.5
2.9
3.5

15.1
15.2
-.1
1.5
1.4

10.7
7.6
2.8
2.1
2.1

34.0
32.4
1.2
1.1
1.9

Nondurable goods:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed- weigh ted price index .. ..

16
17
18
19
20

13.6
2.5
10.8
11.3
11.6

11.5
.7
10.7
11.8
12.3

9.7
1.9
7.7
8.4
8.7

3.7
.5
3.2
3.2
2.9

18.3
7.5
10.1
10.9
11.6

10.4
-1.4
12.0
14.5
15.6

4.2
-4.7
9.3
9.6
10.0

8.6
-.9
9.6
9.5
9.5

13.6
3.1
10.2
10.6
10.8

13.6
4.1
9.2
11.4
12.5

8.2
3.3
4.8
5.4
5.5

5.9
.9
4.9
4.6
4.1

3.6
.3
3.3
3.9
4.0

1.1
14
2.5
2.4
1.7

2.7
1.1
1.6
.8
-.1

6.4
1.3
5.1
5.5
5.9

3.4
1.5
1.9
2.6
2.9

2.1
3.2
-1.1
19
-3.1

12.2
5.9
6.0
6.1
6.0

Services:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed- weighted price index

21
22
23
24
25

12.2
3.7
8.2
8.4
8.7

13.1
2.7
10.1
10.5
10.8

13.1
3.3
9.5
9.9
10.2

11.2
2.9
8.1
8.4
8.6

14.5
3.9
10.2
10.5
10.9

13.0
1.8
10.9
11.4
11.8

10.6
.8
9.7
10.1
10.5

16.7
4.6
11.6
11.2
11.3

14.3
4.1
9.8
10.1
10.2

12.7
3.3
9.1
9.8
10.1

10.9
2.8
7.8
8.5
9.0

14.3
3.6
10.4
10.7
10.7

11.1
1.4
9.6
9.9
9.8

10.8
2.9
7.7
7.8
8.1

11.2
4.7
6.1
6.4
6.8

10.1
2.1
7.8
8.1
8.4

9.5
1.9
7.4
8.0
8.3

6.3
1.4
4.8
5.7
5.9

14.6
6.8
7.3
6.0
6.4

Gross private domestic investment:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed- weigh ted price index

26
27
28
29
30

9.4
2

-5.0
11 8

18.2 -12.7 -13.3
9.1
18 5
14 5

38.5
28.1

49.9
26.3

15.4
12.9

21.6 -14.9 -37.8
34 1
12.3
224

9.5
3.4

31.5
28.6

55.9
45.0

1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed-weighted price index

31
32
33
34
35

13.5
3.8
9.4
10.4
11.0

.7
-7.1
8.4
9.9
10.1

10.9
2.9
7.8
8.5
8.3

38
-6.9
3.3
5.2
4.7

Nonresidential:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator....
Chain price index
Fixed-weighted price index

36
37
38
39
40

16.6
7.3
8.6
9.4
10.1

6.4
-2.4
9.0
10.1
10.6

14.1
5.2
8.4
9.0
9.1

Structures:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index....
Fixed-weighted price index ...

41
42
43
44
45

24.8
10.0
13.5
13.8
13.6

12.9
-.6
13.6
11.9
11.7

Producers' durable equipment:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed- weigh ted price index ...

46
47
48
49
50

12.8
6.3
6.1
7.4
7.9

3.1
-3.1
6.4
9.2
9.8

Personal consumption expenditures:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed-weighted price index

Fixed investment:

Residential:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed-weigh ted price index
Exports:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed-weighted price index
Imports:
1972 dollars
Chain price index
Fixed-weighted price index




7

5.1 -23.8
-1.8 -33.8

-14.2
-9.5

-38.0
-34.6

3
11 0
-7^8 -10.4
7
8.1
4.7
8.2
7.2
4.4

-4.2 -11.7
96
-9.3
5.5 -2.3
4.0
2.3
3.2
2.3

3.4
2.7
.6
.5
-.5

9.2
8.8
.4
2.8
5.4

17.9
15.6
2.0
.9
1.8

8.0
16
9.7
8.7
7.7

-6.7
-5.9
-.8
5.0
5.0

-9.1 -11.3
143 -8.8
6.0 -2.8
3.0
4.9
3.7
5.1

-6.0
-6.6
.6
2.0
2.4

-5.7
-1.5
-4.2
.5
2.3

3.9
4.6
-.7
.1
.8

25.8
15.5
9.0
8.7
6.6

27.1
7.8
17.9
9.9
6.0

20
-1.7
-.4
3.0
3.1

1 5 -10.9
-2.6
-7.2
1.1 -4.1
4.2
1.2
1.4
4.0

-4.0 -15.6 -14.6
-5.5 -13.9 -14.0
-.6
1.6 -2.0
-2.6
1.4 -2.7
-.1 -1.0
2.0

10.1
5.9
4.0
6.9
7.9

27
-5.5
3.0
8.1
8.9

7.9
9.4
9.3

4.0
27 2
-4.9 -31.5
9.4
6.3
10.3
10.6
10.7
10.7

14.7
6.0
8.2
9.7
9.9

23.4
14.5
7.8
6.4
5.8

17.8
9.5
7.5
9.4
9.7

11.7
1.8
9.6
8.6
7.8

4.6
-.9
5.5
7.8
7.7

-1.1
-4.7
3.8
5.8
5.6

4.4
-4.6
9.4
10.8
11.2

13.1 -14.3
2.2 -20.6
10.7
8.0
10.5
10.8
11.1
11.1

11.4
3.6
7.5
9.9
10.4

13.4
5.2
7.9
7.7
7.9

21.4
13.2
7.2
9.0
9.3

18.7
6.0
12.0
9.7
9.4

15.8
8.7
6.5
7.6
7.4

20.2
7.5
11.8
9.6
8.0

6.4
1.8
4.6
5.1
4.1

20.0
6.5
12.7
12.0
12.2

13.2 -7.3
-2.2 -18.0
15.7
13.0
13.5
11.8
13.2
12.0

7.3
-7.3
15.7
9.4
9.0

16.7
6.3
9.7
9.2
7.1

26.6
16.2
8.9
10.0
8.4

28.1
12.8
13.5
10.1
7.3

10.6
4.2
6.1
8.6
9.8

-5.7
-7.5
2.0
6.2
6.7

-3.1
-8.8
6.3
10.2
10.6

179
13.1
4.1 -21.7
8.6
4.8
8.8
10.2
9.7
10.5

13.8
8.5
4.9
10.2
11.5

11.6
4.7
6.6
6.8
8.5

18.5
12.0
5.8
8.4
9.9

13.5
3.2
9.9
9.5
10.8

1.4 -13.0 -12.4
167
554
-5.2 -15.4 -17.4 -23.9 -59.2
9.5
6.9
2.9
6.0
9.2
10.0
6.2
10.0
7.1
3.2
10.0
6.2
10.0
7.1
3.1

26.1
15.9
8.8
8.9
8.9

59.4
55.1
2.7
2.3
2.3

-s'.o

-6.5
-5.8

-9.6 -14.0 -11.6
-9.6
-7.8 -19.3
-2.0
6.5 -2.2
6.3
5.4
4.2
5.2
6.2
5.8

-7.4
-7.1
-.3
2.4
2.6

1.8
5.0
-3.0
2.8
3.8

17.7
14.2
3.1
1.9
2.0

18.2 -13.0
17.9 -13.0
-.1
.2
-.1
.2
0
-.2

46.9
53.2
-4.1
-5.2
-5.4

75.3
57.3
11.4
11.2
11.4

68.2
61.1
4.4
3.5
3.5

18.9 -25.3
7.0
7.2 — 19.2 — 24.4
.4 -1.1
-.2
-.8
-.2
1.9
-.5
1.9 -1.0

6.8
2.4
4.3
3.6
3.2

-6.2
-8.7
2.8
2.1
1.5

17.7 -29.6
-7.5
12.1
4.5 -26.1
12.6 -4.6 -17.5
-3.0
.9 -2.6
-.8 -3.8
-3.2

35.3
27.2
6.3
-3.4
-6.7

75
256 -26.0 -26.5
7.9
285
-2.3 -11.7 -30.7 -30.2
2.7
6.0
4.9
7.3
10.4
3.6
63
5.2
8.3
10.4
3.6
6.4
5.2
8.3
10.4

51
52
53
54
55

6.6 -13.2
-5.2 -20.4
12.4
9.0
12.6
9.3
12.6
9.3

56
57
58
59
60

28.6
15.4
11.5
12.3
12.8

20.4
8.9
10.6
10.4
10.7

8.9
.4
8.4
9.1
9.1

-5.7
-7.8
2.2
2.6
2.4

30.4
20.7
8.0
7.1
7.8

35.9
22.1
11.3
12.1
13.1

1.0
1.7
-7.8 -11.1
13.7
10.4
13.1
8.4
13.2
7.8

9.5
-4.2
14.3
15.0
14.8

27.9
16.2
10.1
11.4
11.8

2.1
.3
1.8
3.9
4.3

-1.9
-4.4
2.6
3.5
3.1

61
62
63
64
65

22.0
6.1
14.9
17.3
16.4

17.4
-.2
17.6
25.6
24.5

8.8
7.3
1.4
6.2
4.9

-3.6
1.4
-5.0
-2.0
-3.1

42.6
10.6
29.0
30.4
31.1

164
33.6
99
8.7 -19.7 -18.8
2.9
22.9
12.2
11.6
38.2
17.6
15.7
13.1
37.9

31.9
27.0
3.8
8.4
7.1

17.6
11.8
5.2
10.1
7.3

16.1
16.0
.1
2.9
3.0

39
8.9
117
-7.7
-9.6

3.8
12.9
-.7 — 16.2
4.0
4.6
3.8
3.9
3.1
3.9

3.3
-3.4 -14.6
16.4
-1.2
-7.2
-2.2
-8.0 -11.2
.9
1.1 -5.6
-.7
-.1 -7.9

92

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 8.1.—Percent Change From Preceding Period in Gross National Product in Current and Constant Dollars, Implicit Price Deflators, and Price
Indexes—Continued
[Percent]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

IV

Government purchases of goods and
services:
66
Current dollars
67
1972 dollars
68
Implicit price deflator
69
Chain price index
Fixed-weighted price index
.... 70

1982

1981

1980

1979
I

II

III

IV

I

II

III

IV

1983
HI

II

I

I

II

4.6
-.2
4.8
6.1
5.5

1.2
-5.0
6.5
5.5
4.5

16.1
9.4
6.2
5.8
5.3

15.5
10.6
4.4
7.2
7.0

-8.8
8.2
4.7
4.0

3.5
-.9
4.4
4.0
3.1

IV

9.8
1.3
8.4
8.7
9.4

13.4
2.2
11.0
10.9
11.9

10.8
.8
9.9
9.5
9.5

9.0
1.8
7.0
7.2
6.7

17.0
3.5
13.0
13.3
15.2

17.1
4.1
12.5
11.6
12.8

14.5
4.0
10.1
10.4
10.8

2.7
-3.9
6.9
7.9
7.6

15.6
-2.1
18.1
15.2
15.8

12.9
4.5
8.1
8.4
8.0

5.1
20
7.3
7.8
7.9

12.0
3.8
7.8
7.2
6.5

15.9
3.9
11.5
11.4
11.4

71
72
73
74
75

9.6
1.8
7.7
8.2
9.1

17.1
4.2
12.4
11.6
13.7

16.3
3.7
12.1
10.8
11.5

12.9
5.6
6.9
7.3
7.3

25.3
5.7
18.5
18.8
22.4

25.3
10.0
14.0
10.5
12.6

25.2
13.8
10.0
10.2
10.6

86
-11.0
2.7
5.8
5.9

27.3
-7.3
37.3
28.2
29.3

18.8
12.5
5.7
6.2
6.6

8.9
2.2
6.5
7.1
8.8

23.6
15.2
7.3
5.1
5.0

30.7
10.0
18.8
18.8
18.8

2.1 -8.7
.2 -14.0
6.2
1.9
5.0
3.9
4.9
2.9

32.1
26.3
4.6
3.8
3.6

-8.0
29.5
28.3 -18.0
12.2
1.0
3.8
7.6
8.7
2.3

1.9
-.6
2.5
1.5
-.1

National defense:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index.
Fixed- weighted price index

76
77
78
79
80

11.5
2.6
8.7
8.8
9.7

17.3
3.9
12.9
12.2
14.6

17.4
5.2
11.6
11.7
11.9

16.5
7.1
8.8
8.2
7.5

24.2
2.7
20.9
19.8
24.5

25.0
10.6
13.0
10.3
13.7

10.7
.8
9.8
12.0
12.2

5.3
0
5.3
4.3
5.0

27.9
-1.1
29.3
29.7
29.3

12.9
6.7
5.9
6.4
6.5

23.8
13.4
9.2
8.5
10.1

10.2
6.3
3.7
6.0
4.7

33.9
7.5
24.6
21.1
20.8

3.5
13
4.9
5.8
4.6

20.8
14.0
5.9
3.8
3.0

16.5
5.1
10.8
8.7
9.2

16.5
14.1
2.1
1.0
-.4

Nondefense:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed-weighted price index

81
82
83
84
85

6.0
.3
5.7
7.1
7.5

16.6
4.8
11.2
10.6
11.3

14.2
1.0
13.1
8.9
10.4

5.4
2.7
2.7
5.5
6.6

27.5
11.9
13.9
16.7
16.9

26.0
8.7
15.9
10.9
9.4

59.1 -30.6
26.0
42.9 -28.3 -18.4
-3.1
54.5
11.3
8.7
25.2
6.6
8.3
29.6
6.1

31.8 -16.7
25.0 -17.2
.7
5.4
5.9
4.2
7.1
5.2

57.3
36.1
15.6
3.4
5.7

24.4
15.0
8.2
14.1
13.6

86
87
88
89
90

9.9
1.1
8.8
9.0
9.5

11.4
1.0
10.3
10.4
10.7

,7.5
-1.0
8.6
8.7
8.1

6.6
-.5
7.1
7.1
6.3

12.6
2.2
10.2
10.4
10.7

12.7
.8
11.9
12.2
12.9

8.7
-1.5
10.3
10.6
11.0

9.9
.7
9.1
9.2
8.8

9.4
1.0
8.3
8.2
7.5

9.6
.1
9.5
9.6
8.9

2.9
-4.6
7.8
8.2
7.4

5.3
-2.7
8.3
8.4
7.6

7.2
.2
7.0
7.0
6.5

6.2
-.5
6.7
6.8
5.9

8.1
1.3
6.7
6.6
5.6

6.8
-.4
7.2
7.1
6.4

6.8
-.1
6.9
6.9
5.9

3.5
-1.8
5.4
5.4
5.2

4.6
-1.0
5.7
5.7
5.3

Gross domestic purchases:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed- weigh ted price index

91
92
93
94
95

11.1
2.0
8.9
9.4
9.8

8.5
-1.2
9.8
10.6
11.1

12.3
3.2
8.8
9.0
9.1

4.4
-1.0
5.4
6.0
5.7

9.1
-.5
9.6
10.7
11.4

-.6
11.3
.4 -10.0
10.9
10.5
10.1
11.9
10.2
12.8

7.3
.6
6.7
9.5
9.5

18.1
6.3
11.2
10.5
10.6

19.2
8.5
9.9
9.4
9.8

8.3
1.8
6.3
7.5
7.6

13.2
4.9
7.9
7.6
7.3

2.8
-5.0
8.3
7.9
7.8

-1.5
-4.4
3.0
5.3
4.9

6.2
1.5
4.7
4.3
3.7

7.1
1.6
5.5
5.7
5.6

1.8
-1.1
3.0
4.9
4.6

6.7
3.3
3.3
3.0
2.8

17.8
11.8
5.3
4.5
4.4

Final sales:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
..
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed-weighted price index

96
97
98
99
100

12.4
3.5
8.7
8.9
9.5

9.9
.5
9.4
8.9
9.8

11.1
1.8
9.2
9.4
9.6

5.5
-.7
6.3
6.5
6.4

10.6
2.7
7.8
8.2
9.4

11.5
1.4
9.9
9.1
10.4

.2
-8.6
9.6
8.8
9.6

14.5
3.0
11.2
9.8
9.4

13.6
2.2
11.2
11.3
11.3

16.1
6.8
8.7
9.7
10.3

6.0
-.9
6.9
7.6
7.9

10.6
1.6
8.8
9.1
8.9

6.4
-2.3
8.9
8.4
8.4

3.9
13
5.3
5.6
5.3

4.6
8
5.5
5.1
4.8

1.9
15
3.4
5.9
6.0

9.4
4.5
4.7
5.0
4.7

5.8
.6
5.2
3.6
3.4

9.5
5.5
3.7
5.0
5.2

Final sales to domestic purchasers:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed-weighted price index

101
102
103
104
105

11.8
2.6
8.9
9.4
9.8

9.5
4
10.0
10.6
11.1

11.1
2.3
8.6
9.0
9.1

5.9
.2
5.6
6.0
5.8

11.7
1.5
10.1
10.7
11.4

11.1
_ i
1L3
12.0
12.7

-1.3
96
9.2
10.0
10.3

12.1
2.9
9.0
9.6
9.5

16.2
4.6
11.0
10.5
10.6

14.8
6.2
8.2
9.5
9.9

7.7
.2
7.5
7.6
7.7

10.4
2.9
7.3
7.7
7.3

5.6
-2.4
8.1
8.1
7.9

3.9
-.1
4.0
5.3
4.9

4.2
-.4
4.5
4.3
3.7

6.2
1.0
5.2
5.7
5.6

8.8
4.8
3.8
4.9
4.6

4.3
1.2
3.0
2.9
2.7

13.5
8.5
4.6
4.5
4.4

Gross domestic product:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed-weighted price index

106
107
108
109
110

11.3
2.4
8.7
8.9
9.5

8.9
-.3
9.2
8.9
9.8

12.3
2.7
9.4
9.4
9.5

4.2
-1.7
6.0
6.5
6.4

8.2
.8
7.3
8.2
9.4

11.7
1.9
9.6
9.1
10.5

1.2
-8.7
10.9
9.0
9.4

10.0
1.1
8.9
9.8
9.4

16.6
4.8
11.3
11.3
11.3

19.7
8.3
10.6
9.6
10.2

6.8
.9
5.9
7.6
7.9

13.1
3.3
9.4
9.0
8.9

3.1
-5.4
9.0
8.2
8.3

5
-4.6
4.3
5.6
5.3

6.3
.7
5.6
5.2
4.7

3.2
-.5
3.7
5.9
6.0

2.6
12
3.8
5.0
4.7

8.6
2.9
5.5
3.6
3.4

13.8
9.0
4.5
5.1
5.2

111
112
113
114
115

11.7
2.6
8.9
9.2
9.9

8.6
-.6
9.2
8.9
9.9

12.6
3.0
9.3
9.3
9.5

3.4
-2.0
5.6
6.1
6.0

7.3
.8
6.5
7.5
8.8

-.2
11.9
1.9 -10.4
11.4
9.8
9.1
9.2
9.7
11.0

10.2
1.0
9.1
10.2
9.9

16.5
5.6
10.3
10.3
10.1

21.3
9.4
10.9
9.8
10.6

6.8
1.0
5.7
7.8
8.1

14.1
3.9
9.8
9.3
9.2

1.4
-6.3
8.2
7.3
7.2

-1.9
-5.3
3.6
5.2
4.9

6.2
.7
5.4
4.9
4.5

2.5
-.5
3.1
5.7
5.8

1.4
14
2.8
4.2
3.8

8.9
3.3
5.4
3.9
3.6

15.2
10.4
4.4
5.1
5.3

116
117
118
119
120

11.3
2.4
8.7
8.9
9.6

8.9
-.9
9.8
10.1
10.3

12.7
3.0
9.5
9.5
9.6

3.6
-2.2
5.9
6.4
6.1

6.7
-.1
6.9

12.8
1.2
11.5

2.1
-9.6
13.0

9.2
2.0
7.1

17.3
6.4
10.2

19.8
7.7
11.3

7.9
1.2
6.6

14.8
4.4
9.9

1.5 -1.7
-7.2 . -5.4 3.9
9.3

6.5
1.0
5.4

2.4
-.2
2.6

.4
33
3.8

10.3
4.8
5.2

15.5
10.3
4.7

121
122

12.0
2.7

10.8
.6

12.0
3.2

6.3
.5

10.1
.1

13.9
2.3

4.1
53

13.2
2.9

14.1
4.1

13.1
4.4

9.0
1.9

17.2
8.9

5.6
-1.4

6.0
1.9

6.1
3

6.8
2.6

5.1
2.9

8.6
3.0

Federal:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed-weigh ted price index

State and local:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator.
Chain price index
Fixed-weigh ted price index

18.0
13.0
4.4
4.3
2.9

7
49 2
3.3 -52.2
6.3
-3.8
3.2
3.4
2.8
5.5

13

7.8
6.5
1.2
3.1
1.7

64.6
64.6 -36.0 -28.2
59.8
92.5 -52.6 -29.4
3.0 -14.5
1.6
35.0
3.7
5.0
2.9
5.3
5.4
.9
7.3
3.8

Addenda:

Business:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
Chain price index
Fixed- weighted price index
Nonfarm:
Current dollars
1972 dollars
Implicit price deflator
>...
Chain price index
Fixed- weighted price index
Disposable personal income:
Current dollars
1972 dollars

1.4
-3.4

NOTE.—The IMPLICIT PRICE DEFLATOR for GNP is a weighted average of the detailed price indexes used in the deflation of GNP. In each period, the weights are based on the composition of
constant-dollar output in that period. In other words, the price index for each item (1972=100) is weighted by the ratio of the quantity of the item valued in 1972 prices to the total output in 1972
prices. Changes in the implicit price deflator reflect both changes in prices and changes in the composition of output. The CHAIN PRICE INDEX uses as weights the composition of output in the prior
period, and therefore, reflects only the change in prices between the two periods. However, comparisons of percent changes in the chain index also reflect changes in the composition of output. The
FIXED-WEIGHTED PRICE INDEX uses as weights the composition of output in 1972 . Accordingly, comparisons over any time span reflect only changes in prices.




July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

93

Table 8.2.—Selected Per Capita Income and Product Series in Current and Constant Dollars and Population of the United States
Constant (1972) dollars

Current dollars
Year

Gross
national
product

Personal
income

Disposable
personal
income

Personal consumption expenditures
Total

Durable
goods

Nondurable goods

Services

Gross
national
product

Disposable
personal
income

Population
(mid— year,
thousands)

Personal consumption expenditures
Total

Durable
goods

Nondurable goods

Services

1929

849

697

676

634

76

309

249

2,590

1,883

1,765

172

805

789

121,878

1930
1931
1932
1933
1934

736
613
466
444
516

619
527
401
374
425

599
513
390
363
413

568
487
389
364
406

58
44
29
28
33

276
233
182
177
211

233
210
178
160
162

2,319
2,122
1,817
1,767
1,891

1,710
1,626
1,395
1,349
1,421

1,620
1,545
1,392
1,356
1,398

135
115
87
85
96

759
750
687
660
699

726
680
617
612
603

123,188
124,149
124,949
125,690
126,485

1935
1936
1937
1938
1939

569
646
705
654
694

474
535
573
524
553

459
517
550
502
534

438
484
517
493
511

40
49
54
44
51

230
256
273
261
268

167
178
190
188
192

2,042
2,306
2,405
2,282
2,441

1,545
1,721
1,765
1,636
1,754

1,474
1,609
1,658
1,606
1,678

118
145
151
121
142

732
810
835
841
879

624
654
671
644
657

127,362
128,181
128,961
129,969
131,028

1940
1941
1942
1943
1944

757
937
1,175
1,405
1,522

590
715
909
1,103
1,189

570
691
865
973
1,052

537
605
657
727
781

59
72
51
48
48

280
321
376
429
465

198
212
230
251
268

2,605
3,001
3,423
3,888
4,112

1,847
2,083
2,354
2,429
2,483

1,740
1,826
1,788
1,815
1,844

160
181
117
102
94

908
956
963
980
1,007

672
688
708
733
742

132,122
133,402
134,860
136,739
138,397

1945
1946
1947
1948
1949

1,518
1,484
1,617
1,770
1,731

1,215
1,256
1,319
1,425
1,383

1,066
1,124
1,170
1,282
1,259

854
1,017
1,122
1,192
1,194

57
111
142
156
168

514
585
631
659
636

283
321
350
377
390

4,005
3,383
3,263
3,340
3,299

2,416
2,353
2,212
2,290
2,257

1,936
2,129
2,122
2,129
2,140

103
179
209
222
238

1,074
1,124
1,074
1,057
1,055

760
825
839
850
848

139,928
141,389
144,126
146,631
149,188

1950
1951
1952 ...
1953
1954

1,889
2,144
2,217
2,299
2,259

1,498
1,652
1,732
1,803
1,783

1,362
1,465
1,515
1,581
1,583

1,266
1,342
1,383
1,439
1,452

203
193
186
204
196

648
705
726
730
726

415
444
472
505
530

3,526
3,755
3,828
3,908
3,794

2,392
2,415
2,441
2,501
2,483

2,224
2,214
2,230
2,277
2,278

281
253
242
264
261

1,067
1,071
1,090
1,101
1,090

876
889
898
912
927

151,684
154,287
156,954
159,565
162,391

1955
1956
1957
1958
1959

2,420
2,507
2,592
2,582
2,755

1,878
1,977
2,049
2,074
2,171

1,664
1,741
1,802
1,832
1,911

1,535
1,581
1,637
1,662
1,755

234
225
230
212
240

744
766
789
803
827

557
590
618
648
688

3,978
3,992
3,992
3,910
4,076

2,582
2,653
2,660
2,645
2,709

2,384
2,410
2,416
2,400
2,487

309
290
284
260
286

1,122
1,139
1,138
1,130
1,158

954
981
994
1,010
1,044

165,275
168,221
171,274
174,141
177,073

1960
1961
1962
1963
1964

2,802
2,855
3,028
3,152
3,323

2,226
2,274
2,378
2,463
2,601

1,947
1,991
2,073
2,144
2,296

1,797
1,823
1,904
1,979
2,087

238
226
250
272
294

836
845
866
883
922

723
752
788
825
871

4,079
4,118
4,289
4,398
4,566

2,709
2,742
2,813
2,865
3,026

2,501
2,511
2,583
2,644
2,751

284
268
293
315
338

1,152
1,153
1,171
1,178
1,216

1,064
1,089
1,119
1,150
1,198

180,760
183,742
186,590
189,300
191,927

1965
1966
1967
1968
1969

3,556
3,845
4,023
4,351
4,656

2,782
2,992
3,170
3,440
3,722

2,448
2,613
2,757
2,956
3,152

2,214
2,366
2,467
2,674
2,870

324
346
353
401
423

971
1,041
1,070
1,149
1,222

920
979
1,045
1,125
1,224

4,782
5,009
5,089
5,271
5,365

3,171
3,290
3,389
3,493
3,564

2,868
2,979
3,032
3,160
3,245

374
399
400
440
453

1,255
1,300
1,306
1,347
1,368

1,239
1,281
1,327
1,373
1,424

194,347
196,599
198,752
200,745
202,736

1970
1971
1972
1973 .
1974

4,841
5,189
5,649
6,258
6,705

3,955
4,181
4,532
5,026
5,463

3,390
3,620
3,860
4,315
4,667

3,031
3,237
3,511
3,831
4,152

415
468
529
582
568

1,296
1,342
1,432
1,573
1,746

1,320
1,426
1,550
1,676
1,838

5,293
5,404
5,649
5,918
5,827

3,665
3,752
3,860
4,080
4,009

3,277
3,355
3,511
3,623
3,566

434
473
529
572
525

1,384
1,390
1,432
1,450
1,414

1,459
1,492
1,550
1,600
1,627

205,089
207,692
209,924
211,939
213,898

7,173
7,878
8,708
9,720
10,741

5,857
6,379
6,993
7,783
8,668

5,075
5,477
5,965
6,621
7,331

4,521
4,972
5,468
6,048
6,695

612
719
809
899
948

1,886
2,025
2,174
2,373
2,666

2,023
2,227
2,485
2,776
3,082

5,702
5,953
6,218
6,462
6,572

4,051
4,158
4,280
4,441
4,512

3,609
3,774
3,924
4,057
4,121

522
580
626
659
654

1,424
1,476
1,513
1,547
1,568

1,664
1,718
1,784
1,851
1,898

215,981
218,086
220,289
222,629
225,106

11,558
12,848
13,239

9,510
10,591
11,109

8,032
8,906
9,377

7,326
8,078
8,581

943
1,027
1,053

2,937
3,192
3,279

3,445
3,859
4,250

6,478
6,584
6,399

4,487
4,587
4,567

4,093
4,161
4,180

604
614
602

1,562
1,577
1,569

1,927
1,971
2,008

227,694
229,916
232,118

1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982

.. . .




94

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 8.5.—Rental Income of Persons by Type

Table 8.3.—Capital Consumption Adjustment by Legal Form of
Organization and Type of Adjustment

[Millions of dollars]

[Millions of dollars]
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

Capital consumption adjustment 1
For consistent accounting at historical cost
For current replacement cost

1
2
3

-52,482 -61,463 -57,865 -46,609
62,339
51,896
83,665 103,784
- 104,378 -123,802 -141,530 -150,393

Domestic corporate business
For consistent accounting at historical cost
For current replacement cost
Financial
For consistent accounting at historical cost
For current replacement cost
Nonfinancial
For consistent accounting at historical cost
For current replacement cost
Sole proprietorships
and partnerships ...
. ..
Farm 1
Nonfarm
. .
For consistent accounting at historical cost
For current replacement cost
Other private business *
Proprietors' income
Rental income of persons
Buildings and equipment owned and used
by
nonprofit institutions serving individuals 2.

4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21

-14,772
41,576
-56,348
-849
1,480
2,329
13923
40,096
54019
-5,732
-5855
123
10,320
-10,197
31,978
-232
28,323
-3,423

Addendum:
Capital consumption adjustment for national 22
income (4 + 13 + 19+20).

-16,313
50,900
-67,213
-1,655
1,199
-2,854
14658
49,701
64359
-8,365
-7 128
-1,237
11,439
-12,676
-36,785
-279
-32,416
-4,090

-11,005
67,231
-78,236
-1,898
1,401
-3,299
9 107
65,830
74937
-6,549
7973
1,424
16,434
-15,010
40,311
301
-35,582
-4,428

-1,080
83,150
-84,230
- 1,924
1,664
-3,588
844
81,486
80642
-4,155
8,359
4,204
20,634
-16,430
-41,374
314
-36,460
-4,600

Except for farm proprietorships and partnerships (line 14) and other private business (line
18), the capital consumption adjustment is calculated in two parts. The adjustment for
consistent accounting at historical cost converts depreciation based on the service lives and
depreciation schedules employed by firms when filing their income tax returns to consistent
service lives and straight line depreciation schedules. The adjustment for current replacement
cost converts the historical cost series with consistent accounting to a current replacement cost
series. For farm proprietorships and partnerships and other private business the historical cost
series is based on consistent service lives and straight line depreciation schedules so that the
adjustment
reflects only a conversion to current replacement cost.
2
Fixed capital assets owned and used by these entities are considered to be business activities
selling their current services to their owners. The value of these services is included in personal
consumption expenditures and is equal to their current-account purchases including capital
consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment.

Table 8.4.—Supplements to Wages and Salaries by Type
[Millions of dollars]

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

220,703

242,985

276,007

297,565

insurance 2

105,791

114,984

132,466

140,944

3

114,912

128,001

143,541

156,621

Line
Supplements to wages and salaries
Employer contributions for
(3.6;2) '.
Other labor income (6 15-1)

social

124,643

138,133

157,243

168,224

5

50,479

55,630

64,921

69,191

6
7
8
9

1,652
6,770
16,839
48,903

1,712
7,449
19,100
54,242

1,876
8,480
20,905
61,061

1,965
9,131
22,700
65,237

Health insurance
Federal hospital insurance (3 6*6)
Temporary disability insurance (3.6;16) 2
Private group health insurance (6.15*23)

10
11
12
13

54,780
10,555
54
44,171

61,481
11,626
75
49,780

73,349
15937
82
57,330

82,207
16,430
90
65,687

Life insurance
Veterans life insurance (3.6;12)
Private group life insurance (6 15*24) 2

14
15
16

5,840
5
5,835

6,365
6
6,359

6,770
9
6,761

7,182
9
7,173

Workers' compensation
Federal (3 6*13)
State and local (3.6;17)
Private insurers (6 15-25)

17
18
19
20

17,744
717
3,028
13,999

19,126
838
3,040
15,248

19,879
870
3,038
15,971

19,928
917
3,075
15,936

Unemployment insurance
State unemployment insurance (3 6*7)
Federal unemployment tax (3.6;8)
Railroad unemployment insurance (3 6*9)
Private supplemental unemployment (6.15;26)

21
22
23
24
25

16,111
12,315
3,181
196
419

16,009
11,795
3,565
148
501

16,725
12,301
3,842
205
377

17,868
13,172
4,084
180
432

Other (6 15*27) 3

26

1,585

1,871

2,041

2,156

1

The numbers in parentheses indicate the tables and line numbers from which the entries in
this
table are derived.
2
Employer contributions to publicly-administered programs are classified as employer
contributions for social insurance. Employer contributions to privately-administered programs
are classified as other labor income. Consequently, government contributions to privatelyadministered health and life insurance plans for government employees are classified as other
labor
income.
8
Consists largely of directors' fees.




1981

1982

56232

63 931

76967

86341

51799

58 199

68478

77 170

3

41374

47967

59050

67 988

Owner-occupied
Permanent site
Mobile homes

4
5
6

29471
29,209
262

34083
34 112
29

41 658
41 570
88

46875
46962
87

Tenant-occupied (permanent site)

7

11903

13884

17392

21 113

Farms owned by nonoperator landlords

8

4058

3827

3724

3 170

Nonfarm nonresidential properties

9

6367

6405

5704

6012

10

4,433

5732

8489

9171

Royalties

Table 8.6.—Dividends Paid and Received
[Millions of dollars]

Dividends paid
Domestic corporate business 1
Financial
Nonfinancial
Rest of the world

2

Dividends received
Domestic corporate business 2
Financial
Nonfinancial

..

Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

95,680

108,470

115,369

122,062

2

77,235

86,416

96,185

102 657

3
4

10,197
67038

12,179
74237

13,305
82880

14,902
87755

5

18445

22054

19 184

19405

6

95,680

108,470

115369

122 062

7

39675

45999

45898

48229

8
9

12424
27,251

15495
30,504

16494
29,404

17625
30,604

Rest of the world 1

10

3,335

3,882

4,813

5167

Government

11

1,913

1,782

1,856

2300

Persons

12

50,757

56,807

62802

66366

Dividends in national income (1 — 7 — 10)
13
Dividends paid by domestic corporate business 14
(net) (2 less 7).
Dividends paid to United States by rest of the 15
world (net) (5 less 10).

52,670
37,560

58,589
40,417

64,658
50,287

68,666
54,428

15,110

18,172

14,371

14,238

50,757

56,807

62,802

66366

Addenda:

Dividends in personal income (13 less 11)
1

4

1980

1

Nonfarm housing

By Type
Pension, profit-sharing, and other retirement
benefit plans.
Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance
(3.6;5).
Railroad retirement (3 6-10)
Federal civilian employees retirement (3.6;11)
State and local employees retirement (3.6;15)
Private pension and profit- sharing (6.15;21)

1979

2

Rental income of persons .
Rental income

-49,059 -57,373 -53,437 -42,009

1

Line

16

Earnings of foreign residents from their unincorporated U.S. affiliates are treated as
dividends paid by domestic corporate business (line 2) and as dividends received by the rest of
the2 world (line 10).
Earnings of U.S. residents from their unincorporated foreign affiliates are treated as
dividends paid by the rest of the world (line 5) and as dividends received by domestic corporate
business (line 7).

Table 8.7.—Interest Paid and Received

Table 8.8.—Imputations in the National Income and Product Accounts

[Millions of dollars]

[Billions of dollars]

Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

1

533,526

678,474

893,242

967,927

Business
Corporate business
Financial
On deposits l
On other liabilities
Nonfinancial
Sole proprietorships and partnerships
Farm
Nonfarm
Other private business
Real estate
Other

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

390 788
272,257
168 235
94,624
73611
104,022
36,363
10,629
25734
82,168
80366
1,802

506 777
363,590
229 446
123712
105 734
134 144
46,453
13504
32,949
96734
94205
2529

670 068
497 731
326 757
170,429
156 328
170 974
61,068
16453
44615
111,269
107 761
3508

713012
525 017
349 771
184611
165 160
175 246
64,114
18038
46076
123,881
120 145
3736

Persons (interest paid by consumers to business)

14

45,468

49,560

54,253

58,109

Government
Federal
State and local

15
16
17

70874
53,634
17240

86613
67,255
19358

115352
91,576
23776

137 641
107,694
29947

18
19
20

26,396
24,104
2292

35524
33,057
2467

53569
50,427
3 142

59 165
55,532
3633

21

533,526

678 474

893 242

967 927

22
Business
23
Corporate business
24
Financial
25
Nonfinancial
Financial
sole proprietorships and partner- 26
ships 2.
Other private business
27

326 084
321,681
275,500
46,181
• 4,198

415 656
408,133
346,532
61 601
7,234

540 464
528,994
443,008
85,986
11,114

587 063
577,554
488,636
88,918
9,201

205

289

356

308

Monetary interest paid.. . .

.. .

Foreigners
To business
To Federal government
Monetary interest received

2

28

145,408

183,668

250,413

260,416

Government
Federal
State and local

29
30
31

36,565
10888
25,677

46,611
13499
33,112

58,004
17985
40,019

68,618
22336
46,282

Foreigners
From business
From Federal government

32
33
34

25,469
14393
11,076

32,539
20027
12,512

44,361
27608
16,753

51,830
33601
18,229

Imputed interest paid

35

98,355

110,752

124,333

141,949

36
Corporate business (financial)..
Banks, credit agencies, and investment compa- 37
nies.
Life insurance carriers and noninsured pension 38
funds.

98,355
61,233

110752
66,288

124 333
68,996

141 949
77,926

37,122

44,464

55,337

64,023

Persons

95

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

1979

1980

1981

1982

1
Gross national product
Imputations (74 + 82 + 87 + 91 + 92+95+96 + 97 2
+ 98 + 100).
3
Excluding imputations (1 — 2)

24178
197.2

2631 7
220.1

29541
243.6

3,073.0
273.3

2,220.6

2,411.6

2,710.5

2,799.7

4
Personal consumption expenditures
Imputations (74 + 82 + 87 + 91 + 95+96 + 97 + 985
-99-101).
6
Housing services (74 + 82 — 99)
7
Other (87 + 91 + 95+96 + 97 + 98 101)
8
Excluding imputations (4 5)

1 5072
89.1

1668 1
123.7

18572
149.3

1,991 9
189.3

778
455
459
436
1 418 1 1 5444

104.8
445
1 7079

138.0
51.3
1,802 6

Line

Gross private domestic investment
Imputations (99 + 100^101)
Excluding imputations (9 10)

9
10
11

4230
1043
3187

4019
927
3092

474.9
908
3841

414.5
80.2
3343

Government purchases of goods and services
Imputations (92)
Excluding imputations (12 13)

12
13
14

474.4
37
4706

537.8
37
534 1

595.7
35
5923

649.2
3.8
6454

15
Charges against gross national product
Imputations (74 + 82 + 87 + 91 + 92 + 95 + 96 + 9716
+ 98 + 100).
17
Excluding imputations (15— 16)

2,417.8
197.2

2,631.7
220.1

2,954.1
243.6

3,073.0
273.3

2,220.6

2,411.6

2,710.5

2,799.7

Capital consumption allowances with capital 18
consumption adjustment.
19
Imputations (75+83 + 88)
20
Excluding imputations (18 19)

256.0

293.2

329.5

359.2

473
2087

532
2399

58.1
271.4

60.9
298.3

21
22
23

189.6
262
1634

213.4
27.9
1855

250.0
30.7
219.2

258.3
34.8
223.6

Subsidies less current surplus of government 24
enterprises.
25
Imputations (77)
26
Excluding imputations (24 — 25)

3.4

5.5

6.4

9.5

.1
3.2

.1
5.3

.2
6.2

.3
9.3

27
National income
Imputations (78 + 79 + 85+86+90+91+92+95 28
+96+97 + 98 + 100).
29
Excluding imputations (27 — 28)

1,966.7
123.8

2,116.6
139.1

2,373.0
154.9

2,450.4
177.9

1,842 9

1,977.5

2,218.1

2,272.5

30
... . 31
32

1,458.1
53
1,452 9

1,599.6
5.9
1,593.8

1,769.2
65
1,762 8

1,865.7
7.1
1,858.6

Proprietors' income with inventory valuation 33
and capital consumption adjustments.
34
Imputations (86+95+100)
35
Excluding imputations (33 — 34)

132.1

117.4

120.2

109.0

59
126.2

52
112.3

55
114.6

57
103.3

Indirect business tax and nontax liability
Imputations (76 + 84 + 89)
Excluding imputations (21 22)

Compensation of employees
Imputations (96 + 97 + 98)
Excluding imputations (30 31)

Imputed interest received

39

98,355

110752

124,333

141 949

Business
Corporate business
Financial
Nonfinancial
Sole proprietorships and partnerships
Farm
.
...
Nonfarm
Other private business

40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47

21 289
17,386
3486
13,900
3,812
1,083
2,729
91

24746
20,551
4289
16262
4,085
1,172
2,913
110

30005
25,012
5256
19756
4,860
1415
3,445
133

32352
27130
5996
21 134
5,079
1488
3,591
143

Rental income of persons with capital consump- 36
tion adjustment.
37
Imputations (79)
38
Excluding imputations (36—37)

27.9

31.5

41.4

49.9

73
20.7

8.5
23.1

133
28.0

17.7
32.1

39
40
41

153.8
1053
484

192.6
119.6
730

249.9
1296
1203

261.1
147.4
113.7

Persons

48

73,319

82300

90876

105 748

Government
Federal
State and local

49
50
51

3,747
347
3,400

3706
362
3344

3452
424
3028

3849
427
3422

42
Personal income
Imputations (79 + 86 + 91 + 95+96 + 97 + 98 + 1043
0-77).
44
Excluding imputations (42 — 43) . ..

1,951.2
54.5

2,165.3
57.2

2,435.0
60.6

2,578.6
72.0

1,896.6

2,108.1

2,374.3

2,506.7

Interest received by government
Imputations (92)
Excluding imputations (45—46)

45
46
47

403
3.7
36.6

503
3.7
46.6

615
3.5
58.0

72.5
3.8
68.6

Interest paid by consumers to business
Imputations ( 78 85—90)
Excluding imputations (48—49)

48
49
50

455
-65.4
110.9

49.6
-78.1
127.6

54.3
-90.6
144.9

58.1
-101.8
159.9

Government transfer payments to persons
Imputations ( 77)
.
Excluding imputations (51 — 52)

51
52
53

240.0
-.1
240.1

285.9
.1
286.0

324.3
.2
324.5

360.4
-.3
360.7

54
Personal taxes outlays and saving
Imputations
(79 + 86 + 91 + 95+96+97 + 98+10055
8-77).
56
Excluding imputations (54 55)

1,951.2
54.5

2,165.3
57.2

2,435.0
60.6

2,578.6
72.0

18966

2,108.1

2,374.3

2,506.7

57
58
59

301.0
262
3272

336.5
-279
364.4

387.4
-307
418.1

402.1
-34.8
436.9

60
Disposable personal income
Imputations
(76+79 + 84+86+89+91 + 95+96 61
+97+98+100-77).
62
Excluding imputations (60— 61)

1,650.2
80.7

1,828.9
85.1

2,047.6
91.4

2,176.5
106.7

1,569.5

1,743.7

1,956.2

2,069.8

63
Personal outlays
Imputations
(75 +76+79 + 83+84 + 86+88+89 64
+91+95+96+97+98-77-99-101).
65
Excluding imputations (63 — 64)

15535
23.7

1,718.7
45.6

1,912.4
58.7

2,051.1
87.4

1,529.8

1,673.0

1,853.7

1,963.7

66
67
68

96.7
57.0
397

110.2
39.5
70.7

135.3
32.7
102.6

125.4
19.3
106.1

421.2

408.2

478.9

406.2

104.3
316.9

92.7
315.4

90.8
388.1

80.2
326.0

Addenda:
Net interest (3 + 8 + 11 + 18-23-26-27-33 52
+ 36-41-44-47).
Plus: Interest paid by government to persons 53
and business (15-34).
54
Less: Interest received by government (29 + 49)
Plus: Interest paid by consumers to business (14) . 55
Equals:
Personal
interest
income 56
(52+53-54 + 55) or (28 + 48).
Rest of the world net interest (18-33)
1

57

153,773

192,624

249,893

261,110

59,798

74,101

98,599

119,412

40,312
45,468
218,727

50,317
49,560
265,968

61,456
54,253
341,289

72,467
58,109
366,164

12,003

15,497

25,961

25,564

Consists of interest paid on the deposit liabilities of commercial and mutual saving banks,
savings
and loan associations, and credit unions.
2
Interest received by nonfinancial sole proprietorships and partnerships is considered interest
received by persons and is included in line 28.




Net interest
. .. .
Imputations (78 + 85 + 90 + 91 + 92)
Excluding imputations (39 40)

Personal tax and nontax payments
Imputations ( 76 84 89)
Excluding imputations (57 58)

Personal saving
Imputations (99+100+101 75 83 88)
Excluding imputations (66 67)

Gross investment, or gross saving and statistical 69
discrepancy.
70
Imputations (99+ 100+ 101)
71
Excluding im nutations (69-70)

96

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Table 8.9.—Relation of Capital Consumption Allowances in the National
Income and Product Accounts (NIPA's) to Depreciation and Amortization as Published by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)

Table 8.8.—Imputations in the National Income and Product
Accounts—Continued
[Billions of dollars]

[Millions of dollars]
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982
Line

1979

1980

1981

139,470

158,721

1982

Specific imputations
Corporations

Owner-occupied nonfarm housing:
Space rent

72

181.4

206.3

229.1

1
2
3

2,447
1 108

2,605
1247

4
5

669
1,406

714
1,491

6

4612

5601

7

1,200

1,333

8

265

433

24.5
135.4

26.3
155.2

27.7
178.6

29.3
199.8

75

39.3

44.2

48.3

50.5

76
77
78
79

25.8
.1
632
7.3

27.4
.1
753
8.5

30.1
.2
872
13^3

34.1
.3
977
17/7

Less: Depreciation of assets of foreign branches
Depreciation or amortization of intangible
assets.
Depreciation of films
Plus: Accidental damage to fixed capital other
than repairable damage.
Depreciation of mining exploration shafts
and wells.
Depreciation of employees' autos reimbursed by business.
Other

Equals: Capital consumption allowances, NIPA's... 9
10
Less* Capital consumption adjustment
Equals: Capital consumption allowances with 11
capital consumption adjustment, NIPA's.

Less: Intermediate goods and services consumed .. 73
Equals:
Gross
housing
product 74
(75+76+78+79-77).
Capital consumption allowances with capital
consumption adjustment.
Indirect business tax and nontax liability
Subsidies
Net interest
Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment.

159.9

Depreciation and amortization, IRS

Owner-occupied farm housing:
Space rent

80

7.8

8.9

9.8

10.4

Less: Intermediate goods and services consumed .. 81
Equals: Gross housing product (83 + 84 + 85 + 86) ... 82

2.0
5.8

2.8
6.1

3.0
6.9

3.1
7.3

Capital consumption allowances with capital
consumption adjustment.
Indirect business tax and nontax liability
Net interest
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation
and capital consumption adjustments.

83
84
85
86

Rental value of buildings and equipment owned 87
and used by nonprofit institutions serving individuals (88 + 89 + 90).
Capital consumption allowances with capital 88
consumption adjustment.
Indirect business tax and nontax liability
89
Net interest
90

1.6
.2
.5
3.5
8.3

1.8
.2
.7
3.4
9.7

1.9
.2
.8
3.9

11.0

2.0

12

42,314

47,674

.3
.9
4.2

Less* Tax return measure of farm depreciation
and amortization.
Depreciation or amortization of intangible
assets.
Allowance for audit
Plus* Accidential damage to fixed capital other
than repairable damage.
Depreciation of mining exploration shafts
and wells.
Capital consumption allowances of farms
Depreciation on employees' autos reimbursed by business.

13

12,652

13062

14

248

254

15
16

1705
235

2070
250

12.1

7.3

7.9

8.4

2
1.7

3
2.1

4
2.6

4
3.2

91
92

362
3.7

378
3.7

355
3.5

417
3^8

Farm products consumed on farms

93

1.3

1.1

1.1

1.1

Less: Intermediate goods and services consumed
Equals: Gross farm product

94
95

.7
.6

.6
.5

.6
.6

.6
.5

Food furnished employees, including military and 96
domestic service.
Standard clothing issued to military personnel
97
Employees' lodging
98

5.2

5.7

6.3

6.9

.1

.1

.1

o

.1

95.8
18

83.5
13
8.0

80.7
1i
9^0

69.1
10

Services furnished without payment by financial
intermediaries except life insurance carriers:

17

837

1333

18
19

8,578
286

9,518
294

10,239

10,868

Equals: Capital consumption allowances, NIPA's... 20
21
Less* Capital consumption adjustment
Equals: Capital consumption allowances with 22
capital consumption adjustment, NIPA's.

37,645
5732
43,377

43,683
-8365
52,048

52,924
-6,549
59,473

62,858
-4,155
67,013

Table 8.10.—Relation of Nonfarm Proprietors' Income in the National
Income and Product Accounts (NIPA's) to Corresponding Totals as
Published by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
[Millions of dollars]

Employment-related:

o

o

o

Other:
Net purchases of owner-occupied housing units
99
Margins on owner-built homes
100
Net purchases of buildings and equipment owned 101
and used by nonprofit institutions.

e!s

io!i

NOTE.—Only national income and product items for which there are imputations are shown in
this table.




220,941
-1,080
222,021

Sole proprietorships and partnerships
Depreciation and amortization, IRS

6.4

To persons
To government

142,729 163,013 191,870
14772 — 16313 -11,005
157,501 179,326 202,875

1979

1980

Net profit (less loss) of nonfarm proprietorships 1
and partnerships, plus payments to partners,
IRS.

74,745

67,312

Plus' Posttabulation amendments and revisions
including allowance for audit.
Depletion on domestic minerals
Adjustment to depreciate expenditures for
mining exploration, shafts, and wells.
Oil well bonus payments written off
Bad debt adjustment
Income received by fiduciaries
Income of tax-exempt cooperatives

2

21028

22808

3
4

1197
2,269

1339
4,830

5
6
7
8

2
1580
487
1,878

1
1264
623
2,077

Equals: Nonfarm proprietors' income, NIPA's

9

103,186

100,254

Line

1981

1982

90,122

84,159

Table 8.11.—Relation of Net Farm Income in the National Income and
Product Accounts (NIPA's) to Farm Operators' Income as Published
by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
[Millions of dollars]
Line

1979

1980

1981

1982

Farm operators' income, USDA

1

32,351

21,497

30,026

21,997

Plus: Depreciation and other consumption of farm
capital, USDA.
Less* Salaries of corporate officers
Supplements to wages and salaries other
than OASDHI *.
Capital consumption allowances with capital consumption adjustment, NIPA's.
Federal fines

2

18,416

21,007

23,066

23,432

3
4

887
740

930
804

971
858

1,011
797

5

16,322

18,869

20,709

21,900

6

1

2

2

2

Equals: Net farm income, NIPA's

7

32,817

21,899

30,552

21,719

Corporate profits with inventory valua- 8
tion and capital consumption adjustments.
Proprietors' income with inventory val- 9
uation and capital consumption adjustments.

892

87

86

192

31,925

21,812

30,466

21,527

1
OASDHI consists of employer contributions to old-age, survivors, disability, hospital, and
supplementary medical insurance.

97

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 8.12.—Relation of Corporate Profits, Taxes, and Dividends in the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA's) to Corresponding Totals as
Published by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
[Millions of dollars]
Line

1979

1980

1981

Total receipts less total deductions, IRS

1

282,964

235,919

Plus: Posttabulation ammendments and revisions, including allowance for audit profits
and gross renegotiation refunds.
Depletion on domestic minerals
Adjustment to depreciate expenditures for mining exploration, shafts, and wells
Oil well bonus payments written off
State and local cororate profits tax accruals
Income of Federal Reserve banks and other federally sponsored credit agencies
Adjustment for insurance carriers and mutual depositary institutions
Bad debt adjustment

2

13,750

17,190

3
4
5
6
7
8
9

6,755
6,321
506
13,412
10,388
-2,936
8,402

7,614
8,177
465
14,466
12,768
-2,527
11,078

20,973
16,825
77,999
1,695
30,606

26,957
18,655
52,371
2,438
29,885

Less: Tax-return measures of:
10
Gains net of losses from sale of property
11
Dividends received from domestic corporations
12
Income on equities in foreign corporations and branches (to U.S. corporations)
13
Costs of trading or issuing corporate securities
Plus: Income received from equities in foreign corporations and branches by all U.S. 14
residents, net of corresponding outflows.
Equals: Profits before taxes, NIPA's....

15

252,676

234,614

Federal income and excess profits taxes, IRS

16

120,047

105,142

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 and local corporate profits tax accruals

17

-739

4362

18
19

9,279
13,412

11,706
14,466

Less' U S tax credits claimed for foreign taxes paid
Investment tax credit
Other tax credits

20
21
22

38,203
14,635
1,564

26,427
15,103
637

.. . .

1982

226,959

174,205

Equals: Profits tax liability, NIPA's

23

87,597

84,785

82,842

59,155

Profits after tax, NIPA's (15-23)

24

? 65,079

149,829

144,117

115,050

25

83,139

97,379

26
Plus' Posttabulation amendments and revisions
Dividends paid by Federal Reserve banks and other federally sponsored credit 27
agencies.
28
U.S. receipts of dividends from abroad, net of payments to abroad 1

-1,980
301

-6,604
376

Dividends paid in cash or assets, IRS .

.

l

6,761

7,948

34,104
1,447

38,662
1,848

Less: Dividends received by U S. corporations
Capital gains distributions of investment companies

29
30

Equals: Net dividend payments, NIPA's

31

52,670

58,589

64,658

68,666

Undistributed profits, NIPA's (24-31)

32

112,409

91,240

79,459

46,384

1

In Tables 6.24 and 8.6, earnings of U.S. residents from their unincorporated foreign affiliates and the earnings of foreign residents from their unincorporated U.S. affiliates are treated as
dividends. These earnings are not included in lines 28 and 29 of this table. Net dividend payments (line 31), however, is identical to the total shown in Table 6.24 and to dividends paid in national
income (line 13) in Table 8.6.

Table 8.13.—Comparison of Personal Income in the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA's) with Adjusted Gross Income as Published by
the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
[Millions of dollars]
Line

1981

1980

1979

Adjusted gross income, IRS

1

1,463,667

1,613,731

1,779,359

Plus: Portion of personal income not included in adjusted gross income
Transfer payments except taxable military retirement and taxable government
pensions.
Other labor income except fees
.
Imputed income in personal income
Investment income retained by life insurance carriers and noninsured pension
funds.
Investment income received by nonprofit institutions or retained by fiduciaries
Differences in accounting treatment between NIPA's and tax regulations, net
Other personal income exempt or excluded from adjusted gross income

2
3

499,482
222,608

558,891
262,825

663,897
297,220

4
5
6

113 327
54,545
37,122

126,130
57,205
44,464

141,500
60,641
55,337

7
8
9

16,391
21,127
34362

19,687
8,861
39,719

24,353
30,457
54,389

Less: Portion of adjusted gross income not included in personal income
Personal contributions for social insurance
Net gain from sale of assets
Taxable private pensions
Small business corporation income
Other income in adjusted gross income but not in personal income

10
11
12
13
14
15

146,387
81,107
27719
25,363
2,315
9883

158,636
88,677
29,736
29,070
671
10,482

181,915
104,552
29,615
35,562
-445
12,631

Plus' Difference between BEA and IRS measures of adjusted gross income 1

16

134,408

151,329

173,647

Equals: Personal income, NIPA's

17

1,951,170

2,165,315

2,434,988

1
Consists of income earned by low-income individuals who are not required to file income tax returns, unreported income identified by IRS audit programs that is included in the NIPA
measure, and gross errors and omissions in lines 2 through 15. Also includes the net effect of errors in the IRS adjusted gross income (line 1) and NIPA personal income (line 17) measures. Such
errors can arise from the sample used by IRS to estimate line 1 and from the data sources used by BEA to estimate line 17.




98

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

9. Seasonally Unadjusted Estimates
Table 9.1.—Gross National Product, Quarterly Totals Not Seasonally Adjusted
[Billions of dollars]
Quarterly totals not seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

IV
Gross national product
Personal consumption expenditures
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Gross private domestic investment
Fixed investment
Nonresidential
Structures
Producers' durable equipment
Residential
Nonfarm structures
Farm structures
Producers' durable equipment
Change in business inventories
Nonfarm
Farm
Net exports of goods and services
Exports
Imports
Government purchases of goods and services
Federal
National defense
Nondefense
State and local

1
2

616.1
413.0

1981

1980

648.8

387.2

III

IV

661.0

705.7

421.3

452.3

689.8

733.7

433.8

1982

III

IV

752.8

777.7

470.1

493.0

733.6
469.6

III

IV

773.4

772.5

793.5

495.5

501.0

525.7

69.1
202.9
253.7

52.8
169.3
199.1

61.4
186.4
204.5

53.0
165.2
215.6

60.3
183.1
216.8

59.3
186.0
224.9

63.5
199.6
229.9

53.8
174.5
241.3

62.6
190.6
242.3

59.0
193.1
249.0

102.2

97.2

103.3

107.3

122.5

127.5

117.7

101.9

112.0

108.1

92.5

100.7
76.5
27.0
49.5
24.2
23.0
.5
.7
1.5
2.6
-1.1

102.3
75.2
28.7
46.5
27.1
26.1
.3
.8
-5.1
-2.7
-2.4

109.9
82.0
30.5
51.4
28.0
26.8

104.0
80.4
27.2
53.2
23.6
22.6
.2
.8
3.4
2.7
.7

118.0
89.1
32.2
56.9
28.9
27.8
.3
.8
4.4
1.9
2.5

116.4
88.4
35.3
53.1
27.9
26.7
.4
.8
11.1
8.7
2.4

118.1
94.2
38.6
55.7
23.9
22.7
.4
.8
-.4
-2.4
2.0

106.2
87.7
32.6
55.1
18.5
17.5
.2
.8
-4.3
-4.8
.5

114.6
90.7
36.2
54.5
23.9
22.7
.4
.8
-2.6
-2.0
-.6

107.5
83.6
36.2
47.4
23.9
22.7
.3
.8
.5
1.2
-.6

110.7
86.3
36.8
49.4
24.5
23.1
.6
.8
-18.2
-17.5
-.7

4.0

8.9

7.1

9.1

-1.3

89.6
85.7

93.9
85.0

81.8

93.0
83.9

84.5
85.8

81.2
78.7

151.2

158.2

155.0

156.7

164.7

172.7

53.9
37.7
16.1
91.2

56.9
38.7
18.2
94.3

64.3
41.8
22.5
93.9

62.8
42.0
20.7
92.2

59.8
43.8
16.0
97.0

64.2
45.8
18.4
100.6

72.0
47.8
24.2
100.7

722.1
729.3

741.3
741.7

763.3
778.2

721.8
738.0

760.9
776.0

761.6
771.9

781.4
811.6

III

IV

3
4
5

59.7
173.4
179.9

49.4
147.9
190.0

51.2
165.2
190.9

6

105.5

99.2

7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17

108.0
77.8
28.5
49.3
30.2
28.8

-2.5
-3.8
1.3

98.7
75.2
24.8
50.4
23.5
22.1
.7
.8
.5
1.2
-.7

18

4.8

3.2

6.6

6.3

7.8

7.4

6.0

19
20

79.1
74.3

80.3

86.1
79.5

81.5
75.2

87.7
79.9

91.1
83.7

94.1
88.1

21

126.5

126.5

132.8

136.2

142.3

141.3

145.0

22
23
24
25

45.9
29.7
16.2
80.6

47.0
31.5
15.5
79.5

48.7
32.2
16.5
84.1

47.7
32.6
15.1
88.5

53.6
34.9
18.7
88.7

54.2
35.9
18.3
87.1

26
27

637.5
652.3

603.7
615.7

637.0
647.3

650.9
666.1

694.7
712.4

677.8
686.5

-6.7
-5.5
-1.2

2.5

Addenda:
Gross domestic product
Final sales

Table 9.2.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product, Quarterly Totals Not Seasonally Adjusted
[Billions of dollars]
Quarterly totals not seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

IV
Personal consumption expendituresDurable goods
Motor vehicles and parts
Furniture and household equipment
Other
Nondurable goods..
Food
Clothing and shoes
Gasoline and oil
Other nondurable goods
Fuel oil and coal
Other
Services....
Housing
Household operation...
Electricity and gas...
Other
Transportation
Other




413.0

III
387.2

1982

1981

1980

407.3

59.7

III

IV

IV

452.3

433.8

460.2

470.1

493.0

501.0

525.7

61.4

53.0

60.3

59.3

63.5

53.8

62.6

59.0

69.1

23.1
25.5
11.1

23.4
18.5
7.4

21.6
20.2
9.4

23.1
21.2
8.6

22.6
26.4
12.3

24.9
19.8
8.3

26.9
22.4
11.0

27.4
23.1
8.9

22.5
28.1
13.0

26.0
19.8
8.0

29.1
22.6
10.8

27.6
22.9
8.4

27.1
28.2
13.8

173.4

147.9

165.2

169.3

186.4

165.2

183.1

186.0

199.6

174.5

190.6

193.1

202.9

84.4
33.0
18.8
37.2
5.3
31.9

78.4
19.8
19.0
30.7
4.4
26.4

85.1
26.1
21.4
32.7
4.6
28.1

87.1
26.1
22.2
33.8
4.8
29.1

94.5
32.6
22.2
37.1
4.9
32.2

81.7
27.6
21.9
34.0
5.1
28.8

92.5
29.8
24.1
36.8
5.2
31.6

94.9
29.1
24.8
37.1
5.2
31.9

106.7
28.7
23.9
40.2
5.2
35.0

87.2
30.7
22.0
34.5
5.1
29.4

99.3
30.5
22.8
38.0
5.0
33.0

102.3
28.4
23.9
38.5
5.0
33.6

108.1
29.4
22.8
42.5
4.9
37.6

179.9

190.0

190.9

199.1

204.5

215.6

216.8

224.9

229.9

241.3

242.3

249.0

253.7

30.7
17.2
13.5
14.3
81.4

65.3
25.6
11.9
13.7
15.2
84.7

67.6
27.6
13.7
13.9
16.0
88.0

69.7
29.1
14.8
14.3
15.6
90.1

71.9
35.3
20.6
14.6
15.5
92.9

74.3
29.0
13.9
15.1
16.5
97.0

76.9
30.8
15.2
15.6
17.2
100.1

79.0
33.3
17.1
16.2
16.3
101.3

40.7
24.4
16.3
15.9
103.9

82.5
33.4
16.6
16.8
17.5
109.0

84.7
34.0
16.7
17.3
18.1
112.3

86.1
36.3
18.7
17.6
17.0
114.4

61.9
25.3
12.0
13.3
14.6
78.2

99

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

Table 9.3.—Federal Government Receipts and Expenditures, Quarterly Totals Not Seasonally Adjusted
[Billions of dollars]
Quarterly totals not seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980
I

IV

Receipts
Personal tax and nontax receipts
Corporate profits tax accruals
Indirect business taxes and nontax liability
Contributions for social insurance

1981

II

III

I

IV

II

1982
III

I

IV

II

III

IV

1

118.3

126.6

144.2

136.8

133.3

147.3

173.1

156.6

150.0

151.6

171.5

154.8

139.6

2
3
4
. . 5

57.7
18.0
7.6
35.0

53.7
18.3
7.6
47.1

71.2
16.3
9.7
46.9

67.8
17.3
10.6
41.1

64.9
18.4
11.1
38.8

61.5
17.7
13.7
54.4

86.4
17.1
14.8
54.9

76.6
17.3
14.0
48.8

74.2
15.4
14.0
46.4

70.0
11.0
12.4
58.2

87.4
12.6
12.1
59.4

78.8
12.3
11.9
51.8

68.5
10.6
12.0
48.6

6

135.5

142.5

146.5

152.0

161.1

167.5

166.7

172.7

182.3

183.3

183.8

190.5

206.8

Purchases of goods and services
National defense
Nondefense

7
8
9

45.9
29.7
16.2

47.0
31.5
15.5

48.7
32.2
16.5

47.7
32.6
15.1

53.6
34.9
18.7

54.2
35.9
18.3

53.9
37.7
16.1

56.9
38.7
18.2

64.3
41.8
22.5

62.8
42.0
20.7

59.8
43.8
16.0

64.2
45.8
18.4

72.0
47.8
24.2

Transfer payments
To persons
To foreigners

10
11
12

54.9
53.7
1.2

59.3
58.1
1.2

59.7
58.6
1.1

65.5
64.2
1.2

67.0
65.3
1.7

70.2
69.0
1.3

69.3
68.1
1.2

72.8
71.2
1.5

74.3
72.7
1.7

77.1
75.6
1.5

78.3
76.8
1.5

80.4
79.0
1.5

85.3
83.4
1.9

Grants-in-aid to State and local governments

13

21.9

21.0

21.5

22.2

23.9

22.8

22.1

21.3

21.6

20.3

21.2

20.3

22.2

Net interest paid
Interest paid
To persons and business
To foreigners
Less* Interest received by government

14
15
16
17
18

11.2
14.4
11.5
2.9
3.1

12.8
15.8
12.7
3.1
3.0

13.6
16.9
14.0
2.9
3.3

13.1
16.7
13.7
3.0
3.6

13.9
17.9
14.4
3.5
4.0

17.3
21.4
17.4
3.9
4.1

17.9
22.2
18.0
4.2
4.3

18.5
23.3
19.0
4.3
4.8

19.4
24.7
20.4
4.3
5.3

20.1
25.6
21.1
4.5
5.5

21.0
26.6
22.2
4.4
5.6

21.7
27.6
22.9
4.7
5.8

22.1
27.9
23.2
4.7
5.8

Subsidies less current surplus of government en- 19
terprises.
20
Subsidies
.
Less: Current surplus of government enterprises.. 21

1.6

2.5

2.8

3.5

2.8

2.9

3.5

3.3

2.6

3.1

3.6

3.9

5.2

2.3
.6

2.5
.1

2.4
-.5

2.3
-1.2

3.2
.4

3.0
.1

2.8
-.7

2.7
-.6

3.3
.7

3.5
.5

3.5
-.1

3.2
-.7

4.7
-.5

Expenditures

Less: Wage accruals less disbursements

0

22

Surplus or deficit ( — ), national income 23
and product accounts.

-17.3

0

0

-16.0

-2.2

0

-15.2

0

-27.9

0

0

-20.2

6.4

.1

-16.1

0

-32.3

0

-31.7

0

0

-12.4

0

-35.7

-67.2

II

III

IV

Table 9.4.— State and Local Government Receipts and Expenditures, Quarterly Totals Not Seasonally Adjusted
[Billions of dollars]
Quarterly totals not seasonally adjusted
Line

1979

1980
I

IV

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

II

1982

1981
III

I

IV

II

III

IV

I

1

97.5

93.8

93.2

92.2

106.9

102.7

103.8

98.7

113.0

106.3

110.2

103.7

118.8

... 2
3
.. .. 4
5

18.6
3.2
46.7
7.1

18.8
3.8
43.0
7.2

19.9
3.3
41.2
7.2

19.6
3.6
39.2
7.6

20.5
3.8
51.0
7.8

20.6
4.0
47.3
7.9

23.3
3.9
46.4
8.1

21.8
3.9
43.4
8.2

23.0
3.6
56.4
8.4

23.1
3.0
51.5
8.5

25.2
3.4
51.7
8.7

24.1
3.3
47.2
8.9

25.0
3.0
59.7
9.0

6

21.9

21.0

21.5

22.2

23.9

22.8

22.1

21.3

21.6

20.3

21.2

20.3

22.2

7

84.3

83.0

87.7

92.4

92.4

91.0

95.0

98.7

98.1

96.6

101.2

105.1

104.9

Purchases of goods and services

8

80.6

79.5

84.1

88.5

88.7

87.1

91.2

94.3

93.9

92.2

97.0

100.6

100.7

Transfer payments to persons

9

9.2

9.5

9.7

10.1

10.4

10.6

10.7

10.9

11.1

11.1

11.2

11.5

11.8

Net interest paid
Interest paid to persons and business
Less* Interest received by government

10
11
12

-3.5
4.6
8.1

-3.8
4.7
8.5

-4.1
4.7
8.9

-4.4
4.9
9.3

-4.7
5.1
9.8

-4.8
5.4
10.2

-4.8
5.7
10.5

-4.8
6.1
11.0

-4.8
6.6
11.4

-4.7
7.0
11.8

-4.8
7.4
12.2

-5.0
7.7
12.6

53
7.9
13.2

Less* Dividends received by government

13

Subsidies less current surplus of government en- 14
terprises.
15
Subsidies
Less: Current surplus of government enterprises.. 16

.5

.5

-1.7

-1.5
.1
1.6

.5

-1.5

.1
1.8

.1
1.5

.4

-1.4
.1
1.4

.4

-1.6
.1
1.7

.4

-1.5
.1
1.6

.4

.5

-1.3

-1.6
.1
1.7

.1
1.4

.5

-1.6
.1
1.7

.5

-1.4
.1
1.5

.6

-1.6
.1
1.7

17

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Surplus or deficit (— ), national income and 18
product accounts.

13.2

10.7

5.5

-.2

14.5

11.7

8.8

0

14.9

9.7

9.0

Less* Wage accruals less disbursements

NOTE.—Prior to 1968, dividends received is included in interest received (line 12).




.6

-1.4
.1
1.5
0

-1.4

.6

-1.8
.1
1.9
0

14.0

100

July 1983

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
Table 9.5.—Foreign Transactions in the National Income and Product Accounts, Quarterly Totals Not Seasonally Adjusted
[Billions of dollars]
Quarterly totals not seasonally adjusted
Line

1980

1979

Receipts from foreigners
Exports of goods and services
Merchandise
Sendees
Factor income
Other

2
3
4
5
6

1982
III

IV

III

IV

79.1

84.7

86.1

81.5

87.7

92.2

94.1

89.6

93.9

88.9

93.0

84.5

81.2

79.1
50.8
28.3
19.1
9.2

83.5
53.5
30.1
20.1
9.9

86.1
56.1
29.9
19.0
10.9

81.5
52.9
28.6
16.4
12.2

87.7
57.5
30.1
19.0
11.1

91.1
59.0
32.1
20.6
11.5

94.1
60.4
33.7
21.1
12.6

89.6
54.7
34.9
21.4
13.5

93.9
58.5
35.4
23.1
12.3

88.9
54.9
34.0
21.5
12.5

93.0
56.2
36.8
23.3
13.4

84.5
49.7
34.7
21.1
13.7

81.2
48.4
32.9
20.6
12.2

0

1.2

0

0

0

1.1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

79.1

84.7

86.1

81.5

87.7

92.2

94.1

89.6

93.9

88.9

93.0

84.5

81.2

74.3
58.7
15.6
6.8

80.3
63.1
17.2
7.7
9.5

79.5
61.7
17.8
7.2
10.5

75.2
57.6
17.6
6.2
11.4

79.9
61.8
18.0
8.0
10.0

83.7
64.9
18.8
8.6
10.3

88.1
66.9
21.2
9.5
11.7

85.7
63.6
22.1
10.0
12.1

85.0
65.7
19.3
8.7
10.6

81.8
61.5
20.3
9.7
10.6

60.9
23.0
10.8
12.2

85.8
62.9
22.9
10.2
12.7

78.7
59.2
19.5
8.6
10.9

1.5
.2
1.3

1.4
.2
1.2

1.7
.2
1.5

2.0
.3
1.7

1.8
.3
1.5

1.8
.3
1.5

1.7
.2
1.5

2.2
.3
1.9

4.3

4.3

4.5

4.4

Capital grants received by the United States (net)... 7
Payments to foreigners

1981
IV

III

IV

Imports of goods and services
Merchandise
Services
Factor income
Other

10
11
12
13

Transfer payments (net)
From persons (net)
From government (net)

14
15
16

1.6
.3
1.2

1.4
.2
1.2

1.3
.2
1.1

1.5
.2
1.2

2.1
.3
1.7

Interest paid by government to foreigners

17

2.9

3.1

2.9

3.0

3.5

Net foreign investment

18

.4

2.4

1.8

2.2

4.2
3.1

.3

-2.0

2.6

3.0

4.7

-7.8

4.7

-4.4

Table 9.6.—Corporate Profits With Inventory Valuation Adjustment and Without Capital Consumption Adjustment, Quarterly Totals Not
Seasonally Adjusted
[Billions of dollars]
Quarterly totals not seasonally adjusted
Line

1980

1979

Corporate profits with inventory valuation
adjustment and without capital consumption adjustment.
Profits before tax..
Profits tax liabilityProfits after tax
Inventory valuation adjustment....




51.0

47.7

63.1

62.1

21.2
41.9

22.0
40.1

-12.1

1981
III

IV

-14.5

IV

1982
III

52.2

47.3

48.9

55.9

56.9

59.6

58.5

56.8

56.5

19.7
36.3

20.9
36.0

22.2
37.5

21.6
36.9

21.0
35.8

21.2
35.3

-8.0

-9.7

-10.7

IV

-6.0

-4.3

III

IV

39.4

43.8

42.6

40.1

55.2

41.3

46.1

44.3

42.5

19.0
36.2

14.0
27.3

16.0
30.1

15.6
28.7

13.5
28.9

-3.6

-2.3

-1.7

-2.4

CURRENT BUSINESS STATISTICS

STATISTICS here update series published in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS, biennial statistical supplement to the SURVEY OF CURRENT
BUSINESS. That volume (available from the Superintendent of Documents for $9.50, stock no. 003-010-00089-9) provides a description of each series, references to
sources of earlier figures, and historical data as follows: For all series, monthly or quarterly, 1975 through 1978, annually, 1947-78; for selected series, monthly
or quarterly, 1947-78 (where available).
The sources of the series are given in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS; they appear in the main descriptive note for each series, and are also listed
alphabetically on pages 171-172. Series originating in Government agencies are not copyrighted and may be reprinted freely. Series from private sources are
provided through the courtesy of the compilers, and are subject to their copyrights.

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

1983

1982

Annual

June

May

Aug.

July

Nov.

Oct.

Sept.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS
PERSONAL INCOME BY SOURCE t
Seasonally adjusted, at annual rates: t
Total personal income

r

r

r

r

2,720.6

2,734.1

Wage and salary disbursements, total
Commodity-producing industries, total....
Manufacturing
Distributive industries

do....
do....
do....
do....

1,493.2
r
509.5
r
385.3
r
361.6

1,578.9 1,579.2 1,581.2 1,583.1 1,583.1 1,591.8 1,608.9 1,606.3 1,616.8 1,632.1 1,653.3
1,568.1 1,568.0 1,571.7
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
513.7
•'517. 1
•507.4
510.0
'•499.0
498.6
501.0
508.7
512.1
514.6
509.2
522.4
508.6
505.9
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
376.7
387.7
384.7
•387.9
377.2
378.3
386.9
387.2
383.8
396.9
•393.5
383.8
382.8
384.6
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
•390.7
''384.2
382.3
383.0
381.2
380.1
378.8
395.5
''388.4
386.6
385.2
382.3
382.4
379.9

1,663.4
528.4
400.2
398.4

Service industries
Govt. and govt. enterprises
Other labor income
Proprietors' income: :|:
Farm
Nonfarm

do....
do....
do....

r
337.7
r

bil. $..

2,435.0

bil. $..
do....
do....
do....
'.. do....
do

r

374.1
306.0
156.6
r

284.4
143.5
r
30.5
r

do....
do....

Rental income of persons with capital
consumption adjustment
Dividends
Personal interest income
Transfer payments
Less: Personal contrib. for social insur
Total nonfarm income

2,578.6

r

r

41.4
62.8

r

r

337.2
104.6
2,377.0

2,568.0

r
373.3
r

15.4
r
88.7

r
49.9
r

66.4
366.2
r
374.5
112.0
r
2,527.6

r
48.9
r

65.7
373.0
364.8
112.0
r
2,523.0
r

r

2,589.8

r

r

2,586.7

r

2,597.4

r

377.8
307.8
157.4

r
38l.2
r

306.9
158.1

384.7
308.3
159.1

15.5
r
89.1

15.0
r
87.7

14.1
r
87.5

18.3
r
88.3

r
49.7
r

r
50.5
r
65.9
r
368.2
r

304.6
156.4

303.0
155.4

21.5
87.4

r

2,572.5

r
370.5
r

r

89.7

r
341.3
r

r

r

r

r

2,617.8

r
386.5
r

312.6
159.7
r
r

r
50.8
r
66.5
r
363.9
r

2,633.1

r

r

r

r

2,645.0 •2,652.6 •2,650.5 '-2,670.1

r

r

2,690.5

r

•'395.8
r
317.9
162.6

395.5
r
319.2
164.2

''397.8
•320.6
166.0

•'402.4
r
321.9
168.1

408.4
327.1
170.1

411.9
324.7
172.2

r
22.9
r

'21.3
•'97.8

•22,3
100.8

•23.6
103.1

'24.4
106.6

24.1
108.3

r
•'54.6
54.1
54.3
'54.8
r
•69.4
•'69.0
68.9
68.9
r
r
355.7
''356.6
355.0
•356.0
r
r
''403.9
''402.7
398.1
402.0
403.0
401.0
395.4
116.8
112.7
118.6
117.6
116.2
116.6
113.1
r
2,575.5 r2,589.4 r2,600.2 '2,599.7 ''2,618. 4 '2,637.5 '2,666.8

55.0
69.5
358.4
402.5
1 19.4
2,680.5

2,670.1 r2,690,5 •'2,720.6
r
•'401. 7
403.6
•415.0
''2,266.5 •'2.288.8 •'2, 305.6
•'2,146. 2 '•2,184.3 •2,217.4
•2,084.6 r 2,r 122,3 •2,155.3
270.6
'•277.5
•259.6
'786.6
•805.2
•780.1
1,044.9 1,065.2 1,072.5

2,734.1
419.9
2,314.1
2,238.8
2,176.4
286.3
807.5
1,082.6

387.7
314.5
160.4
r

r

23.8
89.1

r
52.8
51.4
r
67.4
66.8
r
361.7
362.2
r
r
392.9
378.9
365.6
379.2
383.1
112.7
112.1
112.8
112.8
112.8
r
2,527.4 r2,545.2 r2,543.1 r2,549.7 1-2,564.5

65.5

r
371.1
r

r

r

28.1
89.0

''52.9
'•68.0

r
363.3
r

'391.3
'316.4
161.2
r

r

26.1
92.5

•'5 1.0

r
68.3
r
364.3
r

96.7

r
53.8
r

68.7

r

r

r
360.0
r

DISPOSITION OF PERSONAL INCOME *
Seasonally adjusted, at annual rates:
Total personal income
Less: Personal tax and nontax payments
Equals: Disposable personal income
Less: Personal outlays
Personal consumption expenditures
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Interest paid by consumers to
business
Personal transfer payments to
foreigners (net)

bil. $..
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....

r

r

r

r

2,435.0
r
387.4
2,047.6
1,912.4
1,857.2
r
236.1
r
733.9
r
887.1
r

do....

Equals: personal saving
do....
Personal saving as percentage of disposable
personal income §
percent..
Disposable personal income in constant (1972)
dollars
bil. $..
Personal consumption expenditures in
constant (1972) dollars
do....
Durable goods
do....
Nondurable goods
do....
Services
do....
Implicit price deflator for personal consumption
expenditures
index 1972=100

r

54.3
r

do....

2,578.6 r2,568.0
r
r
402.1
406.9
2,176.5 r2,161.1
r
2,051.1 r2,039.0
1,979.9
1,991.9
r
r
248.6
244.5
r
r
761.0
758.1
r
r
986.4
973.3

0.9

r

58.1
1.1

2,572.5 r2,589.8 r2,586.7 r2,597.4 r2,617.8 r2,633.1 r2,645.0 '2,652.6
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
406.0
403.5
402.9
398.9
412.1
'399.5
400.2
400.4
'2,160.4 r2,191.0 r2,186.3 r2,197.2 r2,214.8 '2,229.6 r2,239.1 •2,253.2
r
2,038.8 r2,054.5 r 2,064.6 r2,086.1 r2,090.3 r2,110.2 ''2,120.5 ''2,127.1
r
r
r
''2,060.0
2,050.2
'•2,030.5
1,995.1
1,979.4
•'2,066. 2
2,026.4
2,005.1
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
•259.1
261.2
254.5
240.5
238.7
239.4
241.0
252.1
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
771.7
773.7
773.8
757.6
764.9
'776.5
767.9
766.8
r
r
r
980.8
990.7
999.6 1,006.4 1,016.3 1,024.0 1,025.1 1,030.5
r

r

57.8

135.3

125.4

122.0

121.6

r

r

r

r

6.6

1,054.7

5.8

r

58.2

5.9

r

58.3
1.1

1.3

1.3

136.4

121.6
r

r

58.7

111.0
r

5.6

r

58.7
1.0

1.1

1.1

'5.8

5.8

r

58.5

'59.5

•59.9

'60.0

'60.6

•60.9

'61.0

1.0

1.0

1.0

1.0

1.0

1.1

1.1

119.4

r

r

5.3

r

59.0

124.5

5.4

•2,650.5
•'402.3
r
2,248.2
r
2,129.3
•'2,068. 3
•256.9
r
774.5
1,036.9

5.4

118.5

'5.4

126.0
' 5.4

118.8

'5.4

120.3
'5. 1

104.5
1

4.6

1,060.2 1,063.5 1,053.3 1,062.4 1,057.1 1,058.5 1,060.9 1,066.8 1,070.8 1,073.7 1,070,3 1,077.2 1,078.4

'88. 1

61.2
1.1

75.4

3.9

1,083.5

r

956.8
141.2
r
362.5
r
453.1

970.2
139.8
r
364.2
r
466.2

974.3
143.1
r
366.1
r
465.2

965.1
137.4
r
361.7
r
466.0

r

967.4
136.3
r
364.1
r
466.9

969.5
135.7
r
365.2
r
468.7

976.2
142.6
'364.7
r
468.9

r

972.6
136.6
r
365.9
r
470.1

''981.0
144.9
r
365.2
''470.8

'985.1
148.0
'367.0
r
470.2

''984. 6
146.1
•367.9
r
470.6

''984.7
144.3
r
368.9
•471.5

'990.8 1,000.0
152.1
147.1
•'370.0
•370.0
•'477.9
•'473.7

1,012.8
156.4
376.5
479.9

194.1

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

209.0

''209. 1

•'209.8

''210.0

•'210.4

'212.2

212.8

134.8

131.2

133.5

138.1

140.5

141.9

143.7

'149.3

r

205.3

r

203.2

r

205.1

206.2

r

206.8

r

207.6

208.8

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION
Federal Reserve Board Index of Quantity Output
Not Seasonally Adjusted
Total index
By industry groupings:
Mining and utilities

1967=100..

151.0

138.6

138.5

141.8

136.2

140.5

141.2

138.5

do....

155.0

146.3

142.4

143.9

144.6

146.8

140.1

136.7

136.4

140.7

147.2

141.7

136.8

134.2

"133.4

'139.0

do....
do....
do....

150.4
164.8
140.5

137.6
156.2
124.7

138.0
154.5
126.6

141.6
159.9
128.9

135.1
152.9
122.7

139.3
161.9
123.7

141.2
164.1
125.4

138.8
162.4
122.5

134.5
155.7
119.9

129.6
147.5
117.2

131.8
149.9
119.2

138.0
157.5
124,5

141,5
160.8
128.1

143.1
162.5
129.7

"145.2
"164.4
"131.9

"150,5
"170.5
"136.7

Total index

do....

151.0

138.6

139.2

138.7

138.8

138.4

137.3

135.7

134.9

135.2

137.4

138.1

140.0

142.7

"144.3

"145.9

By market groupings:
Products, total
Final products
Consumer goods

do....
do....
do....

150.6
149.5
147.9

141.8
141.5
142.6

142.3
142.2
143.6

142.1
142.1
144.8

142.6
142.5
145.8

142.0
141.2
144.1

140.8
140.0
143.4

139.3
138.7
142.2

139.0
138.3
141.3

139.9
139.5
142.0

140.9
140.1
143.6

140.3
138.9
143.4

141.6
139.9
144.3

144.5
142.8
147.6

"146.0
"144,5
"149.5

"147.6
"146.0
"151.3

Manufacturing
Nondurable manufactures
Durable manufactures
Seasonally Adjusted

See footnotes at end of tables.




S-l

S-2

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

1983

1982
May

Annual

July 1983

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Continued
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION—Continued
Seasonally Adjusted— Continued
By market groupings—Continued
Final products—Continued
Durable consumer goods
Automotive products
Autos and utility vehicles
Autos
..
Home goods
Nondurable consumer goods ....
Clothing
Consumer staples
.
Consumer foods and tobacco
Nonfood staples
Equipment
... .
Business equipment
Industrial equipment #
Building and mining equip
Manufacturing equipment
Commercial, transit, farm eq. #
Commercial equipment
Transit equipment
Defense and space equipment
Intermediate products
Construction supplies
Business supplies
Materials
Durable goods materials
Nondurable goods materials
Knergy materials
By industry groupings:
Mining and utilities
Mining
Metal mining
Coal
Oil and gas extraction #
Crude oil
Natural gas
Stone and earth minerals

140.5
137.9
111.2
1034

129.2
129.5
99.0
866

132.6
138.9
111.8
96 1

134.6
143.0
117.1
1019

137.3
149.7
127.7
1146

132.9
135.5
107.1
933

131.3
135.5
105.8
943

126.5
123.6
89.6
79.5

124.6
120.7
86.9
77.7

125.9
128.7
99.0
87.9

131.6
136.2
107.0
97.1

134.4
144.3
120.8
107.3

r

!36.3
142.6
116.4
99.9

140.1
145.3
117.8
102.7

P

144.6
"151.5
P
124.9
"107.4

e

do

1420

129 1

129 1

1299

1304

1314

1289

128.1

126.8

124.3

129.1

128.8

132.8

137.3

"140.7

e

do .
do
do
do
do

1509
1198
1595
1503
1700

1480

1479

1488

149 1

1486

1482

148.5

147.9

148.4

148.3

147.0

147.5

150.6

"151.5

152.3

1590
149 7
1697

1590
1499
1695

1599
1509
1704

1597
1499
1712

1594
1496
1708

1588
1486
1707

159.1
1502
169.5

158.1
1490
168.7

158.8
1495
169.6

158.6
1509
167.6

157.4
1495
166.5

158.1
1484
169.4

161.2
1509
173.1

"161.9

e

"173.6

174.4

do. .
do....
do
do....
do....

151 8
181.1
1664
286.2
127.9

139.8
157.9
1349
214.2
107.2

1404
159.9
1389
2244
109.7

1384
156.7
1340
209.0
107.5

1380
154.9
1313
200.4
106.0

1373
153.9
1284
190.8
104.4

1352
150.5
1238
182 1
101.6

134.0
147.1
118.3
169.3
98.0

134.2
146.4
117.2
165.7
97.5

136.1
148.1
117.9
171.9
97.0

135.3
146.6
118.4
173.8
97.6

132.7
142.7
113.7
153.6
97.9

133.8
143.7
113.1
145.3
99.7

136.2
147.0
113.7
142.9
101.7

"137.5
"148.6
"115.8
"151.6
"102.1

138.7
149.8
e
l!6.8
e
!53.8
e
!02.8

do....
do....
do

198.0
258.7
1254

184.4
253.5
1039

184.1
2477
1109

183.0
2475
1083

182.2
2488
1063

183.3
2535
1020

181.4
2540
955

180.5
253.5
932

180.2
254.8
923

183.0
258.6
962

179.2
254.9
908

176.1
251.2
882

179.2
255.7
r
90 1

185.4
r
264.3
r
920

"186.6
"266.1
"924

187.9
e
267.7
e
94 1

do
do....
do....
do

1027
154.4
141.9
1667

1094
143.3
124.3
162 1

1077
1426
122.2
1628

1076
1419
123.1
1606

1095
1428
124.1
161 4

1095
1447
127.1
162 1

1095
1437
125.5
1618

1119
141.6
122.5
160.5

113.6
141.8
123.4
160.1

115.9
141.5
123.0
159.8

1164
143.7
127.0
160.3

116 1
145.3
129.7
160.9

117.0
147.8
133.1
162.3

118.2
150.8
136.8
164.8

"1187
"151.9
"138.5
"1653

e
!200
e
!53.5
e

do
do....
do....
do....

1516
149.1
174.6
129.0

1337
125.0
157.5
125.1

1343
126.6
156.6
125.4

1335
126.6
153.5
125.4

1330
126.0
152.3
126.0

1328
125.1
154.5
124.5

1320
123.0
158.5
121.0

130.0
118.5
158.2
122.6

128.4
116.4
157.3
121.4

127.8
116.5
155.6
120.4

132.0
121.5
159.7
123.0

134.9
125.3
164.0
121.8

137.6
128.7
167.5
121.9

139.8
132.3
169.2
121.3

"141.5
"134.4
"171.7
"121.2

e
!43.3
e
!36.8
e
!73.2
e

e
!402
e

1967=100..
do....
do....
do

!48.8
159.5
135.4
e
l!8.3
!42.8

!62.3

!40.9

!22.2

do
do....
do
do....
do
do....
do
do

1550
142.2
123 1
141.3
1468
95.1
1118
1294

1463
126.1
824
142.7
131 1
95.1
104 1
112 1

1488
128.9
900
1492
1327
952
1028
1146

1452
123.5
718
1444
129 1
957
1023
1066

1426
120.1
58 1
140.3
1270
957
1028
1038

141 3
116.9
534
135.8
1233
950
995
1057

1397
114.7
554
1279
1210
949
101 3
1063

1404
115.9
63 1
143.2
119 1
93.9
1042
1085

140.4
116.8
704
134.1
1203
94.6
1035
111.9

140.1
118.4
749
129.7
1229
95.1
968
111.7

1413
121.9
81 7
144.8
1246
96.5
101 7
1128

1375
115.6
75 1
136.5
1170
94.4
965
1157

137.7
112.6
752
127.3
1144
r
95.3

138.8
111.7
r
79.8
125.3
1122
r
96.1

"1396
"112.6
P
830
"125.6
"1133
"95.1

114.0

117.7

"1168

do
do....

169 1
190.9

1687
190.5

1709
193.4

1694
191.6

1677
189.2

1685
189.9

1675
188.2

1678
188.4

166.7
188.3

164.2
185.6

163 1
184.4

1620
183.0

165.8
188.2

169.2
192.5

"1697
"193.1

Manufacturing
Nondurable manufactures
Foods

do....
do. .
do....

150.4
164.8
152.1

137.6
1562
151.1

137.9
1550
150.5

137.7
1553
151.0

138.1
1557
151.0

138.0
1569
150.7

137.1
1567
149.0

135.0
156.2
151.5

134.0
155.3
152.0

134.5
155.6
152.8

136.7
1574
154.4

138.2
1590
153.0

140.4
1607
152.0

143.1
1633
153.5

"145.0
"1649

Tobacco products
Textile mill products
Apparel products
Paper and products

do....
do
do....
do

122.2
1357
120.4
1550

118.0
1245

118.6
1235

123.6
1237

121.4
1243

120.6
1259

113.3
126 1

110.6
1259

113.0
123 1

109.9
1222

104.7
1258

108.5
1307

113.4
1319

114.4
1364

"137 1

1508

1465

1468

1470

1525

1543

1550

1545

151 1

1588

1556

1563

1570

"1606

e

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

do
do....
do
do....
do

1442
215.6
1297
274.0
693

1438
193.6
1222
257.0
61 1

1426
193.2
1243
258.9
623

1439
194.1
1247
256.8
629

1453
195.6
121 4
261.1
608

144 3
196.4
1226
262.0
609

142.0
194.1
1238
256.3
595

141.7
192.8
120.0
250.2
57.7

142.8
195.9
118.7
249.7
56.0

1413
197.6
1135
256.2
595

144 0
202.3
111 7
264.0
61 7

1459
r
205.7
1148
r
272.0
r
594

1455
r
208.8
121 5
r
283.1
r
587

"1450
"210.9
"1236
"288.1
"598

e

!459

e

!244

Durable manufactures
Ordnance, pvt. and govt
Lumber and products
...
Furniture and fixtures
Clay glass and stone products. . .
Primary metals
Iron and steel
Nonferrous metals
Fabricated metal products
Nonelectrical machinery
Electrical machinery

do....
do....
do
do
do
do
do....
do
do
do....
do....

140.5
81.1
119 1
157.2
1479
1079
99.8
1224
1364
171.2
178.4

144 1
196.1
1218
254.7
609
124.7
86.9
1126
151.9
1282
753
61.7
997
114 8
149.0
169.3

126.1
86.3
1106
151.1
1250
752
62.4
970
1158
150.0
1709

125.5
86.5
1122
1525
126 1
728
58.0
989
1150
147.4
1708

125.9
87.1
1169
1545
1269
729
58.1
1029
1155
147.1
1703

124.9
86.5
1203
156.7
1288
729
57.4
1003
114 3
147.2
1697

123.5
86.9
1199
1557
1304
732
56.4
1062
1123
144.9
1670

120.3
89.5
1172
154.3
128.1
696
54.1
955
1076
140.4
165.4

119.3
91.9
119 1
152.4
127.3
636
47.5
92.2
1070
139.6
165.5

119.9
92.5
121.4
153.7
125.4
635
46.6
94.2
1073
139.2
165.5

122.5
93.5
1300
150.0
1280
73 1
59.0
1006
1076
138.0
1695

123.9
93.3
1302
154.0
131 8
779
64.3
1026
1103
136.2
1689

126.3
r
91.9
1287
161.0
1356
r
81 2
66.9
1073
1139
138.6
1738

129.1
r
93.2
132 1
168.3
1383
r
825
r
68.5
1039
1153
143.2
1775

"131.2
"94.0
"1358
"1697
"1393
"85 1
"703
"1093
"116 1
"146.6
"1796

do
do
do

116 1
122.3
1703

1049
109.8
1619

110 0
1198
1638

111 6
1240
1648

112 7
1272
1652

107 0
116.7
1655

105 3
1135
1619

1008
103.0
1574

1002
101.7
1558

1037
108.8
1552

1063
113.9
1545

1096
123.0
1534

110 1
123.2
1540

111 4
125.5
1556

"113 6
"1303
"1570

.. .

Utilities
Electric

Transportation equipment
Motor vehicles and parts
Instruments
BUSINESS SALES
Mfg and trade sales (unadj ) total $ .
Mfg. and trade sales (seas, adj.), total $
Manufacturing, total t
Durable goods industries
Nondurable goods industries
Retail trade, total §
Durable goods stores
Nondurable goods stores
Merchant wholesalers, total @
Durable goods establishments
Nondurable goods establishments ....

mil $ 4 273 188 4 130 150 352 377 360 505 333 844 340 978 349 333 343 970 342 005 357 536 315 375 323 346 364 720 r349 802 364 429
do.... '4,273,188 '4,130,150 353,110 349,742 347,676 343,426 342,882 336,905 338,722 338,391 345,337 341,490 348,009 r351,407 363,094
do.;.. '2,017,545 '1,910,119 163,007 163,120 162,417 160,016 160,458 154,194 154,318 154,543 158,239 158,081 161,803 163,372
167,929
1 006 465 922 115 79680 79 197 78856 77250 76419 72478 73005 73495 77744 77769 79595 r80 548 83 012
do
do... 1 Oil 080 988 004 83327 83923 83561 82766 84039 81 716 81313 81048 80495 80312 82208 r83 824 84917
do.... 1 1,047,573 '1,075,679 90,813 88,603 89,469 89,069 89,897 90,905 92,492 92,459 92,308 91,164 93,263 rr95,449 98,423
do
316 020 320 868 28 127 26 136 26 124 25831 26619 27 154 28721 28723 28307 27490 29 160 30 668 32 013
731 553 754811 62686 62467 63345 63238 63278 63751 63771 63736 64001 63674 64 103 r64 781 66410
do...
do.... '1208,070 '1 144352 99290 98019 95790 94341 92527 91,806 91 912 91 389 94790 92245 92943 r92 586 96742
509 743 457 713 37917 37674 37687 37065 37 208 37645 37900 37756 39617 37222 37570 r37 758 39 464
do
do..
698 327 686 639 61373 60345 58 103 57276 55319 54 161 54012 53633 55 173 55023 55373 r54 828 57278

Mfg. and trade sales in constant (1972) dollars
(seas, adj.), total *
bil. $..
Manufacturing *
do
Retail trade *
do....
Merchant wholesalers *
do....
See footnotes at end of tables.




157.3
708
47.1
39.5

155.5
708
45.5
39.1

155.0
706
45.9
38.5

153.3
695
45.6
38.2

1535
696
46.2
37.8

149.7
663
46.1
37.2

151.8
666
47.3
37.9

151.9
670
47.2
37.7

156.0
695
47.2
39.3

1552
696
46.8
38.8

157.5
710
47.8
38.7

158.3
725
47.8
38.0

l!3.1

e
!23.7
e

l!38

e

!703
193.7
146.6
!659

e

!609

e

!33.2
e
95.0

e

86 9

e
l!73
e
!47.6
e

!823

e
l!6 9
e
!367
e

!567

S-3

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

Annual

1982
May

June

July

Aug.

1983
Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Continued
BUSINESS INVENTORIES
Mfg. and trade inventories, book value, end of year
or month (unadj ) total $
mil $

520 611

506 147 520 341 519 729 518 390 516 756 518 362 524 517 522 035 506 147 503 783 506 862 506 481 r507 118 507 369

Mfg. and trade inventories, book value, end of year
or month (seas, adj.), total $
mil. $..

526,152

Manufacturing, total t
Durable goods industries ....
Nondurable goods industries

do....
do
do....

282 333
186 222
96 111

511,942 519,119 521,040 521,145 521,257 521,000 519,797 513,888 511,942 507,550 507,665 503,222 r504,796 506,486
264 902 276 356 274 912 274 629 273 809 271 675 270 786 267 920 264 902 262 117 260 856 257 304 r257 397 258 400
175 200 183 378 182 811 182 099 181 543 180 520 179 675 177 061 175 200 172 506 171 572 169 377 169
814 170 744
89702 92978 92 101 92530 92266 91 155 91 111 90859 89702 89611 89284 87927 r87 583 87656

Retail trade total §
Durable goods stores
Nondurable goods stores

do
do
do

126 833
59095
67 738

128 250 124 631 126 300 126 662 128 258 129 788 128 849 127 619 128 250 127 869 130 392 129 327 129 901 131 842
59597 57039 58225 58888 60 204 61 668 60 581 59 417 59 597 59735 61 517 60 412 rr60 640 61 602
68 653 67 592 68 075 67 774 68 054 68 120 68 268 68 202 68 653 68 134 68 875 68915 69 261 70 240

Merchant wholesalers total @
Durable goods establishments
Nondurable goods establishments

do
do....
do...,

116 986
76,674
40,312

118 790 118 132 119 828 119854 119 190 119537 120 162 118 349 118 790 117 564 116 417 116 591 117498
116 244
78,514 77,214 78,481 79,613 79,240 79,811 80,567 78,752 78,514 77,571 75,814 75,708 r75,338 74,291
40276 40918 41347 40241 39950 39726 39595 39597 40276 39993 40603 40883 r42 160 41953

Mfg. and trade inventories in constant(1972)dollars,
end of year or month(seas.adj.),total*
bil. $..
Manufacturing *
.
do
Retail trade *
do...
Merchant wholesalers *
do

264.5
145 3
647
54 5

265.2
144 6
654
55 2

265.6
144 4
655
55 6

2655
144 0
66 4
55 0

2660
143 3
672
55 5

265.2
142 6
669
55 8

262.3
141 0
659
55 3

2610
139 7
659
55 4

2588
138 1
655
55 1

258.9
137 9
665
54 5

2573
136 9
66 2
54 2

2575
137 0
66 1
54 4

BUSINESS INVENTORY-SALES RATIOS
Manufacturing and trade, total t

ratio-

1.43

1.51

1.47

1.49

150

152

152

154

1.52

151

147

149

145

1 44

139

Manufacturing, total t
Durable goods industries
Materials and supplies ....
Work in process
Finished goods

do
do
do
do
do

166
2 19
069
0 97
053

176
2 41
0 73
1 06
0 62

1 70
2 30
071
1 02
0 60

169
2 31
0 71
1 03
0 60

169
2 31
0 71
1 01
0 60

1 71
2 35
0 71
1 04
0 62

1 69
2 36
0 71
1 05
0 62

176
2 48
0 75
1 11
0 66

1 74
2 43
0 74
1 10
0 63

1 71
2 38
0 72
1 08
0 61

1 66
2 22
0 66
0 99
0 56

1 65
2 21
0 66
0 98
0 56

1 59
2 13
0 63
0 95
0 55

1 58
2 11
0 62
0 94
0 54

1 54
2 06
0 61
0 92
0 52

do....
do
do
do

1.13
0 45
0 19
0 48

1.14
0 46
0 19
0 49

1.12
0 46
0 19
0 48

1.10
0 44
0 19
0 47

1.11
0 45
0 19
0 47

1.11
0 45
0 19
0 48

1.08
0 43
0 18
0 47

1.11
0 44
0 19
0 49

1.12
0 45
0 19
0 49

1.11
0 45
0 18
0 48

1.11
0 44
0 18
0 50

1.11
0 44
0 18
0 49

1.07
0 42
0 17
0 47

1.06
0 42
0 17
0 47

1.03
0 41
0 17
0 46

Retail trade total §
Durable goods stores
Nondurable goods stores

do
do....
do....

1 40
2.17
1.06

1 42
2.20
108

1 37
2.03
108

1 43
2.23
109

1 42
2.25
107

1 44
2.33
108

1 44
2.32
108

1 42
2.23
107

1 38
2.07
107

1 39
2.07
108

1 39
2.11
1 06

1 43
2.24
1 08

1 39
2.07
1 08

1 36
1.98
1 07

1 34
1.92
1 06

Merchant wholesalers total @
Durable goods establishments
Nondurable goods establishments

do
do....
do....

1 13
1.74
0.69

1 24
2.06
0.70

1 19
2.04
0.67

1 22
2.08
069

1 25
2.11
069

1 26
2.14
070

1 29
2.14
072

1 31
2.14
073

1 29
2.08
073

1 30
2.08
075

1 24
1.96
072

1 26
2.04
074

1 25
2.02
074

1
27
r
2.00
077

1 20
1.88
073

168
2 05
1 37
1 38

171
204
1 44
1 41

171
2 05
143
1 44

173
2 07
146
1 44

173
2 06
146
1 47

1 77
2 15
145
1 50

1 73
2 12
1 39
1 46

1 72
2 08
1 40
1 47

1 66
1 99
1 39
1 40

1 67
1 98
1 42
1 40

1 63
1 93
139
1 40

1 63
1 89
1 38
1 43

...

Nondurable goods industries
Materials and supplies
Work in process
Finished goods

Manufacturing and trade in constant (1972) dollars,
total *
do....
Manufacturing *
do
Retail trade *
do....
Merchant wholesalers *
do
MANUFACTURERS' SALES, INVENTORIES,
AND ORDERS
Shipments (not seas adj ) total t

mil $ 2 017 545 1 910 119 163 858 171 147 149 358 157 045 167 548 159 487 153 628 150 068 146 613 159 488 170 007
do
1 006 465 922 115 80869 84664 70 639 73669 80 160 75 894 72 461 71 371 69 982 78 272 85 247
do....
48,001
44,005
4',040
3,597
3,805
3,903
3,549
3,578
3,237
3,368
3,839
3,989
3,887
7 979
do
141 943 107 031
9 373
9387
7 790
7 383
7 394
8 066
8 285
8 593
8 671
9 482
do .
70 125
4 191
47320
4042
3 130
2993
3348
3615
3*429
3 059
3220
3*472
3 896
do
123 665 113 967 10 196 10 474
9 324
8 855
9 105
8 469
9 706
9 825
9 374 10 074
8 257
do
201 538 180 612 15493 16475 13374 13 634 15 488 13902 13*727 14 678 12 186 13 413 15 424
do
140 195 140 550 11 949 12 588 10 843 11 327 12 301 11 908 11 496 11 421 11 042 12 214 12 967
do
205 222 195 370 18256 19287 14978 14 882 17 130 16 393 15*654 15 489 16 123 19*113 20 529
do.... 116,981 112,177
10,931 11,624
9,432
8,605
8,622
7,694
9,826 11,737 12,346
8,690 10,024
do
48292
48873
4 204
4469
4 085
4 049
3 673
3 691
3 900
4 098
4 064
4 065
4 516
do
1011080 988 004 82989 86483 78719 83 376 87388 83593 81 167 78697 76631 81 216 84 760
do
272 140 277 324 23 171 24 347 22 083 22 789 24 867 23 694 23 325 22*883 21 404 23 596 24 454
do....
13,130
1,394
1,265
14,455
1,145
1,347
1,028
1,284
1,498
1,121
1,108
1,046
1,476
4 047
do
50261
47 217
4 324
4 009
4 076
3 245
3 949
3 842
3 826
3 445
4 252
4 557
do
80236
6 511
6 794
78 989
6 669
6 354
6 506
6 145
6 754
6 813
6 789
6 038
7 058
do.... 180,457 172,803 15,237 15,514 13,098 14,102 14,948 13,269 13,284 13,719 13,851 14,974 16,109
do.... 224,132 206,430 17,669 18,161 17,721 17,377 17,824 17,473 16,793 16,379 15,241 14,206 14,781
do....
53,173
50,163
4,578
4,130
4,215
4,344
4,076
4,148
4,325
3,832
3,533
3,901
4,442
do
163 007 163 120 162 417 160 016 160 458 154 194 154 318 154 543 158 239 158 081 161 803

Durable goods industries total
Stone, clay, and glass products
Primary metals
....
Blast furnaces, steel mills
Fabricated metal products
Machinery except electrical
. .
Electrical machinery
Transportation equipment..
..
Motor vehicles and parts
Instruments and related products
Nondurable goods industries, total
Food and kindred products
Tobacco products
Textile mill products
Paper and allied products
Chemical and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and plastics products
Shipments (seas adj ) total t
By industry group:
Durable goods industries, total #
Stone clay and glass products
Primary metals
Blast furnaces steel mills

78 856
3 638
8737
3758
9 882
14,827
12,181
17 662
10727
4 103

77 250
3 636
8694
3 698
9 648
14,483
11,682
17 517
10826
4 095

76 419
3 686
8385
3 593

10 020
15,569
12,077
17373
10271
4 158

79 197
3 708
8958
3999
9 789
15,197
11,880
17855
10615
4 171

83327
23576
l'l38
3 953
6454
14,692
17689
4.206

83923
23616
1361
3 984
6521
14,727
17878
4.355

83561
23558
1011
3 847
6558
14,449
18042
4.389

82766
22 686
1232
3 965
6623
14,627
17 346
4.213

do
do
do....
do

79680
3 738
9 151
4 038

Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electrical machinery
Transportation equipment
Motor vehicles and parts
Instruments and related products

do
do....
do....
do
do....
do.. .

Nondurable goods industries, total #
Food and kindred products
Tobacco products
Textile mill products
Paper and allied products
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and elastics products

do....
do
do....
do
do.. .
do....
do
do....

See footnotes at end of tables.




....

73 005
3 627
7737
3 127

73 495
3 634
7916
3 163

77 744
4 016
8 240
3 249

9 447
14,948
11,651
16 476
9634
4 245

72 478
3 624
7841
3 114
8 904
13,841
11,429
15 165
8 176
3949

9 082
14,123
11,372
15 310
8290
3944

8 856
13,794
11,557
16 120
8894
4 050

84039
23 519
1504
3 984
6581
14,516
17829
4.293

81 716
22904
1219
3 911
6575
13,799
17563
4.092

81313
22 937
1094
3 820
6581
14,135
16831
4.032

81048
22 931
1306
4 100
6531
14,163
16279
3.931

164 679 168 870
r

82
387
r
3,962
r
9
448
r
3 792
r
9 828
14 038
12 545
19 902
12,264
r
3 892

84319
4,082
9 744
3 850
10 248
14 440
12 524
20 287
13,140
3 882

r
82
r

84 551
23 712
1,414
4 339
6 949
16,093
15,827
4,200

292
22 835
1,269
r
4 140

r
7 070
15,351
15,431
r
4,280

163 372 167 929
r

9 358
13,701
11,987
17 998
10732
4 101

77 769
3 799
8230
3 241
9 373
13,097
11,977
19 135
11666
3 954

79 595
3 822
8 925
3 594
9 515
14,191
12,364
18 530
11037
3 946

r
9 617
14,117
12,619
18 763
11
259
r
3 971

83 012
4 013
9513
3 857
10 077
14,553
12,658
19 295
12346
3 938

80495
23018
1 102
3 823
6768
14,287
14 804
4.183

80312
23 583
1 191
3 936
6614
14,709
13953
3.967

82208 rr82 824
23 778 23 460
1572
1 267
4 173 rr4 166
6 695
6 994
14,716 14,635
15 068 15
877
r
4.017
4.130

84917
24 138
1406
4 278
6890
15,529
15 827
4.194

80
548
r
3 885
r
8
958
r
3 588

June

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-4
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

1982

Annual

July 1983

May

June

July

Aug.

1983

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Continued
MANUFACTURERS' SALES, INVENTORIES,
AND ORDERS t— Continued
Shipments (seas, adj.) t — Continued
By market category: t
Home goods and apparel
mil $ 135915
Consumer staples
do.... '355,359
Equipment and defense prod., exc. auto .... do.... 1305,123
Automotive equipment
do.... '137,770
Construction materials and supplies
do.... 1149,156
'934 222
Other materials and supplies
do
Supplementary series:
Household durables
do.... '61,152
Capital goods industries
do.... '345,885
Nondefense
do.... '297,788
Defense
do.... '48,097
Inventories, end of year or month: t
Book value (unadjusted), total
Durable goods industries, total
Nondurable goods industries, total
Book value (seasonally adjusted), total t
By industry group:
Durable goods industries, total #
Stone clay and glass products
Primary metals
Blast furnaces, steel mills
Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electrical machinery
Transportation equipment
Motor vehicles and parts
Instruments and related products
By stage of fabrication: t
Materials and supplies
Work in process
Finished goods
Nondurable goods industries, total #
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
By stage of fabrication:
Materials and supplies
Work in process
Finished goods
By market category: t
Home goods and apparel
Consumer staples
Equip, and defense prod., exc. auto
Automotive equipment
Construction materials and supplies
Other materials and supplies
Supplementary series:
Household durables
Capital goods industries
Nondefense
Defense
New orders, net (not seas, adj.), total t
Durable goods industries total
Nondurable goods industries, total
New orders net (seas adj ) total 1"
By industry group:
Durable goods industries, total
Primary metals
Blast furnaces, steel mills
Nonferrous and other primary met
Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electrical machinery
Transportation equipment
Aircraft, missiles, and parts
Nondurable goods industries, total
Industries with unfilled orders i
Industries without unfilled orders ti
By market category: t
Home goods and apparel
Consumer staples
Equip, and defense prod., excl. auto
Automotive equipment
Construction materials and supplies
Other materials and supplies
Supplementary series:
Household durables
...
Capital goods industries
Nondefense
...
..
Defense
See footnotes at end of tables.




'130888
'367,743
'290,655
'130,758
'135,945
'854 130

10792
31,100
24,690
11,869
11,672
72884

10878
31,177
24,347
12,206
11,369
73 143

11 147
30,801
24,129
12,295
11,676
72369

11 213
30,408
23,637
12,338
11,552
70868

11 092
31,456
24,421
11,109
11,402
70978

10904
30,345
23,395
9,625
11,208
68717

10,676
30,592
23,506
9,822
11,226
68496

10395
30,792
23,805
10,445
11,048
68058

11 276
30,811
23,426
12,501
12,433
67792

11 415
31,501
23,061
13,474
12,026
66,604

11,208
32,055
23,797
12,902
12,291
69,550

11,716
r
31,133
r
23,992
13,139
12,333
r
71,059

11,847
32,344
23,565
14,312
12,946
72,915

'57,753
'327,792
'271,379
'56,413

4,792
28,045
23,373
4,672

4,859
27,836
22,955
4,881

5,041
27,442
22,584
4,858

4,760
26,577
21,811
4,766

4,927
27,111
22,130
4,981

4,828
26,220
21,210
5,010

4,683
26,279
21,311
4,968

4,449
26,532
21,455
5,077

4,976
26,339
21,196
5,143

4,910
26,017
20,762
5,255

4,971 r5,252
27,153 r27,402
22,037 --22,131
r
5,116
5,271

5,221
26,875
21,731
5,144

r
261,987 278,877 275,461 273,877 272,635 269,207 268,917 266,310 261,987 262,428 262,695 259,430 260,170 260,735
171,819
172,616
172,615 185,369 183,581 181,969 181,159 178,831 177,979 175,402 172,615 172,243 173,009 171,120
r
r
89,372 93,508 91,880 91,908 91,476 90,376 90,938 90,908 89,372 90,185 89,686 88,310 88,351 88,119
r
264,902 276,356 274,912 274,629 273,809 271,675 270,786 267,920 264,902 262,117 260,856 257,304 257,397 258,400

do....
do....
do....

279,454
183,616
95,838

do....

282,333

do....
do
do....
do....

186,222
6445
25,509
13,194

do
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....

20332
43,494
28,474
37,539
9,054
9,755

do
do....
do

57953
81,107
47 162

52543
77,908
44 749

55889
79,890
47599

55618
79,802
47391

55354
79,044
47701

54927
78,891
47725

54355
78,776
47389

53969
78,973
46733

53 100
78,308
45653

52543
77,908
44749

51 453
77,141
43912

51 410
76,420
43742

do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....

96,111
21,382
4,338
6,836
8,641
22,011
10,689
6,557

89,702
20,680
4,370
6,164
8,607
19,898
9,411
5,824

92,978
21,070
4,702
6,419
8,632
21,191
9,283
6,312

92,101
20,713
4,683
6,312
8,592
21,097
9,157
6,256

92,530
21,091
4,843
6,373
8,569
21,090
9,259
6,101

92,266
21,225
4,642
6,344
8,593
20,948
9,349
6,049

91,155
20,896
4,489
6,314
8,657
20,625
9,326
5,916

91,111
20,820
4,374
6,261
8,687
20,635
9,357
5,984

90,859
20,808
4,419
6,261
8,693
20,255
9,740
5,874

89,702
20,680
4,370
6,164
8,607
19,898
9,411
5,824

89,611
20,855
4,503
6,195
8,534
19,503
9,685
5,666

89,284
20,733
4,549
6,127
8,483
19,434
9,782
5,670

do
do....
do....

37 726
15,995
42,390

35 140
14,241
40,321

36990
15,267
40,721

36632
15,301
40,168

36646
15,364
40,520

36389
15,306
40,571

35801
14,949
40,405

35465
14,772
40,874

35509
14,608
40,742

35 140
14,241
40,321

35,360
14,378
39;873

35,257
14,477
39,550

do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....

22,226
33,997
76,449
11,395
21,464
116,802

do....
do....
do....
do....

10,894
86,301
72,915
13,386

170,744
175,200 183,378 182,811 182,099 181,543 180,520 179,675 177,061 175,200 172,506 171,572 169,377 169,814
r
5,962
5,724
5,751
5,786
5,783
5,828
6070
6036
6 103
6039
6084
6076
5962
6 160
20,674 20,592 20,174 r20,543 20,571
21,306 24,476 24,155 23,858 23,545 23,271 22,964 22,375 21,306
9,979
9,945
9,770 10,008
10,603 12,770 12,547 12,367 12,075 11,847 11,664 11,322 10,603 10,062
17 746 19753 19675 19327 19232 19 106 18671 18068 17746 17444 17310 17 121 r17,264 17,302
40,153 43,455 43,094 42,977 42,656 41,982 41,945 40,979 40,153 39,539 39,234 38,636 r38,269 38,221
26,713 27,612 27,504 27,353 27,307 27,098 27,026 27,095 26,713 26,589 26,287 26,085 r26,165 26,451
39,717
40,491 38,195 38,467 38,730 39,080 39,381 39,612 39,426 40,491 39,917 39,771 39,150 39,278
r
8,367
8,466
7,952
8,308
8,063
8,175
8,144
8,313
8,196
8,415
8,523
8,660
8,436
8,308
r
8,927
9,418
9,047
8,954
8,830
8,993
9,565
9,538
9,308
9,578
9,589
9,572
9,308
9,535
r
50 016
r
75,896
r

r
50 268
r
76,018
r

43 528

50 517
76,656
43571

87,927 rr87,583
20,654 20,536
4,596
4,707
r
6,180
6,225
r
8,370
8,304
19,364 19,401
r
8,855
8,588
r
5,629
5,638

87,656
20,731
4,600
6,334
8,294
19,334
8,666
5,603

34,815 r34,722
14,164 14,347
38,948 r38,514

34,752
14,249
38,655

43 465

r
r

19,784
20,244 21,317 21,261 21,297 21,093 20,932 20,780 20,472 20,244 20,091 19,889 19,737 19,800
33,266 34,167 33,726 34,274 34,235 33,652 33,589 33,485 33,266 33,452 33,307 33,192 rr32,998 33,144
76,504 77,534 77,660 77,509 77,609 77,326 77,442 76,747 76,504 75,573 74,873 73,963 73,713 74,059
10,877 10,637 10,404 10,347 10,074 10,473 10,207 10,260 10,123 10,297 10,420
10,473 10,735 10,816
18,928 20,110 19,969 19,741 19,747 19,579 19,400 19,189 18,928 18,459 18,567 18,607 18,604 18,653
105,487 112,493 111,480 110,931 110,488 109,782 109,228 107,953 105,487 104,335 103,960 101,682 101,985 102,340
9,895
86,280
70,297
15,983

10,496
87,498
73,222
14,276

10,532
87,299
72,868
14,431

10,567
87,211
72,774
14,437

10,424
87,535
72,835
14,700

10,417
87,137
72,098
15,039

10,265
87,305
71,971
15,334

10,040
86,604
71,036
15,568

9,895
86,280
70,297
15,983

9,908
85,473
68,935
16,538

9,802
84,908
68,407
16,501

9,666
83,740
66,916
16,824

r
9,749
r
83,447
r

66,597
16,850

9,732
83,993
66,777
17,216

168,044
do.... 2,015,089 1,888,448 157,645 165,156 144,954 150,994 163,475 159,054 150,600 155,180 154,561 160,300 172,686 167,206
1 004 703 901 237 74911 78961 66443 67629 75955 75559 69483 76245 77,665 79,059 87,411 rr84,710 83381
do
987,211 82,734 86,195 78,511 83,365 87,520 83,495 81,117 78,935 76,896 81,241 85,275 82,496 84,663
do.... 1,010,386
1
do
2 015 089 '1888448 159 466 159 986 158913 155 700 156 572 152,362 152,604 157,382 162,871 157,757 162,587 166,331 169,561
r

71,067
7670
3,005
3,980

76,180
7212
2,684
3,854

82,355
8,708
3,526
4,347

77,449
9,911
4,277
4,839

79,951
9,183
3,777
4,553

83,407
r
8,952
r
3,481
r
4,519

84,505
10,029
4,201
4,727

8788
13,401
12,099
14 444
3,841

70,735
7 116
2,810
3,658
8376
13,409
11,945
14804
5,436

8 109
12,773
12,292
15 150
5,483

7761
11,967
12,934
21 399
6,598

9229
12,708
12,213
23 105
9,616

9024
12,252
12,398
17708
5,206

9715 r9366
14,330 14,806
12,526 13,181
17953 r20
226
r
5,946
7,162

10017
15,105
13,567
18480
4,244

82,735
16,962
65,773

84,224
17,141
67,083

81,627
16,691
64,936

81,537
17,243
64,294

81,202
17,374
63,828

80,516
17,504
65,171

80,308
17,196
r
63,112

82,636
18,082
r
64,554

82,924
17,886
•-65,038

85,056
18,108
66,948

10,744
30738
22,245
12,460
11,470
71,256

11,027
30383
21,566
11,744
11,183
69,797

10,837
31 478
21,771
11,400
11,250
69,836

10,790
30368
22,860
9,636
10,937
67,771

10,718
30595
22,876
9,717
10,534
68,164

10,507
30 829
27,075
10,632
10,186
68,153

11,375
30789
26,130
12,691
12,371
69,515

11,557
31 487
21,598
13,331
11,798
67,986

11,101 11,702
32036 rr31 133
22,261 26,718
12,806 13,417
12,815 12,219
71,568 r71,142

12,234
32353
23,498
14,359
12,748
74,369

4669
25,126
19931
5.195

4585
24,397
18741
5.656

4685
23,855
20217
3.638

4,778
25,748
20 127
5.621

4,699
25,646
19,983
5.663

4,512
30,886
19,679
11.207

5,038
30,075
20,507
9.568

5,007
24,494
19,175
5,319

4,940
26,601
20,032
6.569

r
5,249
r
29,671
r
22,592
r

5,583
26,788
22 129
4.659

'1,004,703
'138968
'69,302
'57,310
'122412
'200,491
'144,712
'203 724
'64,123

'901,237
'100876
'43,405
'48,201
'106782
'162,913
'147,073
'200 931
'68,008

76,353
8986
4,099
4,032

76,157
8935
3,831
4,199

75,563
8673
3,865
3,922

72,965
8323
3,575
4,030

72,348
8054
3,294
4,096

9427
13,933
12,246
16361
4,848

9324
12,937
12,029
17337
5,223

9 148
12,880
12,514
17 178
4,882

9003
12,643
11,782
16229
5,090

do.... '1,010,386
do.... '204,094
do.... '806,292

'987,211
'202,437
'784,774

83,113
16,652
66,461

83,829
16,725
67,104

83,350
16,576
66,774

do....
do
do....
do....
do....
do....

'135,936
'355 532
'306,317
'137,719
'148,570
'931,015

'130,192
'367 750
'288,228
'129,645
'131,667
'840,966

11,054
31 113
22,215
11,609
11,278
72,197

11,256
31 200
23,488
12,082
11,001
70,959

'61 174
. do.
do.... '347,744
'288 704
do
do.... '59.040

'57 162
'323,386
'248 240
'75.146

5036
25,319
20306
5.013

5218
25,926
19932
5.994

do....
do
do....
do....
do
do....
do....
do
do....

r

7.079

June

S-5

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1983

1982

1982

Annual

June

May

July

Sept.

Aug.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Feb.

Jan.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Continued
MANUFACTURERS' SALES, INVENTORIES,
AND ORDERS t— Continued
Unfilled orders, end of year or month (unadjusted),
total t
- mil $
Durable goods industries, total
do....
Nondur goods ind with unfilled orders ^
do
Unfilled orders, end of year or month (seasonally
adjusted) total t
mil. $..
By industry group:
Durable goods industries, total #
do....
Primary metals
do
Blast furnaces, steel mills
do....
Nonferrous and other primary met
do

321 402
311,635
9767

299 731 318 599 312 608 308 204 302 153 298 080 297 647 294 619 299 731 307683 308 490 311 178 rr313 705 312875
290,757 309,340 303 637 299 441 293 401 289,196 288,861 285,883 290,757 298 447 299,227 301,397 303 720 302 778
8736
9263
8974
9259
8971
8884
8786
8974
9236
9781 r 9985 10097
8763
8752

323,346

300,971 316,518 313 384 309 880 305 564 301,678 299,846 298,132 300,971 305 599 305,268 306,053 r309,015 310,645

313,337
26304
15,779
7403

300 763
291 764 307,449 304 409 301 116 296 831 292,760 291,017 289 079 291 764 296 374 296,049 296 407 r299,270
20 160 22445 22422 22358 21987 21656 20931 20864 20 160 20627 22308 22567 r22 561 23076
13,625
11,891 13,279 13,111 13,218
13,095 12,796 12,492 12,370 11,891 12,168 13,204 13,388 13,281
r
6 130
6579
6339
6 130
6296
6944
6982
7067
7 122
6569
6242
6698
6 549
6 479
r
21 531 26630 26 165 25431 24 786 24 127 23599 22626 21 531 21 403 21 052 21255 r21 003 20942
55,697 66,900 64,640 62,693 60,853 59,306 58,874 57,524 55,697 54,703 53,859 53,999 r54,690 55,243
60600 56757 56906 57 239 57 339 57787 58303 59223 60600 60828 61 246 61 408 61 967 62878
120,898 120,462 119,944 119,460 118,172 116,140 115,779 115,619 120,898 126,003 124,576 123,997 125,463
124,647
92669 94 443 93992 93558 93 414 91936 91 801 91 806 92669 96483 95883 95873 r97 112 95888

do
do....
do
do....
do

28 784
73,517
54037
115,556
88640

Nondur. goods ind. with unfilled orders $.. do....

10,009

Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electrical machinery
Transportation equipment
Aircraft missiles and parts
By market category: t
Home goods, apparel, consumer staples
Equip, and defense prod., incl. auto
Construction materials and supplies
Other materials and supplies
Supplementary series:
Household durables
Capital goods industries
Nondefense
Defense

9,207

9,069

8,975

8,764

8,733

8,918

8,829

9,053

9,207

9,225

9,219

9,646

r

9,745

9,882

do....
do....
do....
do....

r
5,251
4,272
4,123
4,272
4,350
4,348
4,334
4,678
5,079
4,613
4,169
4,078
4,473
4,729
4,402
192,213
188,308 193,836 192,853 191,134 188,469 186,110 185,586 184,851 188,308 191,201 189,596 187,963 190,969 190,949
17,125
12,707 12,478 13,003 12,889 12,691
12,769 15,689 15,321 15,115 14,746 14,594 14,323 13,631 12,769
108,757 • 95,622 102,315 100,131 99,018 97,947 96,805 95,859 95,527 95,622 97,341 98,721 100,739 100,823 102,276

do
do....
do....
do....

3909
224,377
146,301
78,076

3 189
3 159 r3 156
3032
2953
2969
3032
3095
3 518
3433
3792
3420
3245
3003
219 633 226 046 224 136 221 820 219 640 216 384 215912 215 279 219 633 223 367 221 843 221 290 r223 562 223 476
122,942 137,788 134,765 132,112 129,042 127,129 126,046 124,718 122,942 122,251 120,664 118,658 119,122 119,523
96,691 88,258 89,371 89,708 90,598 89,255 89,866 90,561 96,691 101,116 101,179 102,632 104,440 103,953

New incorporations (50 States and Dist. Col):
Unadjusted
number
Seasonally adjusted
do....

581 242

566 942

BUSINESS INCORPORATIONS @
46008
46995

48876
45936

45282
44525

45 572
46981

45461
45552

45029
45530

44 354
48474

59750
57507

48099
49999

43756
48296

585

604

611

622

624

492
526
473
375
404
499
1530
682
844
857
231

509
624
476
401
405
479
1 521
705
844
893
244

523
705
506
415
412
443
1 517
703
832
895
242

549
749
504
447
425
456
1 517
698
826
891
236

r
558
r
r

INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL
FAILURES @
Failures, total
Commercial service
Construction ..
Manufacturing and mining
Retail trade
Wholesale trade

number..
do....
do
do
do
do....

Liabilities (current), total
Commercial service
Construction
Manufacturing and mining
Retail trade
Wholesale trade

thous. $..
do
do....
do....
do....
do....

Failure annual rate (seasonally adjusted)
No per 10 000 concerns

1,941
303
382
288
752
216

16,794
2366
3614
2224
6882
1,708
6,955,180
1 045 825
851,780
2,370,415
1,558,528
1,128,632

2,850,453
117 830
80,592
243 501
2,150,519
258011

'613

803

COMMODITY PRICES
PRICES RECEIVED AND PAID BY
FARMERS H
r

r

1910-14=100..

633

Crops #
Commercial vegetables
Cotton
. .
Feed grains and hay
Food grains ...
Fruit
Tobacco

do
do....
do
do....
do
do
do

524
*630
467
378
401
r
649
1489

Livestock and products #
Dairy products
Meat animals
Poultry and eggs

do
do....
do....
do

580
677
566
446
456
r
481
1363
688
842
848
264

696
831
876
r
252

608
471
417
413
r
607
1 469
727
807
r
949
247

855

864

868

1,035

1,071

1,070

61

57

59

58

58

56

272.3

2886

2865

290 1

2918

2724

289 1

287 1

290 6

258.5
2706
270.9

2733
2884
286.8

2706
2860
284.9

2738
2897
288.4

Prices received, all farm products

Prices paid:
Production items
do
All commodities and services, interest, taxes, and
wage rates (parity index)
1910-14=100..
Parity ratio §

do

609
r

r

635

r
546
r

629

624

541
r
643
490
r
403
388
r
615
1469
r
720
r
807
936
r
247

r
541
r

873

1,076

622
506
385
374
r
756
1 400
r

710
807
912
252

r

607

r

620

r

586

587

r

579

r
491
505
494
538
r
r
r
r
521
625
575
519
499
469
505
506
484
446
r
r
r
347
346
363
328
362
376
383
388
393
398
r
r
r
r
667
543
683
1 085
718
1 517 1552 1 530 1 521 1 521
r
r
r
706
685
671
669
712
r
r
r
850
832
844
850
813
r
r
851
823
828
922
895
r
r
r
r
251
246
232
252
239
r
507
r

701
521
r
465
r
425
r
467
1 526
r
691
813
r
874
252
r

614
547
675
544
465
396
449
1 521
683
807
856
257

873

871

865

859

860

859

869

875

880

887

890

890

1,079

1,079

1,077

1,073

1,075

1,073

1,083

1,088

1,091

1,096

1,100

1,103

r

58

55

55

54

54

56

56

57

57

56

2924

2928

2936

2932

2920

292 1

2923

2930

2949

2963

2972

292 2

292 8

2933

294 1

2936

2924

2

293 1

2932

2934

295 5

297 1

298 1

2753
2915
289.9

2757
2925
290.5

2769
2929
290.8

2779
2940
291.5

278 1
2936
290.8

2782
292 1
289.5

2785
2
2926
2
290.0

278.5
2926
290.0

278.7
2924
290.1

2808
2947
292.3

2824
296 5
293.9

2834
2978
294.9

CONSUMER PRICES
(U.S. Department of Labor Indexes)
Not Seasonally Adjusted
ALL ITEMS, WAGE EARNERS AND
CLERICAL WORKERS, REVISED
(CPI-W)
1967- 100..
ALL ITEMS, ALL URBAN CONSUMERS
(CPI-U)
1967-100
Special group indexes:
All items less shelter
do....
All items less food
.
do
All items less medical care
do....
See footnotes at end of tables.




S-6

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

1982

Annual

July 1983

May

June

July

Aug.

1983

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

COMMODITY PRICES—Continued
CONSUMER PRICES— Continued
(U.S. Department of Labor Indexes) — Continued
Not Seasonally Adjusted
All items (CPI-U)—Continued
Commodities
Nondurables
Nondurables less food
Durables
Commodities less food
Services
Services less rent

1967—100
do....
do
do....
do
do....
do

Food #
Food at home

do
do....

Housing
Shelter # .
Rent residential
Homeownership
Fuel and utilities #
Fuel oil, coal, and bottled gas
Gas (piped) and electricity
Household furnishings and operation

do...,
do....
do
do....
do
do....
do
do....

Apparel and upkeep
do....
Transportation
... do. ..
Private
do....
New cars
do
Used cars
do....
Public
do
Medical care
do....
Seasonally Adjusted @
All items percent change from previous month
Commodities
1967—100
Commodities less food
do
Food
do
Food at home
do....
Apparel and upkeep
do....
Transportation
do....
Private
..
do.
New cars
do....

2536
266.3
2575
227.1
241 2
305.7
3243
274.6
269.9
293.5
314.7
2082
352.7
3192
675.9
3459
221.3

186.9
2800
277.5
1902
256.9
3120
294.5

2638
273.6
2616
241.1
2509
333.3
3542
2857
279.2
314.7
337.0
2240
376.8
3508
667.9
3938
233.2
191.8
291 5
287.5
1976
296.4
3460
328.7

2615
270.7
2562
239.8
2478
331.8
3528
2855
279.8
313.8
336.7
2218
377.4
3454
644.6
3890
233.4

265 1
274.4
2612
243.2
2519
334.9
3565
2878
282.6
317.5
340.9
2226
382.8
3522
656.6
3989
233.7
190.8
2928
288.9
198 1
298.2
3456
326.4

2665
275.7
2630
244.7
2535
337.0
3585
2885
282.8
319.2
342.8
2248
384.5
3547
659.9
402 1
234.1
189.7
296.1
292.3
198.6
302.4
3472
330.0

2664
275.5
2636
2446
2538
3389
3605
2874
280.8
320.1
3442
2260
385.9
3563
659.9
404 4
233.4

1.0
2610
247.3
2854
279.7
191.1
285.1
281.2
196.5
332 1

1.1
2643
251.2
2871
281.5

0.6
265.8
253.0
287.6
281.5

0.3
2660
253.6
2869
279.9

191.5
291.5
287.7
197.2
3349

192.2
294.1
290.4
198.0
3368

192.7
295.3
2916
199.2

298.6

299.3

300.4

191.5
2856
281.5
1975
291.4
342 1
323.8

2666
276.2
2646
244.1
2539
339.7
3613
2876
280.6
319.7
342.6
2269
383.0
3595
662.8
4092
234.2
194.9
295.3
291.1
1977
304.6
3533
336.0

267.5
276.5
2657
246.0
2554
340.3
3616
287.0
279.4
320.7
342.8
2289
382.8
3634
677.2
413.4
235.4

267.8
276.4
266 1
246.6
2560
338.6
3593

2677
275.8
2647
247.3
2558
335.6
3555

286.4
278.3
319.0
340.7
2302
379.5
3622
691.3
407.6
235.1

195.5
295.5
291.1
197.7
306.7
356.3
338.7
0.4
267.9
255.6
288.1
280.5
193.3

3389

0.1
266.4
253.8
2875
280.2
192.8
295.6
291.6
199.6
339 1

300.2

299.3

191.8
2962
292.4
1987
304.4
348 1
333.3

2667
274.6
2605
247.1
2532
338.9

266.7
274.4
258.9
247.4
252.4
339.4

269.2
277.3
2630
248.7
255.4
341.2

2709
279.3
2663
249.5
2576
342.6

271 6
279.7
2673
251.2
2589
344.0

289.0
280.3
318.5
339.2
233 1

290.5
281.9

318.6
339.3
233.6

291.9
283.4
320.3
341.7
234.5

292.4
283.8
321.8
342.7
235 1

292.0
283.0
323.1
343.6
2359

3646
654.0
414.5
236.7

363.8
625.3
418.0
237.6

363.6
610.6
420.5
239.0

3736
620.0
437.4
238.6

191.0
293.0
288.4
201.0
311.0
357.7
347.8

192.0
289.9
285.2
201.3
309.1
3552
351.3

194.5
287.4
282.7
201.2
309.3
354.5
352.3

195.5
292.3
287.5
201.1
312.7
361.1
353.5

3693
621.0
429 1
238.4
196.1
296.2
291.7
201.6
317.1
3592
354.3

'0.2
'268.1
'255.6
288.3
279.5

-0.2
266.3
253.0
288.3
279.4
194.2
289.1
284.4
201.1

0.1
266.8
252.8
290.1
281.8
194.1
289.0
284.4
202.6

0.6
268.4
254.5
291.3
282.9

0.5
270.4
257.1
292.2
283.8

0.2
270.8
258.2
291.3
282.0

339.3

339.8

194.5
292.1
287.2
201.3
341.7

195.8
295.8
291.3
200.6
342.8

196.5
297.1
292.6
200.8
343.7

286.5
277.8
316.3
335.9
2308
372.9
364 1
688.5
4106
235.7

'267.2
275.2
262.4
'247.3
'2544
'337.9
(2)
288.1
279.3
'317.9
'338.3
2322
(2)
3654
671.1
413.5
'235.8

195.4
295.8
291.4
199.0
310.5
356.0
342.2

193.6
294.8
290.4
200.1
312.6
3556
344.3

-0.3
268.4
256.3
288.1
279.4
192.7

3399

0.0
268.1
255.9
288.2
280.1
193.2
296.0
291.8
198.7
339.3

3367

193.2
293.9
289.4
199.4
'338.3

299.8

300.3

300.7

299.9

r

296.4
292.3
199.2

295.8
291.7
199.3

195.6
298.3
293.8
201.6
322.7
361.2
355.4

PRODUCER PRICES §
(U.S. Department of Labor Indexes)
Not Seasonally Adjusted
All commodities
1967—100..
By stage of processing: t
Crude materials for further processing
do....
Intermediate materials, supplies, etc
do....
Finished goods #
do....
Finished consumer goods
do
Capital equipment
do....
By durability of product:
Durable goods
do....
Nondurable goods
do
Total manufactures
do
Durable manufactures
do.
Nondurable manufactures
do....
Farm prod., processed foods and feeds
do....
Farm products
do....
Foods and feeds, processed
do....
Industrial commodities
do
Chemicals and allied products
do....
Fuels and related prod., and power
do....
Furniture and household durables
do....
Hides skins, and leather products
do....
Lumber and wood products
do....
Machinery and equipment
do.
Metals and metal products
do....
Nonmetallic mineral products
do....
Pulp, paper, and allied products
do....
Rubber and plastics products
do....
Textile products and apparel
do....
Transportation equipment # ....Dec. 1968=100..
Motor vehicles and equip
1967 = 100..

300.9

300.5

300.8

301.7

302.5

329.0
306.0
269.8
2713
264.3

319.5
310.4
280.7
281.0
279.4

328.3
309.8
277.8
2777
278.1

325.6
309.9
279.9
280.1
279.2

323.4
311.1
281.7
282.1
280.2

319.8
310.8
282.3
282.8
280.7

316.1
310.5
281.2
281.9
278.7

312.0
309.9
284.1
284.3
283.2

313.2
309.9
284.9
285.3
283.8

312.7
310.1
285.5
285.6
284.9

313.9
309.2
283.9
283.5
285.2

r
320.2
r
309.9
r
284.1
r
283.7
r

322.1
309.2
283.4
282.5
286.5

325.7
309.1
283.0
282.0
286.5

325.7
310.1
284.3
283.5
286.8

323.2
311.7
285.0
284.4
286.9

269.8
3124
286.0
2696
303.6

279.0
3153
292.7
2798
306.4
248.9
242.4
251.5
312.3
292.3
693.2
206.9
262.6
284.7
278.8
301.6
320.2
288.7
241.4
204.6
249.7
251.3

278.5
3145
291.3
2792
304.0

278.3
316.0
292.4
279.3
306.3

278.9
317.6
293.7
279.9
308.5

278.8
317 1
293.8
279.8
308.6

278.6
315.7
292.9
279.6
307.1

282.6
313.3
293.5
283.7
303.8

r
284.8
r
313.4
r
293.9
r
285.7
r

252.4
246.6
254.6
312.8
291.6
701.1
206.8
263.1
238.6
279.6
299.5

247.4
234.5
253.5
312.7
290.7
700.4
208.3
263.5
283.0
280.2
301.8
321.2
289.4
242.5
204.3
244.5
244.6

244.8
232.6
250.5
315.2
289.6
703.4
209.2
264.1
285.6
282.4
299.9
320.5
290.5
242.2
202.6
257.5
258.1

245.8
233.2
251.7
313.9
289.3
683.6
210.7
266.7
293.3
283.3
300.3
321.5
293.6
242.9
202.7
256.3
257.0

r
250.4
r
240.7
r

321.1
289.1
242.0
204.1
249.8
252.0

249.6
240.8
253.5
313.2
291.6
705.6
208.1
262.0
284.2
279.9
299.2
320.5
289.3
242.6
204.2
250.6
252.8

285.1
312.4
293.0
285.8
300.5
250.4
241.4
254.3
313.4
290.1
662.3
212.1
265.9
305.0
284.0
305.4
321.9
293.8
243.1
203.2
257.1
257.7

285.1
312.8
292.9
285.8
300.2
254.7
250.5
256.0
312.6
291.3
648.1
213.1
267.1
305.4
284.9
305.3
323.7
295.1
242.2
203.3
255.6
255.9

285.9
313.9
293.9
286.6
301.4
254.7
250.3
256.1
313.8
291.3
654.8
213.3
270.1
306.2
285.6
306.7
324.2
295.7
242.9
203.9
256.0
256.2

286.4
315.0
295.1
287.0
303.6

255.3
252.7
255.8
310.6
293.3
677.3
207.0
261.8
289.0
278.6
299.3
320.9
289.5
242.5
205.0
249.1
251.1

281.2
315.3
293.9
282.4
306.1
243.9
230.7
250.2
315.0
290.5
706.1
208.9
263.2
279.9
281.8
300.5
321.2
289.8
241.7
203.9
256.3
257.8

282.0
315.3
294.3
283.2
305.9

255.8
256.5
254.4
309.6
295.0
662.2
206.5
263.2
284.6
2782
302.8
321.2
289.6
242.1
205.4
247.5
249.2

281.2
314.3
293.8
282.3
306.0
243.8
229.2
250.8
314.3
289.9
698.8
208.9
263.2
279.4
281.1
301.6
321.1
289.8
242.2
204.1
256.0
257.8

00

1.0

0.5

05

0.1

0.4

0.6

0.3

-1.1

r

293.4

251.5
254.9
248.7
304 1
287.8
694.4
198.4
261.5
292.8
263 1
300.4
309.5
273.7
232.8
199.6
235.4
237.5

299.3

Seasonally Adjusted $
Finished goods, percent change from previous
month
By stage of processing: t
Crude materials for further processing 1967—100.
Intermediate materials, supplies, etc
do....
Finished goods #
,
do....
Finished consumer goods
do
Food
do....
Finished goods exc foods
do
Durable
do....
Nondurable
do
Capital equipment
do....
PURCHASING POWER OF THE DOLLAR
As measured by:
Producer prices
Consumer prices
See footnotes at end of tables.




1967 — $! 00
do....

0371
0.367

0356
0.346

285.6

302.5

254.7
r
313.9
r
290.5
r
668.6
r
212.5
r
264.3
r
303.1
r
284.3
r
304.7
r
322.3
r
294.2
r
242.3
r
202.6
r
255.8
r
256.3

r

252.4
247.3
254.2
315.4
291.3
668.7
213.6
270.6
312.5
285.8
306.4
324.6
296.7
242.7
204.5
256.3
256.6

-0.3

-0.1

0.3

0.5

285.0

319.4
308.3
283.0
282.0
261.1
288.1
233.8
328.3
286.7

323.9
307.6
282.8
282.0
264.2
286.6
232.4
326.7
285.9

323.9
308.9
283.7
282.9
262.9
288.2
232.6
330.0
286.6

323.5
311.4
285.0
284.4
261.2
291.3
233.7
334.6
287.3

0.352
0.341

0.353
0.341

0.353
0.338

0.352
0.337

0.351
0.335

0.2

326.4
308.7
277.1
2769
262.3
2807
225.0
3224
277.8

325.8
309.7
279.9
280.0
263.5
2846
226.8
3277
279.5

322.1
310.3
281.2
281.5
259.2
288.5
227.4
334.3
280.5

319.1
310.3
282.5
2826
259.4
290 1
228.6
3362
282.3

315.4
310.8
282.8
283.0
258.3
291.2
227.8
3386
281.9

314.3
310.9
283.8
284.4
258.2
293.2
228.5
341.7
282.0

317.3
311.7
285.5
286.2
258.2
295.8
229.8
345.3
283.1

316.6
311.8
286.4
287.0
258.8
296.7
230.4
346.4
284.4

315.8
310.1
283.3
283.1
258.3
290.8
229.6
337.3
283.9

r
316.8
r
309.8
r
283.8
r
283.4
r

0360
0.348

0.357
0.344

0355
0.342

0.354
0.342

0.356
0.341

0.352
0.340

0.351
0.341

0.350
0.342

0.352
'0.341

260.9
290.0

r
232.2
r
333.7
r

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
1982

1981

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1982

May

Annual

8-7

June

July

Aug.

1983

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

CONSTRUCTION AND REAL ESTATE
CONSTRUCTION PUT IN PLACE
New construction (unadjusted), total

mil. $..

Private total #
Residential
New housing units

do
do
do

r

239,418

r

186 069
86 566
62664

180
979
r
74 810
r
51 916

Nonresidential buildings, except farm and
public utilities total # ...
mil $
Industrial
do....
Commercial ....
do
Public utilities:
Telephone and telegraph
do...,
Public total #

.

do

60818
17030
34248

232,049

r

65 134
17 343
37 284
r

r

5363
1460
r
3075

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r
5832
5 684
1 569 r1502
3362
3 312
r

586

7,110

53 349

r

r

51 070

r

r

r

7,074
r

r
20,950 r20 633 r21 272 r21 501 r21 368 r21 368 19,674
15
248
16
223 15 837 15 946 16 018 16 399 16 668 16 020
r
r
6 564
6 867 r6 635 r6 607 r6 561 rg 999 rr7 268 rg 804
r
r
4 150 r 4374
5 046 r 4600
4 639 r4 840 r 4939 r 4985

19,404

4 156

r

652

r

4727

r

5 770 r 5726 r5 851
1 479 1
455 1571
3 339 r3 337 r3 303
r

4 795

r

650

624
r

5 326

r

r

649

5483

5 758
1 440
3 295

4 969

4 700

Buildings (excluding military) #
Housing and redevelopment
Industrial

do....
do....
do

17,792
1,722
1655

16,997
1,658
1632

1,392
125
131

1,494
140
146

Military facilities
Highways and streets

do....
do

1,964
13 599

r
2,205
13 521

187
1036

r
r
r
r
245
169
202
216
184
217
1 496 1 573 1 741 1 692 1 646 1 318

r

r

New construction (seasonally adjusted at annual
rates) total
bil $
Private total #

do....

2309

r

2316

r

2307

1,480
152
136

r

1819

1905

234 1

r
75
r

r
73 8
r

r
72
r

r
71 7
r

r
76
r

4
53 6

r

r

r

r

r

r

65 0
17 1
37 0

645
17
8
r
365

5
493

673
18 2
r
386
r

73

1808
51 4

65 3
17
2
r
37 8

1795
6
52 6

65 3
16 9
37 6

r

r

74

72

r

17 1
17
16

16 6
17
17

17 1
18
18

21
126

r
20
13 3

r
22
14 0

12513
94

15 444
111

3766
8747

Buildings (excluding military) #
Housing and redevelopment
Industrial

do....
do
do....

168
15
15

Military facilities
Highways and streets

do....
do

530

65 2
16 5
r
380
r

73

r

500

1782

1,538
162
139

r

r
75
r

r

CONSTRUCTION

2308

1,622
153
167

1829

do

Public, total #

r

1,540
150
144

1809
2
50 1

Residential
do
New housing units
. do
Nonresidential buildings, except farm and
public utilities total # ...
bil $
Industrial
do
Commercial ..
do
Public utilities:
Telephone and telegraph ..
do

2334

1,483
145
141

r

2437

4 793 r 4 733
1 117 1074
2 751 r2 770

4 931
1088
2 896

4 823
1 112
2818

3 654

3 296

2 956

1,326
151
151

191
727

180
r
573

194
r
489

198
r
558

r

r

2402

r

2479
r
89
r

r

r

r

0
586

64 3
15
6
r
36 9

7
634

65 3
15
2
r
38 2

r

64

68

r

2057

107 0
81 5

r

rgl 3
14
3
r
35 5

688

627
14
3
r
36 7

rg g

r

r
24
14 0

r
26
14 0

r
24
14 4

r
26
14 4

r
24
13 0

r
23
14 0

12 528
98

13 896
112

14 180
117

12 549
105

12 909
122

4360
11 084

3 745
8783

3 411
10485

3 849
10330

3 272
9276

3 137
9772

13 977
131
2 835
11 142

5027
5*629
1 893

4520
5 628
2761

52 9

1
72 3

r

rg g

r

179
18
18

49 4

r

102
0
r
77 3

18 1
18
18

53 2

200
1 091

r
96
r

168
18
15

52 2

212
770

r

r
93 6
r

177
19
20

525

1,412
144
154

253 0

173
18
19

r

3 965

1,330
133
138

245 6

172
18
16

52 2

241 9

3 499

198 0

r

50 0

r

501
r

1949

2430

1943

r

504

3 200

1,265
133
126

r

r

561

r

1,342
144
156

r
86
r

66

r

1,380
154
127

r
81 2
r

66 1
16
7
r
37 9

r

448

436

r

1950

55 8

4 553
1039
2 663

r

539

r

1908

r

72

17344
9 181
6742

r

596

r

21 309

13 820 13 358 15
058 15 954
r
rg 233
rg 082
7 163 r8 227
r
4 446 r4 510 r 5463 rg 069

5 334
1 344
3 019

r

599

r

17 116 16314 18 259 19 453

48 7

r

r

57 6
13
2
r
33 6

63

47 0

59 2
13 3
34 3

63
r

47 6

47 3

172
19
18

16 8
16
16

17 2
17
18

r
24
12 5

r
25
11 9

r
28
12 9

23
12 8

11 376
127

11 310
119

16 171
131

16 336
129

18 934
148

2 958
8418

8772

2 538

3 917
12254

3 735
12 602

4 479
14 455

3975
5 184
4818

4459
4 970
1947

4 214
4 775
2321

5438
7 762
2971

4 549
7 667
4 120

5 246
8 235
5 453

15,530

17,683

12,665

11,802

12,737

10,930

11,165

13,185

1745
173 9
1152

173 7
111 6

CONTRACTS

Construction contracts in 50 States (F.W. Dodge
Division, McGraw-Hill):
Valuation total
. mil $
Index (mo data seas adj )
1977 — 100
Public ownership
Private ownership
By type of building:
Nonresidential
Residential
Non-building construction
New construction planning
(Engineering News-Record) §

153 480
110

mil $
do....

38956
114524

154619
111
41 347
113273

do....
do
do....

60088
60 164
33228

59208
58076
37336

4 130
5060
3322

6 113
5602
3729

5011
5 144
2372

5250
5 414
3232

5226
5525
3429

do....

166,366

149,206

9,119

8,278

11,992

10,385

11,936

thous..
do
do

1,100.3
10842
7054

1 0720
10622
6626

992
988
589

919
91 1
635

1072
106 8
61 4

972
96 0
620

1084
106 4
633

111 5
110 5
663

1099
108 9
660

834
82 9
518

929
91 3
563

967
96 3
604

1358
134 6
862

1364
135
8
r
932

1028
622

910
617

1 185
625

1 046
651

1 134
683

1 142
716

1 361
868

1 280
842

1 694
1,126

1 784
1,103

1 605
1,008

1 506 1 799
1,187
1,001

13,373

HOUSING STARTS AND PERMITS
New housing units started:
Unadjusted:
Total (private and public)
Privately owned
One-family structures
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates:
Total privately owned
One-family structures

do
do....

New private housing units authorized by building
permits (16,000 permit-issuing places):
Monthly data are seas. adj. at annual rates:
Total
thous
One-family structures
do....
Manufacturers' shipments of mobile homes
Unadjusted
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates

thous..
do

986
564

1000
546

951
489

924
513

1065
507

928
515

1 029
576

1 154
657

1 227
738

1326
753

1 447
866

1 479
835

1 467
859

1 536
841

1 635
r
940

2409

2389

218
244

236
252

194
240

22 2
234

21 2
222

20 4
224

188
251

159
243

18 1
284

197
283

254
276

25 1
291

268
298

154.1

154.4

154.4

155.2

156.5

157.4

158.8

1 747
1,103

1 745
1 003

CONSTRUCTION COST INDEXES
Dept. of Commerce composite

1977 = 100..

151.9

American Appraisal Co., The:
Average 30 cities
Atlanta
New York
San Francisco
St Louis

1913—100
do
do....
do
do

2643
2841
2645
2873
2453

Boeckh indexes:
Average, 20 cities:
Apartments, hotels, office buildings 1977=100..
Commercial and factory buildings
do....
Residences
do....

137.4
140.1
136.0

150.0
151.9
147.5

149.0
151.1
146.1

Engineering News-Record:
Building
Construction
.

1967-100..
do

310.3
3289

3306
356 1

325.5
3476

Federal Highway Adm. — Highway construction:
Comoosite (avg. for vear or qtr.)
1977=100..

156.7

146.8

.

....

See footnotes at end of tables.




153.4

152.6
154.3
149.9
3294
3552

146.8

3342
3630

152.8

153.9

3350
3633

147.8

153.4

154.9
156.0
152.5

153.6
155.2
151.2
3343
3630

152.7

3348
3632

3356
3648

156.6

156.8

155.7
159.2
153.1
3400
3677

146.1

3420
3687

155.8
159.7
153.5
3475
3725

348 1
3729

148.1

157.7
161.7
155.4
3474
3725

3479
3726

2

353.5
3796

2

143.1

S-8

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

Annual

July 1983

1982
May

June

July

Aug.

1983
Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

CONSTRUCTION AND REAL ESTATE—Continued
REAL ESTATE H
Mortgage applications for new home construction:
FHA net applications
thous. units..
Seasonally adjusted annual rates
do
Requests for VA appraisals
Seasonally adjusted annual rates
Home mortgages insured or guaranteed by:
Fed. Hous. Adm.: Face amount
Vet. Adm.: Face amount §

92.3

99.8

5.2
65

6.7
90

8.2
100

6.8
102

9.8
180

11.8
106

7.9
143

11.3
168

12.2
178

12.0
167

17.1
180

16.5
187

15.1
156

153.8

155.0

13.0
149

14.1
157

12.3
137

11.9
128

12.9
154

15.7
186

16.9
227

15.1
238

19.5
274

21.0
278

27.3
292

22.7
248

21.9
239

mil. $.. 10,278.14
do.... 7,905.93

8,087.07
5,428.27

589.61
327.85

716.28
443.89

653.80
438.90

592.51
552.50

772.41
743.54

724.61
385.69

771.21 1,083.56
454.78 563.89

914.79 1,100.29 2,026.13 2,447.06 1,637.70 3,944.14
630.80 961.02 1,243.48 1,189.71 1,910.77

65,194

66,004

67,801

69,398

69,325

68,399

67,642

67,077

66,308

66,004

62,365

61,004

60,024

59,371

58,628

53,283

54,298

3,797

5,006

4,101

4,543

5,112

4,724

5,314

8,451

5,869

6,415

10,076

10,436

10,302

11,599
28,299
13.385

11,765
21,779
20.754

796
1,607
1,394

1,052
2,080
1,874

859
1,921
1.321

981
1,962
1.600

1,154
1,988
1,970

1,125
1,786
1,813

1,194
1,938
2,182

1,719
2,714
4,018

1,152
2,173
2,544

1,340
2,249
2,826

2,163
3,438
4,475

2,266
r
3,823
r
4,347

2,183
3,920
4,199

do....
do

Federal Home Loan Banks, outstanding advances
to member institutions, end of period
mil. $..
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....

r

18.8
210

58,800

DOMESTIC TRADE
ADVERTISING
Magazine advertising (Publishers Information
Bureau):
Cost, total
mil. $..
Apparel and accessories
.
do
Automotive incl accessories
do
Building materials
do
Drugs and toiletries
do....
Foods soft drinks confectionery
do
Houshold equip., supplies, furnishings
Industrial materials
Soaps, cleansers, etc
Smoking materials
All other
.. . .

do....
do
do....
do....
do..

Newspaper advertising expenditures (Media
Records Inc.):
Total
mil $
Classified
Financial
General .
Retail

do
do
do
do

3,256.9
1434
291 7
593
320.4
2344

3,421.2
1544
3300
523
329.3
261 3

338.9
11 8
365
68
34.4
212

262.7
55
170
44
28.7
228

210.7
7.6
21 2
3.7
22.6
209

211.6
130
20 1
30
23.5
158

307.5
23.2
179
6.9
30.4
223

351.1
17.2
368
5.1
30.3
26.9

397.6
16.7
46.2
4.1
28.5
34.3

285.5
11.9
269
2.7
24.7
20.8

229.2
8.8
193
3.4
20.1
14.2

275.9
10.3
32.0
2.6
27.1
23.7

320.6
20.4
35.8
3.7
31.6
23.9

330.9
17.3
36.2
5.0
36.2
20.7

374.7
15.7
45.6
7.0
39.5
24.9

256 9
167.9
677
29.7
316.6
1 3689

258 1
146.7
509
26.5
358.0
1,450.6

22 7
19.2
80
3.0
32.3
1430

23 2
9.6
35
2.3
28.2
1175

16 1
8.5
32
1.4
27.2
66.6

12 2
6.7
32
1.7
31.0
82.8

19 5
17.1
39
2.1
32.0
132.1

243
16.0
3.7
3.2
34.2
153.1

326
17.5
4.4
2.5
38.7
172.0

348
10.8
2.4
1.1
32.7
116.7

102
8.0
2.3
1.3
31.4
110.1

136
8.0
2.3
2.0
31.4
122.9

196
12.2
3.1
1.9
34.9
133.5

196
17.2
3.3
2.6
36.0
136.8

205
19.6
4.4
2.6
38.2
156.3

97,707 100,393
37,500 39,143
60,207 61,250

93,273
36,971
56,302

94,291
38,103
56,188

93,626
38,473
55,153

93,067
38,473
54,594

94,181
38,279
55,902

94,279
37,643
56,636

87,420
35,061
52,359

91,153
37,531
53,622

97,727
39,819
57,908

95754
225 6
2 514 9
387 2
1 3800
50678

904 9
25 0
233 6
294
1378
4790

WHOLESALE TRADE $
Merchant wholesalers sales (unadj.), total
Durable goods establishments
Nondurable goods establishments

mil. $.. 1,208,070 1,144,352
do.... 509,743 457,713
do.... 698,327
686,639

Merchant wholesalers inventories, book value,
end of year or month (unadj.), total
mil. $..
Durable goods establishments
do....

117,566
75,601
41 965

84,974 100,953
34,133 40,763
50,841 60,190

r
r
r

115,535
119,302 117,563 118,772 118,676 117,271 118,424 120,222 119,620 119,302 118,010 117,803 118,208 117,613
r
77,415 78,527 79,658 80,648 79,398 79,731 79,439 77,964 77,415 76,097 75,738 75,935 r75,790 75,554
41 887 39 036 39 114 38 028 37 873 38 693 40783 41656 41 887 41 913 42065 42273 41 823 39981

RETAIL TRADE
All retail stores: t
Estimated sales (unadj.), total t

90,812

88,965

91,213

89,642

88,159

91,416

94,196 113,189

81,329

78,884

93,760

r

Durable goods stores #
do....
Building materials, hardware, garden supply,
and mobile home dealers
mil. $..
Automotive dealers
.
do
Furniture, home furn., and equip
do....

316,020

320,868

28,488

27,615

27,204

26,922

26,776

26,824

28,423

31,142

23,808

24,159

30,832

r

51,968
173 922
47,462

48,975
182 390
46,513

4,768
16742
3,664

4,704
15689
3,847

4,561
15459
3,926

4,395
15321
3,865

4,395
15261
3,765

4,404
15218
3,859

4,039
16,233
4,193

3,864
14960
5,318

3,261
13,776
3,639

3,159
14,536
3,440

4,088
19,246
4,035

4,567
18,405
r
3,937

5,362
19,588
r
3,956

'5,646
'21,106
'4,174

Nondurable goods stores
General merch group stores
Food stores
Gasoline service stations

do....
do
do
do....

731,553
127 948
241 102
108,231

754,811
131 282
252 802
104,633

62,324
10707
21 404
8^619

61,350
10088
21 020
9,047

64,009
10061
22674
9,463

62,720
10452
20838
9,169

61,383
10066
20957
8,706

64,592
11 036
21572
8,869

65,773
13 197
20680
8,585

82,047
21 238
23608
8,706

57,521
7,896
20354
8,059

54,725
7,747
19323
7,353

62,928
10248
21 497
8,077

r

r

65,293
11,190
r
21 838
r
8,867

'65,864
11,070
'22 221
'9,301

Apparel and accessory stores
Eating and drinking places
Drug and proprietary stores
Liquor stores

do....
do ...
do....
do....

50,270
98,585
33,593
18,631

51,991
107 357
35,849
19,031

4,150
9214
2,930
1,591

3,846
9271
2,924
1,570

4,020
9786
2,924
1,690

4,374
9778
2,899
1,559

4,151
9,145
2,859
1,505

4,395
9,548
2,953
1,553

4,762
8,878
3,021
1,559

7,232
9,382
4,171
2,197

3,496
8,673
2,975
1,386

3,203
8,413
2,930
1,329

4,185
9,635
3,208
1,452

r
4,306
10,367
<3,176
1,505

'4,297
10,428
'3,189

90813

88603

89469

89069

89897

90905

92,492

92459

92,295

91,164

93,263

r
r

Estimated sales (seas adj ) total t

mil. $.. 1,047,573 1,075,679

do

Durable goods stores #
do....
Building materials, hardware, garden supply,
and mobile home dealers #
mil. $..
Building materials and supply stores do
Hardware stores
do ...

28,127

26,136

26,124

25,831

26,619

27,154

28,721

28,723

28,307

27,490

29,160

4,281
2944
735

4,139
2903
696

4,134
2905
684

4,014
2821
666

4,004
2809
663

4,024
2848
682

4,057
2864
682

4,143
3018
674

4,366
3,214
710

4,222
3,101
702

4,400
3232
685

93,970
30,350
r

63,620
10,490
21 739
r
8,324

r

r

4,327
9,942
3,114
1,495

r

r

r

97,832 100,548

r

32,539
r

'34,684

95,449

r

98,423

'99,120

30,668

r

32,013

'32,373

r

4,542
3330
r
680

r

r

4,837
3,540
736

'4,901

Automotive dealers
Motor vehicle and miscellaneous
auto dealers
.
Auto and home supply stores

do ...

16430

14,638

14650

14463

15,200

15,713

17,104

16,727

15,979

15,496

16,802

18,157

19,099

19,387

do
do

14664
1 766

12834
1804

12865
1785

12709
1 754

13424
1776

13927
1786

15,298
1806

14965
1762

14,227
1752

13,664
1832

14986
1816

16371
1786

17,199
1900

17,501

Furniture, home furn., and equip. #
Furniture home furnishings stores
Household appliance, radio, TV

do....
do
do....

3,917
2239
1,181

3,865
2 187
1,136

3,889
2204
1,222

3,807
2 187
1,123

3,807
2 180
1,109

3,834
2242
1,118

3,868
2258
1,175

4,100
2326
1,317

4,100
2,384
1,414

3,973
2,296
1,375

4,106
2425
1,370

See footnotes at end of tables.




r

4,196
2423
1,434
r

r

4,220
2,434
1,459

'4,242

S-9

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

1983

1982

Annual

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

DOMESTIC TRADE—Continued
RETAIL TRADE— Continued
All retail stores t — Continued
Estimated sales (seas, adj.) — Continued
mil. $..
do
do....
do

62686
11 032
9009
738

62467
10796
8822
712

63345
10925
8929
729

63,238
10841
8845
738

63278
10847
8821
724

63751
10858
8865
726

63771
11 043
8928
729

63736
11 410
9265
744

63988
11313
9309
747

63,674
11 131
9056
758

64 103 r64 781 r66 410 166 747
11 272 11
240 11
651 11 798
r
r
9256
9208
9511 '9724
r
753
739
765

do
do....
do

21 113
19,733
8559

21025
19,624
8649

21 247
19,839
8803

21 213
19,808
8741

21 253
19,870
8750

21 370
20,003
8747

21 333
19,964
8733

21 423
20,139
8628

21 115
19,868
8583

21 347
20,073
8216

21 501
20,208
8 183

Apparel and accessory stores # ..
do
Men's and boys' clothing
do....
' Women's clothing spec stores furriers do
Shoe stores
do....

4 417
707
1644
834

4226
681
1 560
792

4364
689
1601
830

4321
667
1 575
829

4267
'677
1 555
827

4279
671
1 592
805

4354
680
1 626
818

4 341
682
1638
813

4263
682
1 656
822

4332
664
1651
878

4322
'654
1678
838

r

Eating and drinking places
Drug and proprietary stores .
Liquor stores

8,817
2975
1 612

8863
2999
1583

9028
2999
1 591

9 113
3001
1573

9090
3041
1 578

9324
3041
1 577

9345
3067
1 565

9345
3016
1548

9626
3 148
1 542

9,715
3209
1545

9762
3263
1 563

r
9,776
r

Nondurable goods stores
General merch group stores
Department stores
Variety stores
..
Food stores
Grocery stores
Gasoline service stations

do....
do
do....

...

Estimated inventories, end of year or month: t
Book value (unadjusted), total
mil. $..
Durable goods stores #
do....
Building materials, hardware, garden
supply, and mobile home dealers
do....
Automotive dealers
do....
Furniture, home furn., and equip
do....

3 197
1 572

10,338
26,994
9,671

10,255
27,275
9,639

10,192
26,245
9,866

10,023
26,756
10,111

10,142
27,083
10,337

10,259
26,638
10,324

10,224
26,691
9,878

10,360
26,596
9,984

10,789
27,585
10,101

do....
do
do....
do
do....

65,150
21 808
16,315
14300
10,561

65956
22 191
16462
15 311
10,477

65969
23317
17442
14 311
10,830

66519
23566
17412
14 504
10,767

66823
23949
17497
14 189
10,891

68233
24 646
18070
14 071
11,501

70865
25950
19071
14326
11,970

74441
27992
20760
14982
12,251

75293
28 198
21 130
15 431
12,167

65956
22 191
16462
15 311
10,477

64 110
21 555
15826
14 769
10,001

65,459
22780
16837
14750
10,234

do
do....

126 833
59,095

do....
do....
do....

10,164
26,296
9,870

10,672
26,375
10,028

10,081
24,875
9,603

10,145
26,132
9,642

10,255
26,872
9,736

10,223
27,831
9,836

10,134
28,925
9,962

10,234
27,892
9,920

10,373
26,665
9,956

10,672
26,375
10,028

10,736
26,023
10,314

10,821
27,585
10,349

10,893
r
26,739
10,461

10,830
27,285
10,327

do....
do....
do
do....
do....

67,738
24020
17889
14,158
10,967

68,653
24484
18090
15,174
10,891

67,592
23900
17780
14,470
11,188

68,075
24 118
17 858
14,606
11,216

67,774
24247
17 872
14,420
11,079

68,054
24333
17998
14,373
11,242

68,120
24206
17 924
14,442
11,218

68,268
24357
18 068
14,546
11,047

68,202
24386
18 075
14,767
10,912

68,653
24484
18 090
15,174
10,891

68,134
24 129
17663
14,994
10,918

68,875 rr68,915
24 983 25 080
18 523 18 566
14,960 14,826
10,876 10,885

69,162
25484
18853
14,765
11,048

mil. $..

371,996

388,984

31,992

31,076

32,291

31,725

31,312

33,067

35,274

47,915

28,146

27,026

do....
do....

26,870
3,959

28,212
4,059

2,370
346

2,368
359

2,387
370

2,305
348

2,320
345

2,347
359

2,575
362

3,792
361

1,933
289

1,868
272

Durable goods stores
Auto and home supply stores
Nondurable goods stores #
General merchandise group stores
Food stores
Grocery stores
Apparel and accessory stores
Eating places
Drug stores and proprietary stores

do....
do....
do....
do
do....
do
do....

345,126
115,314
127,567
125 745
18,706
20341
17,855

'22017
'20,664

8788

r

4669
725
1 783
877

'4 712

10 026
r
3218
1 560

'9913
'3254

11,198
27,488
10,325

11,198
27,558
10,286

r
67
r

68,176
25096
18,664
14 765
10,772

r

772
24 334
18 028
14 900
10,667

233.89

234.07

128 250 124 631 126 300 126 662 128 258 129 788 128 849 127 619 128 250 127 869 130 392 129
327 129 923
59,597 57,039 58,225 58,888 60^204 61,668 60,581 59,417 59,597 59,735 61,517 r60,412 60,761

360,772
119,163
135,387
133 475
20,143
22 138
19,095

do
do....
do
do....
. do

Apparel and accessory stores
Women's clothing, spec, stores, furriers.,
Shoe stores
Drue stores and proorietarv stores

r
22 020
r
20,687
r

129,352
124,858 123,901 125,496 125,837 126,850 130,731 135,378 136,105 124,858 123,345 126,364 128,843
58902 57932 58977 59014 58617 59866 60937 60812 58902 59235 60,905 r6!071 61,176
10,383
25,770
9,574

Nondurable goods stores #
General merch. group stores
Department stores
Food stores
Apparel and accessory stores

..

4519
r
698
1 688
r
868

10,224
26,691
9,878

Book value (seas adj ) total
Durable goods stores #
Building materials, hardware, garden
supply, and mobile home dealers
Automotive dealers
Furniture, home furn., and equip

Estimated sales (sea. adj.), total #
Auto and home supply stores
Department stores
Variety stores
Grocery stores
...

8391

9,737
26,638
9,722

Nondurable goods stores #
General merch group stores
Department stores
Food stores
Apparel and accessory stores

Firms with 11 or more stores:
Estimated sales (unadjusted), total

123,591
58,441

r
21 572
r
20,298
r

do....
do....
do ...
do....

r

32,513
r

2,483
360

r

30,227
9,550
11,741
11 594
1,718
2033
1,694

r

33422
344
8803
603
11 411

29,622
9,737
11,321
11 175
1,606
1925
1,550

28,708 29,904
9,096
9,160
12,046
11,038
10 889 11 886
1,534
1,458
1 926 2 014
1,554
1,518

29,420
9,497
10,928
10 778
1,776
2 Oil
1,521

28,992 30,720
9,991
9,115
11,201 11,521
11 057 11 381
1,611
1,729
1 856 1 977
1,507
1,551

32,699
12,020
11,135
10 987
1,934
1 860
1,625

44,123
19,437
13,050
12 786
3,055
1 924
2,442

26,213 25,158 30,131
7,122
6,991 r9,311
11,038 10,454 11,693
10 905 10 308 11 529
1,717
1,228
1,186
1 803 1 736
2 030
1,727
1,575
1,542

32390
338
8667
609
11 108

32 122
332
8 466
577
11 077

32537
342
8572
600
11 129

32425
337
8494
600
11 215

32606
343
8 498
590
11 237

32560
344
8522
588
11 224

32817
346
8547
588
11 257

33540
339
8937
600
11 416

33312 33083
348
351
8967 , 8697
598
606
11 185 11 340

1 697
705
376
1.572

1608
677
354
1.576

1722
708
372
1.594

1 686
696
361
1.579

1 656
683
354
1.627

1 678
706
356
1.638

1 725
723
368
1.651

1 728
736
371
1.616

1 726
748
370
1.694

1 746
758
389
1.744

233.27

233.43

32,710

2,382
345

33 568
355
r
8920
r
596
11 472
1r 757
772
r
378
1.773

1 786
748
392
1.772

LABOR FORCE, EMPLOYMENT, AND EARNINGS
POPULATION OF THE UNITED STATES
Total, incl. armed forces overseas i

mil..

3

3

110,812
2,142
108^670
100,397
8,273

112,383 112,089 113,742 114,706 114,083 112,744 112,955 113,035 112,659 111,968 111,835 112,067 112,077 112,506 115,578
2 194
2 173
2 180
2 182
2 188
2,198
2,195
2 180
2,189
2,202
2,179
2,198
2 188
2,175
2 196
110',204 109',914 111*569 112*526 111*887 110*546 110*767 1 10*855 110*477 109*779 109*647 109373 109*875 110*308 113,383
97,262 97,265 97,994 98,840 99,543 101,813
99,526 99,957 100,683 101,490 101,177 99,851 99,825 99,379 98,849
10,678
9,957 10*886 11,'036 10,710 10*695 10,'942 11*476 11,628
12,517
12,382
11*879 11,035 10,765 11,570

229.85

232.06

231.70

231.88

232.06

232.28

232.50

232.70

232.90

233.08

233.57

233.74

LABOR FORCE
Not Seasonally Adjusted
Labor force, total, persons 16 years of age
and over
Armed forces
Civilian labor force, total
Employed
Unemployed

thous..
do
do....
do
do

Seasonally Adjusted U
Civilian labor force, total....
.
Participation rate *
Employed total
Employment-population ratio *
Agriculture
Nonagriculture
.
.
Unemployed, total
Long term, 15 weeks and over
See footnotes at end of tables.




do
percent..
thous
percent..
thous
do

58.3
3,368
97*030

do
do....

2,285

63.9

110,378 110,147 110 416 110,614 110 858 110,752 111,042 111,129 110,548 110,553 110,484 110786 110,749 111 932
63.7
63.7
64.3
64.1
64.2
64.1
63.8
63.7
63.6
64.2
64.2
64.2
64.1
64.0
99994 99 681 99588 99683 99 543 99 176 99 136 99093 99,103 99,063 99,103 99,458 99,557 100 786
57.2
57.9
57.1
57.1
57.2
57.1
57.1
57.2
57.3
57.2
57.4
57.1
56.9
56.6
57.2
3,412
3,371
3,367
3,522
3,375
3,401
3,446
3,363
3,413
3,466
3,411
3,393
3,429
3,371
3,445
96*125 96*548 96*310 96443 96*254 96480 95*763 95*670 95*682 95*691 95,670 95*729 96,088 96490 97,264

64.0

3,485

10384
3,267

10,466
3,517

10,828
3*569

10931
3,637

11,315
3,856

11,576
4,167

11,906
4,524

12036
4,732

11 446
4,634

11,490
4,618

11,381
4,615

11 328
4,356

11,192
4,517

11 146
4,589

S-10

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

1982

Annual

July 1983

May

June

July

Aug.

1983
Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

Mas-

June

LABOR FORCE, EMPLOYMENT, AND EARNINGS—Continued
LABOR FORCE— Continued
Seasonally Adjusted H
Civilian labor force — Continued
Unemployed — Continued
Rates (unemployed in each group as percent
of civilian labor force in the group): §
All civilian workers
Men, 20 years and over
Women, 20 years and over
Both sexes 16-19 years

7.6
6.3
6.8
19.6

9.7
8.8
8.3
23.2

9.4
8.3
8.2
22.9

95
8.7
8.1
22.5

9.8
8.9
8.3
23.9

9.9
9.0
8.3
23.8

10.2
9.6
8.4
23.8

10.5
'9.8
8.7
24.1

10.7
10.0
9.0
24.2

10.8
10.1
9.2
24.5

10.4
9.6
9.0
22.7

10.4
9.9
8.9
22.2

10.3
9.6
8.8
23.5

10.2
9.8
8.4
23.4

10.1
9.6
8.5
23.0

10.0
9.0
8.6
23.6

White
Black and other
Married men, spouse present
Married women, spouse present
Women who maintain families

6.7
142
4.3
6.0
10.4

8.6
173
6.5
7.4
11.7

8.4
17 1
6.1
7.3
11.9

8.4
17 1
6.4
7.1
12.1

8.7
174
6.6
7.4
12.0

8.7
17.7
6.8
7.3
11.7

9.1
18.1
7.2
7.6
12.4

9.3
18.4
7.5
7.9
11.3

9.6
18.5
7.6
8.2
12.5

9.7
18.8
7.8
8.2
13.2

9.1
19.0
7.1
7.8
13.2

9.2
18.0
7.2
7.6
13.0

9.0
18.5
7.1
7.5
13.5

8.9
18.8
7.1
7.3
13.2

8.9
18.6
7.0
7.5
12.9

8.6
18.9
6.6
7.8
12.8

40
10.3

4.9
14.3

4.8
13.6

49
14.0

49
14.4

4.9
14.4

4.9
15.5

5.2
15.8

5.5
16.2

5.6
16.3

15~6
8.3
8.2

10.1
20.0
12.3
13.3

9.8
18.9
11.5
12.2

10.0
19.5
12.2
13.1

10.2
20.3
12.1
12.8

10.2
20.4
12.4
13.3

10.7
22.0
13.6
14.9

11.0
22.3
14.1
16.0

11.4
21.8
14.8
17.0

11.6
22.0
14.8
17.1

10.8
20.0
13.0
14.7

10.8
19.7
13.3
14.7

10.8
20.3
12.8
14.1

10.5
20.3
12.4
13.5

10.5
20.4
12.3
13.5

10.0
18.1
11.5
12.2

91,156
75 125

89,596
73793

90,407
74 228

90,585
74603

89,221
74 212

89,088
74 211

89,562
74,161

89,541
73,678

89,466
73,463

89,321
73,353

87,660
71,905

87,613
71,625

88,172
72,121

r
89,016
r

r
89,827
r

P
90,571
P

r
88,746
r
73,004
r

54,759
23,049
1,014
3,790

88,814
73,090
54,823
23,030
1,006
3,757

r
89,101
r
73,377
r
55,001
r

r
89,416
r
73,688
r

P
89,760
P
74,130
P
55.570
P
23,514
p
l,008
P

18,267 18,376
18,486
10,617 r!0,689
10,783
r
638
651
661
433
440
444
r
559
565
569
r
r
827
816
820
1,362
1,369
1,379
r
2,030
2,031 rr2,064
f
1,988
1,999
2,010
1,723
1,743
1,758
r
r
691
690
689
377
381
382

P
18,560
P
10,830
P
679
P
448
P
575
P
832
p
l,385
P
2,061
P
2,017
p
l,761
P
689
P

Occupation:
White-collar workers
Blue-collar workers
Industry of last job (nonagricultural):
Private wage and salary workers
Construction
Manufacturing
Durable goods

(')
(')

EMPLOYMENT t
Employees on payrolls of nonagricultural estab.:
Total, not adjusted for seasonal variation ....thous..
Private sector (excl government)
do

72,984

73,788

74,804

Seasonally Adjusted t
Total employees, nonagricultural payrolls
Private sector (excl. government)
Nonmanufacturing industries
Goods-producing
Mining
Construction

do....
do....
do
do....
do....
do....

91,156
75,125
54955
25,497
1,139
4,188

89,596
73,793
54940
23,907
1,143
3,911

90,016
74,148
55070
24,226
1,177
3,971

89,775
73,939
55021
24,001
1,150
3,933

89,450
73,781
54979
23,843
1,125
3,916

89,264
73,579
54913
23,672
1,113
3,893

89,235
73,451
54,896
23,530
1,100
3,875

88,938
73,158
54,800
23,287
1,082
3,847

88,785
73,013
54,791
23,131
1,066
3,843

88,665
72,907
54714
23,061
1,053
3,815

r
88,885
r
73,132
r

Manufacturing
Durable goods
Lumber and wood products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone clay and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment
Transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing

do ..
do....
do
do....
do
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....

20,170
12,109
666
464
637
1,122
1,590
2,498
2,093
1,897
730
408

18,853
11,100
603
433
577
922
1,434
2,266
2,015
1,744
715
385

19,078
11,289
602
434
586
947
1,460
2,350
2,033
1,766
723
388

18,918
11,169
601
433
580
929
1,442
2,298
2,025
1,756
720
385

18,802
11,095
600
430
578
909
1,432
2,256
2,016
1,770
717
387

18,666
10,961
601
433
573
890
1,416
2,213
2,008
1,733
712
382

18,555
10,862
603
428
570
869
1,402
2,184
1,992
1,724
710
380

18,358
10,685
605
426
565
840
1,378
2,122
1,976
1,691
705
377

18,222
10,577
608
427
559
823
1,362
2,088
1,975
1,661
700
374

18,193
10,559
614
429
554
816
1,359
2,066
1,957
1,696
695
373

18,244
10,594
625
430
557
817
1,364
2,048
1,974
1,710
695
374

18,245
10,608
631
427
557
810
1,364
2,042
1,981
1,729
693
374

do....
do
do....
do
do....
do....
do....
do
do....
do....
do....

8,061
1 671
70
823
1,244
688
1,266
1 109
214
736
237

7,753
1638
67
750
1,163
662
1,268
1079
201
700
221

7,789
1,641
68
758
1,170
664
1,272
1084
201
708
223

7,749
1 635
68
744
1,167
661
1,268
1079
200
705
222

7,707
1639
67
741
1,141
660
1,266
1 073
200
700
220

7,705
1 636
67
736
1,151
657
1,267
1074
200
698
219

7,693
1,633
66
734
1,149
659
1,266
1,070
202
696
218

7,673
1,636
66
733
1,148
653
1,265
1,066
201
689
216

7,645
1,632
63
727
1,141
654
1,263
1,064
200
685
216

7,634
1,626
69
727
1,140
653
1,263
1,059
199
685
213

7,650
1,626
69
726
1,150
653
1,266
1,057
200
688
215

7,637
1,620
67
726
1,148
652
1,264
1,056
199
691
214

7,650
1,619
67
730
1,143
652
1,269
1,056
199
699
216

do....
do
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do
do....

65,659
5 165
20,547
5,358
15,189
5,298
18,619
16,031
2772
13,259

65,689
5081
20,401
5,280
15,122
5,340
19,064
15,803
2739
13,064

65,790
5 117
20,454
5,311
15,143
5,331
19,020
15,868
2731
13,137

65,774
5099
20,454
5,293
15,161
5,339
19,046
15,836
2738
13,098

65,607
5075
20,438
5,279
15,159
5,342
19,083
15,669
2737
12,932

65,592
5056
20,410
5,265
15,145
5,344
19,097
15,685
2739
12,946

65,705
5054
20,380
5,252
15,128
5,351
19,136
15,784
2735
13,049

65,651
5033
20,344
5,237
15,107
5,350
19,144
15,780
2,742
13,038

65,654
5,019
20,320
5,212
15,108
5,356
19,187
15,772
2,746
13,026

65,604
5008
20256
5,192
15,064
5,367
19,215
15,758
2,747
13,011

65,697
r
4,966
20,343
5,181
15,162
5,384
19,262
15,742
2,742
13,000

65,784
4,963
20,350
5,176
15,174
5,391
19,356
15,724
2,742
12,982

r

66,069
r
4,991
r
20,354
r
5,196
15,158
r
5,431
19,565
15,728
2,749
12,979

66,246
P
4,997
P
20,457
P
5,205
P
15,252
P
5,451
P
19,711
P
15,630
P
2,745
P
12,885

Production or nonsupervisory workers on private
nonagric. payrolls, not seas, adjusted
thous..
Manufacturing
do....

60,927
14,020

59,560
12,790

59,989
12,968

60,308
12,941

59,934
12,630

59,922
12,693

59,919
12,790

59,495
12,505

59,292
12,319

59,209
12,201

57,529
12,157

57,989
12,241

r
58,800 r59,556
12,369 12,525

P
60,484
P

Seasonally Adjusted t
Production or nonsupervisory workers on private
nonagricultural payrolls t
thous
Goods-producing
do....
Mining
do
Construction ..
do ..
Manufacturing
do....
Durable goods
do....
Lumber and wood products
do....
Furniture and fixtures
do
Stone, clay, and glass products
do....
Primary metal industries
do
Fabricated metal products
do....
Machinery, except electrical
do...
Electric and electronic equipment
do....
Transportation equipment
do...
Instruments and related products
do...
Miscellaneous manufacturing
do...

60927
18,245
841
3261
14,020
8,294
553
373
490
861
1,171
1,580
1,311
1,219
430
302

59566
16,589
831
3004
12,790
7,350
493
342
437
683
1,033
1,368
1,216
1,085
410
279

59903
16,902
862
3060
12,980
7,511
492
343
444
704
1,054
1,438
1,233
1,105
417
281

59716
16,704
837
3024
12,843
7,408
491
342
438
689
1,039
1,396
1,226
1,095
413
279

59568
16,578
814
3013
12,751
7,350
491
339
437
672
1,031
1,358
1,215
1,116
411
280

59367
16,430
804
2992
12,634
7,234
491
342
434
658
1,018
1,321
1,206
1,082
407
275

59247
16,307
792
2,973
12,542
7,150
493
338
432
640
1,008
1,297
1,193
1,072
404
273

58,988
16,095
776
2,951
12,368
6,992
495
336
427
615
988
1,243
1,180
1,039
398
271

58,850
15,961
763
2,946
12,252
6,900
500
337
422
601
975
1,215
1,178
1,010
394
268

58,764
15,908
750
2,917
12,241
6,892
506
338
418
596
973
1,199
1,161
1,044
390
267

58,801
15,900
715
2,882
12,303
6,949
522
337
421
595
983
1,179
1,187
1,073
385
267

58,889 r59,150 r59,468
15,881 16,016
16,192
r
707
701 r r702
r
2,851
2,880
2,956
12,323 12,435 12,534
r
6,961
7,117
7,035
r
529
540
549
r
r
342
349
353
r
423
429
434
r
601
608
615
r
982
987
996
1,171
1,175
1,202
1,193
1,204
1,214
1,066
1,085
1,094
r
r
384
384
385
270
275
274

P
59,883
P
16,380
P
712
P
3,039
P
12,629
P
7,177
P
566
P
355
P
438
P
619
p
l,005
p
l,204
p
l,225
p
l,101
P
387
P

Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and plastics products, nee
Leather and leather products
Service-producing
Transportation and public utilities
Wholesale and retail trade
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate
Services
Government
Federal
State and local

See footnotes at end of tables.




54,888
23,186
1,037
3,905

r

65,699
r
4,979
20,355
5,185
15,170
5,374
19,238
15,753
2,748
13,005

r

57,776
12,115

r

58,939
16,019
736
2,992
12,291
6,931
515
339
421
598
981
1,186
1,182
1,055
387
267

r

55,202
23,347
r
998
r
3,863

23,159
997
r
3,786

r

383

r

7,687
1,633
66
733
1,149
r
654
1,274
1,058
199
707
r
214
65,942
4,988
r
20,329
r
5,180
15,149
r
5,423
19,478
15,724
2,749
12,975

3,946

P
7,730
p
l,637
P
65
P
745
p
l,160
P
657
p
l,276
p
l,056
P
198
P
721
P

7,703
1,630
66
736
1,153
656
1,276
1,058
198
716
214
r

215

P

12,732

277

S-ll

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1983

1982

1982

1981

May

Annual

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

LABOR FORCE, EMPLOYMENT, AND EARNINGS—Continued
EMPLOYMENT t— Continued
Seasonally Adjusted t
Production or nonsupervisory workers— Continued
Nondurable goods
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products
Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and plastics products, nee
Leather and leather products

5,400
1,126
r
51
631
r
972
488
699
587
122
546
178

5,362
1,114
52
627
965
486
694
585
122
538
179

42
901
r
4,087
17769
4,166
13,603
4,003
17,042

43008
4,086
17776
4,156
13,620
4,012
17,134

34.6
35.1
42.5
36.9

34.2
34.5
41.3
35.4

34.7
34.8
41.8
36.4

34.7
34.9
41.6
36.7

39.7
39.0
23

39.2
39.7
24

38.8
39.2
24

39.6
39.5
26

39.8
40.1
29

5 727
1,149
54
712
1,059
518
699
628
133
569
201

5440
1,126
52
642
983
493
698
601
120
536
185

5469
1,128
54
649
989
495
700
604
120
543
187

5435
1,124
53
636
986
492
698
600
119
541
186

5401
1,129
52
634
963
491
696
596
119
537
184

5400
1,126
53
630
972
489
696
597
119
535
183

5392
1,123
51
628
971
492
696
595
122
532
182

5376
1,127
51
629
968
486
696
593
120
526
180

5,352
1,123
48
623
962
487
694
592
120
523
180

5349
1,119
54
623
963
486
695
589
119
524
177

do
do....
do
do....
do....
do....
do....

42805
4,283
17958
4,360
13,598
3,999
16,565

42940
4,194
17827
4,268
13,559
3,994
16,926

43001
4,223
17893
4,298
13595
3,988
16,897

43012
4,208
17890
4,280
13,610
3,999
16,915

42990
4,189
17868
4,268
13,600
3,994
16,939

42937
4,168
17833
4,252
13581
3,990
16,946

42940
4,171
17800
4,240
13,560
3,994
16,975

42893
4,149
17764
4,225
13,539
3,990
16,990

42889
4,135
17738
4,201
13,537
3,993
17,023

42856
4,125
17689
4,183
13,506
3,997
17,045

35.2

34.8

34.8
35.0
42.7
37.5

35.0
34.9
42.8
37.5

35.2
34.9
42.5
38.0

35.2
34.8
42.4
37.6

34.8
34.8
42.0
36.9

34.7
34.7
41.9
37.1

34.7
34.7
41.6
36.1

35.0
34.8
42.2
36.8

39.3
39.1
23

38.9
39.1
23

39.0
39.0
23

38.9
38.8
23

39.0
38.9
23

39.3
39.0
23

Service-producing
Transportation and public utilities
Wholesale and retail trade
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate
Services

r

5,354
1,115
52
622
970
486
694
587
121
529
178

thous
do....
do
do....
do....
do....
do
do....
do
do....
do....

5,360
1,119
54
622
973
486
694
588
120
525
179
r

42
920
r
4,103
17774
4,171
13,603
3,998
17,045

r

r
5,417
1,124
51
634
r
977
492
701
r
586
120
r
554
178

r

43
134 r43,276
r
r
4,106
4,107
!7 754 17
789
r
'4,165
4,180
13,589 13,609
r
r
4,037
4,042
r
!7,237 17,338
r

P

5,452
"1,131
P
50
P
643
P
981
P
494
P
702
P
590
P
121
P
560
P
180
P

43,503
P
4,117
17861
P
4,187
P
13,674
P
4,058
P
17,467
P

AVERAGE HOURS PER WEEK f
Seasonally Adjusted
Avg. weekly hours per worker on private nonagric.
payrolls: ^1 Not seasonally adjusted
hours..
Seasonally adjusted
do....
Mining :!:
do....
Construction :|:
do....
Manufacturing:
Not seasonally adjusted
do....
Seasonally adjusted
do....
Overtime hours
do

43.7
36.9

42.6
36.7

39.8

38.9

28

23

39.0
39.1
23

35.0
35.1

r
42.0
r

37.5

r

39.9
39.9
27

P

35.3
35.1

P

P
42.9
P

38.0

P
P

40.3
40.1
P
29

Durable goods
Overtime hours
Lumber and wood products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone, clay, and glass products
Primary metal industries
Fabricated metal products
Machinery, except electrical
Electric and electronic equipment
Transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing :i:

do
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....

402
2.8
38.7
38.4
40.6
40.5
40.3
40.9
40.0
40.9
40.4
38.8

393
2.2
38.0
37.2
40.0
38.6
39.2
39.7
39.3
40.5
39.8
38.5

395
2.2
38.2
37.3
40.1
38.5
39.4
39.8
39.4
40.9
40.0
38.5

396
2.2
38.4
37.6
40.3
38.8
39.4
39.7
39.4
41.3
40.1
38.6

396
2.2
38.5
37.4
40.5
38.8
39.4
39.8
39.6
40.9
40.1
38.2

394
2.2
38.2
37.8
40.2
38.6
39.2
39.4
39.3
40.6
40.0
38.6

39 1
2.1
38.4
37.5
40.2
37.8
38.9
39.2
39.0
40.1
39.9
38.6

392
2.1
38.1
37.5
40.2
38.2
39.0
39.3
39.2
40.4
39.6
39.0

393
2.1
38.7
37.6
40.2
38.3
39.2
39.3
39.3
40.9
39.4
39.1

393
2.2
38.8
37.8
40.1
38.8
39.2
39.3
39.4
40.1
39.7
39.0

40 1
2.2
40.5
38.6
41.4
38.9
39.9
39.6
39.9
41.6
40.4
38.7

397
2.3
39.5
37.9
40.5
39.1
39.6
39.4
39.5
41.2
39.7
37.7

399
2.5
39.5
38.3
40.6
39.4
39.7
39.7
39.8
41.7
40.0
39.0

405
2.8
40.0
39.3
r
41.0
39.9
40.5
40.2
40.4
42.3
40.5
r
39.0

40 4
2.6
'•39.8
r
39.2
r
41.2
40.2
40.4
40.0
r
40.3
41.6
r
40.3
38.8

P

Nondurable goods
Overtime hours
Food and kindred products
Tobacco manufactures :i:
Textile mill products
Apparel and other textile products

do .
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....

39 1
2.8
39.7
38.8
39.6
35.7

384
2.5
39.4
37.8
37.5
34.7

385
2.5
39.4
37.2
37.7
34.9

385
2.5
39.4
38.4
37.7
35.1

385
2.5
39.4
36.8
37.7
35.1

385
2.5
39.2
38.1
38.1
35.0

386
2.6
39.4
39.7
38.1
35.1

385
2.6
39.5
39.0
38,3
35.1

386
2.5
39.4
38.0
38.8
35.0

386
2.5
39.1
37.9
38.9
35.1

39 1
2.6
39.3
36.5
39.7
36.6

385
2.6
39.0
34.1
39.0
35.2

39.0
2.7
39.2
36.3
39.6
35.6

r

39.5
3.0
39.6
r
37.3
40.6
r
36.2

r

P

do
do....
do....
do....
do....
do....

425
37.3
41.6
43.2
40.3
36.7

41 8
37.1
40.9
43.9
39.6
35.6

41 8
37.0
40.9
43.8
r
39.7
35.7

41 9
37.0
40.9
44.0
r
40.1
35.8

41 9
37.0
40.8
43.4
r
39.6
36.0

41 7
36.9
40.9
44.0
r
39.7
36.0

41 6
37.0
41.0
44.2
r
39.6
35.7

41 7
37.1
40.8
43.8
39.3
35.4

41 7
37.1
40.7
44.1
39.6
35.8

41 7
37.1
40.9
44.4
40.4
35.8

41 8
37.5
41.0
44.5
40.1
36.3

41 4
37.1
41.0
44.4
39.7
34.9

42 1
37.4
41.2
44.9
40.6
36.0

r

424
37.7
41.5
43.5
r
41.1
37.0

r

do....
do....
do...
do
do...
do...

39.4
32.2
38.5
30 1
36.3
32.6

39.0
31.9
38.4
299
36.2
32.6

39.1
32.0
38.4
300
36.3
32.7

39.1
31.9
38.4
299
36.1
32.6

38.9
32.0
38.5
299
36.2
32.6

39.2
32.0
38.5
299
36.3
32.6

38.8
31.9
38.4
299
36.1
32.8

38.8
31.9
38.4
299
36.2
32.6

38.9
31.8
38.4
298
36.2
32.6

38.9
32.1
38.4
30 1
36.3
32.6

38.6
31.9
38.5
299
36.5
32.9

38.6
31.4
38.2
293
36.1
32.5

38.8
31.7
38.4
297
36.0
32.7

r

165.95
169.92
13900
13533
249
2.58
7.47
8.01
38.33
41.64
10.57
10.28
34.32
34.54
10.01 . 10.09
32.35
31.65
30.91
30.62

167.88
136 68
258
38^94
10.37
34.60
10.14
32.29
31.20

166.40
135 67
251
7.49
38.68
10.34
34.32
10.09
32.24
30.73

166.04
135 64
245
7.56
38.47
10.27
34.48
10.09
32.33
3040

165.50
135 03
238
7.47
38.12
10.22
34.38
10.12
32.33
3047

165.48
134 76
234
7.30
37.71
10.16
34.45
10.13
32.66
30.72

164.27
133 58
2.29
7.30
37.24
10.13
34.13
10.08
32.41
30.69

163.32
133 19
226
7.31
36.95
10.09
33.95
10.10
32.53
30.13

164.13
133 26
2.26
7.28
36.74
10.08
34.04
10.16
32.69
30.87

165.80
13477
2.30
7.98
37.26
9.93
34.22
10.20
32.89
31.03

163.89
13287
2 17
7.30
37.09
9.89
33.59
10.10
32.74
31.02

164.40
13356
2.20
7.12
37.43
10.02
33.66
10.10
33.04
30.84

466,12
13469
2.18
r
7.26
r
38.03
10.09
r
33.70
10.18
r
33.25
31.43

105.6
93.5
138.8
1045
892
87.6
91.6
112.3
103.3
105.6
109.8
104.0
117.6
122.2

105.0
92.1
132.8
101 1
885
86.6
91.2
112.1
103.0
105.2
109.5
103.6
117.0
122.3

104.8
91.7
129.6
101.9
879
86.0
90.7
112.1
102.2
105.5
109.4
104.0
117.0
122.1

104.2
90.2
125.7
100.5
866
83.9
90.5
111.9
102.1
105.2
108.8
103.8
116.8
122.1

102.9
87.4
119.0
97.0
840
79.9
90.1
111.5
100.6
104.3
107.7
103.0
116.7
122.5

102.5
86.8
117.5
97.2
833
79.0
89.7
111.3
100.7
103.5
107.2
102.1
116.8
122.8

102.6
86.5
116.5
96.5
83 1
78.8
89.5
111.5
100.5
104.0
106.7
103.0
117.2
122.9

104.1
r
89.8
118.4
106.2
855
81.4
91.7
112.0
r
99.0
104.3
106.8
103.4
117.8
124.1

102.2
87.2
111.6
94.7
84 1
80.4
89.6
110.5
r
98.6
102.1
105.5
100.8
116.4
122.5

103.1
87.8
110.7
94.3
854
81.6
91.0
111.6
99.1
103.9
106.1
103.0
116.4
123.9

104.0
89.6
109.5
96.3
87.4
r
83.7
r
92.8
111.9
r
99.6
103.6
106.6
102.4
117.8
124.7

Paper and allied products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum and coal products
Rubber and plastics products, nee :l:
Leather and leather products
Transportation and public utilities
Wholesale and retail trade
Wholesale trade
Retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate i
Services

r

38.8
31.7
38.5
296
r
36.1
32.7

39.4
2.9
r
39.4
r
37.4
r
40.4
36.1

405
P
2.8
"39.9
P
39.5
P
41.5
P
40.2
P
40.4
P
40.2
"40.5
P
42.0
P
40.1
P
38.9
39.4

P
2.9
P
39.5
P

37.3
"40.6
36.2

P

427
37.4
r
41.5
r
43.7
r
41.2
r
36.8

P
427
P

38.9

P
39.0
P
32.0
P

r
31.9
r
38.6
r
299
r

36.3
32.9

37.3

P
41.7
P
P

43.6
41.2
36.8

P

38.7

P
299
P

36.0
"32.8

AGGREGATE EMPLOYEE-HOURS t
Seasonally Adjusted
Employee-hours, wage & salary workers in nonagric. establish, for 1 week in the month,
seas adj. at annual rate
bil. hours.
Total private sector
do
Mining
do...
Construction
do ...
Manufacturing
do...
Transportation and public utilities
do...
Wholesale and retail trade
do...
Finance, insurance, and real estate
do...
Services
do...
Government
do...
Indexes of employee-hours (aggregate weekly): ^j
Private nonagric. payrolls, total
1977=100.
Goods-producing
do...
Mining
do...
Construction
do. . .
Manufacturing
do
Durable goods
do...
Nondurable goods
do...
Service-producing
do...
Transportation and public utilities
do...
Wholesale and retail trade
do...
Wholesale trade
do...
Retail trade
do...
Finance, insurance, and r al estate
do...
Services
do...
See footnotes at end of tables.




108.1
101.1
137.0
109.1
979
98.0
97.6
111.9
105.5
106.3
111.7
104.2
117.2
119.6

104.4
91.0
132.2
100.0
873
84.8
90.9
111.8
102.3
104.8
108.9
103.2
116.9
122.1

103.9
88.9
122.8 •
982
856
82.0
90.8
112.2
101.2
105.1
108.4
103.8
117.0
123.3

166.97 P"167.31
13686
13601
P
r
2.26
2.20
P
r
7.67
7.49
r
38.27
"38.55
P
10.10
10.18
r
P
34.07
34.19
P
10.26
10.29
P
r
33.76
33.60
P
r
30.45
30.96

105.0
r
90.5
110.2
r
99.9
r
878
r
84.3
r
92.9
113.0
r
99.8
104.6
107.2
103.6
118.9
126.2

"105.7
P
91.8
"113.9
P
102.7
"88.7
P
85.4
P
93.6
P
113.4
P
100.3
"105.1
"107.7
P
104.1
P
118.4
"126.7

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-12
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

July 1983
1983

1982

Annual

May

June

Aug.

July

Sept.

Nov.

Oct.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

LABOR FORCE, EMPLOYMENT, AND EARNINGS—Continued
HOURLY AND WEEKLY EARNINGS f
Average hourly earnings per worker: fl
Not seasonally adjusted:
Private nonagric. payrolls
dollars..
Mining
do.
Construction
do....
Manufacturing
.
. . do....
Excluding overtime
do....
Durable goods
do.
Excluding overtime
do....
Lumber and wood products
do
Furniture and
fixtures
do....
Stone, clay, and glass products
do....
Primary metal industries
do....
Fabricated metal products
do....
Machinery, except electrical
do....
Electric and electronic equipment .... do....
Transportation equipment
do....
Instruments and related products .... do....
Miscellaneous manufacturing ... . do....

7.25
10.04
10.82
7.99
7.72
854
8.25
699
5.91
8.27
10.81
8.19
8.81
7.62
10.39
7.42
5.97

7.67
10.78
11.62
8.50
8.25
9.06
8.81
7.46
6.31
8.86
11.33
8.78
9.29
8.21
11.12
8.10
6.43

7.64
10.63
11.51
8.46
8.22
9.02
8.78
736
6.22
8.79
11.22
8.78
9.27
8.10
11.09
8.01
6.39

7.64
10.78
11.47
8.50
8.25
9.07
8.81
754
6.29
8.85
11.30
8.82
9.29
8.14
11.21
8.08
6.42

7.68
10.86
11.59
8.55
8.31
9.12
8.87
759
6.33
8.93
11.36
8.85
9.32
8.23
11.25
8.13
6.41

7.70
10.88
11.66
8.51
8.26
9.09
8.85
7.56
6.37
8.92
11.48
8.85
9.34
8.30
11.17
8.17
6.40

7.76
10.99
11.74
8.59
8.33
9.17
8.92
7.65
6.40
9.03
11.54
8.90
9.41
8.37
11.24
8.24
6.50

7.79
10.96
11.88
8.56
8.31
9.13
8.90
7.57
6.40
9.03
11.41
8.85
9.36
8.41
11.29
8.26
6.50

7.81
11.01
11.72
8.61
8.36
9.17
8.92
7.59
6.43
9.04
11.49
8.90
9.38
8.45
11.34
8.31
6.56

7.82
11.03
11.96
8.68
8.42
9.24
8.97
7.55
6.46
9.08
11.49
8.96
9.43
8.51
11.43
8.38
6.67

7.90
11.21
11.95
8.71
8.46
9.26
9.02
7.68
6.49
9.10
11.56
8.98
9.40
8.53
11.40
8.42
6.72

7.92
11.25
12.00
8.75
8.50
9.31
9.06
7.72
6.50
9.10
11.53
9.04
9.44
8.56
11.49
8.48
6.73

7.90
11.19
11.95
8.74
8.47
9.29
9.02
7.68
6.51
9.13
11.24
9.05
9.46
8.60
11.49
8.47
6.75

r
7.94
11.28
11.90
8.77
8.48
9.31
9.02
r
7.74
r
6.51
9.16
11.25
r
9.07
9.48
8.60
11.53
8.46
6.76

r
7.97
11.21
11.80
8.78
8.49
9.33
9.04
r
7.75
r
6.51
r
9.21
11.28
r
9.09
r
9.58
8.59
11.51
8.47
6.81

P
7.97
P
11.33
P
11.72
P
8.81
P
8.50
P
9.37
P
9.04
P
7.83
P
6.57
P
9.29
P
11.29
P
9.11
P
9.63
P
8.67
P
11.58
P
8.46
P

Nondurable goods
.
do....
Excluding overtime
do
Food and kindred products
do....
Tobacco manufactures
do....
Textile mill products
do....
Apparel and other textile products .. do....
Paper and allied products
do....
Printing and publishing
do....
Chemicals and allied products
do....
Petroleum and coal products
do....
Rubber and plastics products, nee .... do....
Leather and leather products
do....
Transportation and public utilities
do....
Wholesale and retail trade
do
Wholesale trade
do....
Retail trade
do
Finance, insurance, and real estate
do....
Services
do

7.18
694
7.44
8.88
5.52
4.97
8.60
8.19
9.12
11.38
7.17
4.99
9.70
592
7.56
525
6.31
641

7.73
749
7.89
9.78
5.83
5.20
9.32
8.75
9.96
12.46
7.65
5.32
10.30
621
8.02
5.47
6.78
690

7.66
7.43
7.93
9.93
5.79
5.18
9.14
8.62
9.81
12.52
7.57
5.32
10.17
6.19
7.99
5.46
6.76
6.85

7.70
746
7.91
10.36
5.80
5.20
9.27
8.68
9.94
12.53
7.66
5.35
10.20
6.18
7.96
5.46
6.71
6.84

7.77
752
7.88
10.42
5.81
5.19
9.41
8.75
10.00
12.42
7.67
5.29
10.29
6.20
8.03
5.47
6.77
6.87

7.74
7.48
7.86
9.51
5.83
5.20
9.45
8.81
10.01
12.42
7.66
5.33
10.42
6.20
8.07
5.46
6.86
6.90

7.84
7.56
7.91
9.55
5.86
5.23
9.63
8.91
10.19
12.61
7.78
5.41
10.46
6.24
8.10
5.50
6.90
6.99

7.80
7.55
7.88
9.50
5.88
5.21
9.53
8.89
10.22
12.57
7.74
5.39
10.48
6.27
8.13
5.53
6.97
7.04

7.88
7.62
8.00
10.16
5.92
5.24
9.60
8.92
10.26
12.68
7.81
5.41
10.59
6.30
8.14
5.56
7.00
7.08

7.95
7.69
8.06
9.63
6.04
5.28
9.65
9.00
10.32
12.71
7.91
5.44
10.62
6.27
8.20
5.54
7.01
7.12

7.97
7.72
8.09
9.87
6.08
5.33
9.65
8.97
10.34
13.16
7.91
5.50
r
!0.68
6.42
8.31
5.65
7.19
7.18

7.99
7.75
8.11
9.96
6.10
5.33
9.65
8.99
10.41
13.25
7.91
5.50
10.72
6.45
8.28
5.69
7.22
7.19

8.00
7.74
8.16
10.43
6.11
5.33
9.67
9.03
10.39
13.28
7.92
5.52
10.68
6.43
8.27
5.68
7.19
7.17

8.03
r
7.75
8.20
10.61
6.14
5.35
r
9.72
r
9.03
10.43
13.27
7.95
5.52
10.72
6.45
8.34
5.69
7.23
7.20

8.03
7.75
r
8.18
10.74
r
6.14
r
5.33
r
9.80
r
9.07
10.50
13.21
r
7.96
r
5.51
10.73
6.47
r
8.36
5.71
r
7.3l
r
7.22

P
8.04
P
7.76
P

7.25
1004
10.82
799
9.70
592
6.31
641

7.67
1078
11.62
850
10.30
621
6.78
690

7.65

o
11.57

7.67

7.73

8.51
10.29
6.20
C)
6.89

7.70
(')
11.63
8.54
10.31
6.23
H
6.95

7.78
O
11.71
8.61
10.51
6.32
(l)
7.04

7.82
O
11.88
8.63
10.58
6.33
0)
7.09

7.88
0)
11.86
8.68
10.66
6.35

(')
7.11

7.91
(')
12.00
8.76
10.70
6.39
H
7.14

7.91
(')
12.00
8.75
10.77
6.40
C1)
7.15

7.95
(')
12.02
8.78
10.76
6.43
(M
7.19

r
7.98
(l)
11.86
8.79
10.81
6.46
(M
r
7.23

138.9
92.6
1482
132.0
141 9
139.4
138.0
138.1
137.3

148.3
93.3
159.0
141.1
152.5
148.6
145.0
148.3
147.6

147.5
93.5
156.5
140.4
151.8
147.5
144.6
147.8
146.4

148.0
92.8
159.2
140.5
152.5
148.5
144.6
146.8
147.4

12.92
16.78

14.28
18.56

14.15
18.39

10.64

11.51

255.20
170.13

266.92
167.87

22057
147 05

( 22)
()

255.20
438.75
399.26
318.00
343.31
280.74
382.18
190.62
29106
158.03
229.05
208.97
119

Seasonally adjusted:
Private nonagricultural payrolls
Mining
Construction
Manufacturing
Transportation and public utilities
Wholesale and retail trade
Finance, insurance, and real estate
Services

dollars..
do
do....
do
do....
do
do....
do

Indexes of avg. hourly earnings, seas, adj.: H
Private nonfarm economy:
Current dollars
1977=100..
1977 dollars x
do....
Mining
do
Construction
do....
Manufacturing
do
Transportation and public utilities
do....
Wholesale and retail trade
do....
Finance, insurance, and real estate
do....
Services
do....
Hourly wages, not seasonally adjusted:
Construction wages, 20 cities (ENR): §
Common labor
.. .
$ per hr..
Skilled labor
do....
Farm (U.S.) wage rates, hired workers, by
method of pay:
All workers, other than piece-rate

6.79

8.21
10.67
P
6.16
P
5.36
P
9.91
P
9.08
P
10.53
P
13.23
P
7.96
P
5.50
P
10.72
P
6.45
P
8.35
P
5.71
P
7.25
P
7.19
P

P

8.00

11.65
8.56
10.38
6.24
0)
6.98

11.66
8.57
10.39
6.24
I1)
7.00

7.76
(')
11.77
8.58
10.45
6.29
C)
7.03

148.8
92.8
160.9
141.2
153.3
148.8
145.2
148.2
148.5

149.6
93.0
161.0
141.4
154.1
149.9
145.8
150.0
149.4

150.0
93.1
162.8
141.6
154.6
150.1
146.2
150.6
149.8

150.7
93.1
162.1
142.9
154.7
151.1
147.1
152.0
150.5

151.1
93.4
162.9
141.9
155.3
152.2
147.5
152.6
150.7

151.9
94.1
163.0
144.0
155.8
153.1
148.1
153.0
152.0

152.7
94.7
164.7
144.0
156.5
154.4
148.9
156.7
152.2

153.4
95.3
165.1
145.6
157.3
155.2
149.3
157.4
152.4

153.4
95.0
164.0
145.5
157.1
155.9
149.6
156.6
152.6

154.0
94.8
165.7
145.9
157.0
155.9
150.5
157.4
154.0

154.6
r
94.7
165.1
144.5
157.6
156.4
151.3
159.0
154.9

"154.8
P
94.7
P
167.0
P
144.2
"157.8
P
156.6
P
151.5
P
158.1
P
155.4

14.15
18.40

14.45
18.70

14.56
18.98

14.64
18.99

14.64
19.01

14.69
19.10

14.77
19.26

14.86
19.34

14.92
19.46

14.92
19.46

14.92
19.46

14.92
19.49

P
15.24
P

11.29

11.29

11.54

11.55

11.59

11.64

12.07

12.17

12.53

12.79

12.48

267.75
169.78

267.68
167.93

268.73
167.54

269.00
167.18

269.00
166.98

269.27
166.32

269.97
166.96

272.14 276.59
168.61 171.48

272.90
169.61

275.27
170.45

277.46
170.85

r
280.10
171.63

P
280.80
P

266.92
459.23
426.45
330.65
356.06
296.83
401.70
198.10
307.97
163.55
245.44
224.94

265.87
453.90
431.63
329.94
356.29
294.14
395.61
197.46
306.02
162.71
245.39
222.63

267.40
461.38
430.13
334.05
360.99
297.99
400.86
198.38
306.46
164.35
242.23
224.35

270.34
461.55
440.42
332.60
357.50
299.15
403.37
202.12
310.76
167.93
245.07
227.40

271.04
461.31
438.42
331.89
356.33
299.54
410.55
201.50
311.50
167.62
249.02
227.70

270.05
461.58
433.21
334.15
357.63
304.19
405.85
200.30
311.04
165.55
249.09
228.57

270.31
459.22
440.75
333.84
357.90
301.08
406.62
199.39
313.01
164.79
252.31
228.80

271.01
458.02
423.09
338.37
363.13
305.74
413.01
199.71
313.39
164.58
253.40
230.10

273.70
465.47
440.13
344.60
371.45
310.85
416.30
203.15
317.34
168.97
254.46
232.11

273.34
476.43
440.96
341.43
367.62
307.64
r
409.04
201.59
318.27
164.98
262.44
234.79

270.86
464.63
424.80
339.50
366.81
305.22
411.65
199.31
313.81
163.30
260.64
232.96

274.13 rr275.52 rr278.95 PP281.34
467.74 469.25 r470.82 P486.06
434.98 436.73 442.50 P445.36
346.10 349.05 r 350.32 P355.04
372.53 375.19 r376.93 P381.36
311.20 313.97 r315.58 P318.38
413.32 '413.79 415.25 P420.22
201.90 203.18 205.75 207.05
316.74 319.42 r321.86 PP323.15
166.42 167.29 169.59 171.87
258.84 r261.00 rr265.35 "261.00
233.74 234.72 236.09 P237.27

86

87

85

83

78

73

76

78

83

83

83

(!)

11.57
8.47
10.24
6.18
0)
6.85

7.73

(!)

(!)

P

11.83
P
8.82
P
10.82
P
6.48
P

7.25

19.85

do....

Workers paid per hour cash wages only do
Railroad wages (average, class I)
do....
Avg. weekly earnings per worker,
private nonfarm: fl
Current dollars, seasonally adjusted
1977 dollars, seasonally adjusted $
Spendable earnings (worker with 3 dependents):
Current dollars seasonally adjusted
1977 dollars seasonally adjusted $
Current dollars, not seasonally adjusted:
Private nonfarm, total
dollars..
Mining
do
Construction
.
.
do .
Manufacturing
do....
Durable goods
do....
Nondurable goods
do....
Transportation and public utilities
do....
Wholesale and retail trade
do....
Wholesale trade
do
Retail trade
do....
Finance, insurance, and real estate
do....
Services
do ..

171.85

HELP- WANTED ADVERTISING
Seasonally adjusted index
See footnotes at end of tables.




1967—100..

83

81

r

87

92

S-13

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1983

1982

1982

Annual

May

Aug.

July

June

Sept.

Dec.

Nov.

Oct.

Jan.

Apr.

Mar.

Feb.

May

June

LABOR FORCE, EMPLOYMENT, AND EARNINGS—Continued
WORK STOPPAGES H
Work stoppages involving 1,000 or more workers:
Number of stoppages:
Beginning in month or year
number..
Workers involved in stoppages:
Beginning in month or year
thous..
Days idle during month or year . .
do .

145

96

15

18

13

729
16908

656
9061

43
658

43
907

38
845

19
754

Unemployment insurance programs:
Insured unemployment, all programs, average
weekly # @
thous
3410
State programs (excl. extended duration prov.):
2
Initial claims
thous
23 939
Insured unemployment, avg. weekly
do....
3,048
Percent of covered employment: @ @
Unadjusted
3.5
Seasonally adjusted
Beneficiaries, average weekly
thous... 2 22,614
Benefits paid @
mil. $.. 13,257.8

4590

4387

4328

4495

4398

30298
4057

1989
3729

2399
3707

2658
3912

2358
3831

4.6

3,558
13,257.8

43
46
3,257
1,573.4

43
47
3,329
1,692.2

4.6
45
3,332
1,682.1

44
47
3,414
1,747.3

3

14

9

1

5

4

2

7

0
764

2
795

14
844

9
1,127

3
790

18
437

5074

5459

5437

5 134

4642

3080
4,581

3 143
4,923

2065
4,759

2075
4,401

1 874
3,906

5.6
5.5
5.0
45 r 45 r 45
4,358 r 4,228 r 4,246
r
2,205.6 2,052.4 2,367.8

4.5
44
3,568
1,817.5

0

1

390
2089

38
905

2
805

4282

4391

4635

2344
3712

2443
3828

2661
4 156

4.2
50
3,306
1,711.3

44
53
3,282
1,647.3

r

UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE

Federal employees, insured unemployment,
average weekly
thous..
Veterans' program (UCX):
Initial claims
do
Insured unemployment, avg. weekly
do....
Beneficiaries average weekly
do
Benefits paid
mil $
Railroad program:
Applications
thous..
Insured unemployment, avg. weekly
do....
Benefits oaid
mil. $..

r2

r

32

32

29

28

29

27

193
41
41
2
2807

136
11
9
P
553

8
9
7
34

10
8
7
33

10
7
6
28

11
7
5
28

184
40
210.8

r
246
62
338.7

5
43
19.1

36
41
18.6

70
54
18.0

20
59
27.0

P

ll
8
6
29

14
65
31.1

4.7
5.2
50
53
3,448 P r3,877
1,820.0 2,138.0

r

28

31

33

35

33

31

26

10
9
7
34

17
14
8
40

24
26
20
112

21
37
r
32
r
!68

16
37
r
36
180

18
34
r
34
r
!96

15
30
28
148

20
73
31.6

17
78
35.1

17
81
39.5

20
95
44.5

7
76
33.1

8
68
36.2

9
79
24.8

26
p

r

P

P

FINANCE
BANKING
Open market paper outstanding, end of period:
Bankers' acceptances
mil. $..
Commercial and financial co. paper, total
do....
Financial companies
do....
Dealer placed .
do
Directly placed
do....
Nonfinancial companies
do

69,226
161,114
111,908
30357
81,551
49206

71601 71 765 72559 72709 73818 75811 77 125
176,937 180,015 180,878 174,094 171,627 170,365 166,941
117,918 121,083 122,885 117,202 115,216 115,530 115,650
34336 35446 36983 36657 35584 35893 36 147
83,974 83,582 85,637 85,902 80,545 79,632 79,637 79,503
43690 59019 58932 57993 56892 56411 54835 51 291
79543

r3
162,330
r3
118,640
r3
34 666
r3

77529 73706 70843
167,304 r!69,142 166,534 169,892 169,870
!20,626
122,230 121,034 123,819 125,552
r
36 755 r38 363 36529 36984 38205
83,974 r83,871 r83,867 r84,505 r86,835 87,347
43690 46678 46912 45500 46073 44 318
79543

r3
162,330
r3
118,640
r3
34 666
r3

r

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....

78,206

80,408

46,463
9,124
22,619

50,375
8,423
21,609

Federal Reserve banks, condition, end of period:
Assets total # .. .
mil $

176 778

190 128 173 574 173 810 177 673 180 258 180 647 186 454 187 494 190 128 176 424 183 117 182 445 189 421 185 Oil 189617

143,906
1 601
130,954
11,151

153,769 141,249 140,244 143,812 144,502 146,838 142,629 149,394 153,769 142,656 142,975 148,860 151,134 152,198 155,649
717
3 610
1 260
848
1 155 2 808
354
374
438
1 058 1 638
717
1 123
449
458
139,312 129,407 127,005 132,640 132,858 134,393 132,080 137,676 139,312 132,368 135,561 136,651 141,550 141,180 141,673
11 131
11,148 11,149 11 149 11 149 11,148 11,148 11 148 11 148 11,148 11,144 11 139 11 138 11,135 11,132

do

176 778

do....
do....
do....

30,816
25,228
131,906

190 128 173 574 173810 177 673 180 258 180 647 186 454 187 494 190 128 176 424 183 117 182 445 189 421 185011 189617
34,334 26,834 25,325 29,893 29,076 32,095 36,638 29,884 34,334 26,275 29,160 28,100 32,321 26,054 27,508
26,489 23,463 20 198 24974 24993 20318 24678 26533 26,489 22,683 22468 23419 23,193 20,567 18004
141,990 132,619 134,228 134,115 135,374 135,197 136,048 139,989 141,990 137,667 139,060 141,497 142,497 145,783 147,587

'41,918
Ml,606
'312
'642
'-277

Ml 853
M1.353
'500
'697
'-164

108,595

109,585

Reserve bank credit outstanding, total # .. do....
Time loans
do
U.S. Government securities
do....
Gold certificate account
do....
Liabilities total # ..

..

Deposits, total
Member-bank reserve balances
Federal Reserve notes in circulation

All member banks of Federal Reserve System,
averages of daily figures:
Reserves held, total
mil. $..
Required
do....
Excess
do....
Borrowings from Federal Reserve banks
do....
Free reserves
do ...
Large commercial banks reporting to Federal Reserve System, Wed. nearest end of yr. or mo.:
Deposits:
Demand, adjusted §
mil. $..

80,972
48,838
9,260
22,874

39,552
39,192
360
1,105
-508

81,415
49,289
8670
23,456

39567
39,257
310
1,205
-656

81,659

81,564

49,582
8,355
23,722

49,845
8,034
23,685

39864
39,573
291
669
-153

40 177
39,866
311
510
-80

81,566
50,006
8,078
23,464

39963
39,579
384
976
-490

81,352
50,160
8288
22,904

40587
40,183
404
455
35

80,766

80,408

80,202

80,356

50,292
8477
21,998

50,375
8,423
21,609

50,364
8,882
20,955

50,429
9 102
20,825

41 199
40,797
402
579
130

41853
41,353
500
697
-164

41 862
41,316
546
500
79

39797
39,362
435
557
-83

80,856

81,022

81,024

50,569
9341
20,946

50,687
9,259
21,076

50,778
8,967
21,279

38039
37,602
437
r
852
r
-362

95 162 102 251 97253 102 733 96774 104 673 107 467 109 585 103 892 105018 103 300
189 652 179 348 178 400 158 754 182 441 164 559 187 996 190 848 189 652 173 523 182 699 173 389
139,364 133,664 133,059 120,177 136,241 124,088 139,931 143,159 139,364 131,271 136,570 130,202
5,722
5,487
5,487
5,533
5,238
5,391
4,488
4,843
4,586
5,706
4,514
4,439
1,213
1,767
2,327
1,767
2,095
2,580
1,064
1,874
899
1,575
1,148
3,014
23613 23720 20459 17299 20735 17939 22492 23 374 23613 19964 20790 18668
406,773 380,789 384,708 392,964 401,138 401,322 403,346 400,640 406,773 416,773 415,929 415,145

38650
38,174
476
993
-435

r
38 282
r
37,833
r
449
r
902
r

-355

38586
37,943
643
1,716
-952

102 186 105 580 104 052
170 795 201 731 180 687
129,353 150,310 134,190
5,482
5,510
4,863
1,134
3,477
2,031
17587 25867 20667

Demand, total #
.
Individuals, partnerships, and corp
State and local governments
U.S. Government
Domestic commercial banks

187 518
do
do.... 140,376
5,235
do....
do.... • 2,148
21 896
do

Time, total #
Individuals, partnerships, and corp.:
Savings
Other time

do....

362,502

do
do....

76971
250,511

do
do....
do....
do....
do
do

470 988
195,499
10,756
26,729
124 444
146 367

110 640 80675 79522
258,127 262,910 269 310
505 603 485 664 490 410
216,860 209,013 212,198
9,056
8,685
11,223
26,926 27,725 27,655
132 336 128 931 129 614
155 314 143 459 144 084

. do ..
do....
do....
do....

116905
36,819
30,872
80.086

125 863 117 335 115205 115 T92 115619 116464 122 277 122 219 125 863 131 837 131 316 129 975 135 147 137 979 136 946
44,586 36,821 36,941 37,542 36,996 37,798 42,270 44,152 44,586 48,816 49,391 49,098 50,996 54,352 53,742
36,730 29,054 29,088 28,841 30,044 30,695 33,043 34,740 36,730 38,677 40,047 40,587 41,118 43,885 43,425
81.277 80.514 78.264 77.650 78.623 78.666 80.007 78.067 81.277 83.021 81.925 80.877 84.151 83.627 83.204

Loans (adjusted) total §
Commercial and industrial
For purchasing or carrying securities
To nonbank financial institutions
Real estate loans
Other loans
Investments, total
U.S. Government securities, total
Investment account *
Other securities
See footnotes at end of tables.




78780 80857 79 876 85 214
276 169 280 507 281 554 278 990
487 857 495 076 499 214 503 444
210,394 212,637 217,148 216,754
9,421 10,257 10,495 12,207
27,389 28,134 27,036 27,312
129 964 130 883 131 702 131 706
143 136 151 432 148 459 154'587

85 764 110 640 147 742
276 282 258,127 233,046
503 395 505 603 507 196
216,892 216,860 218,565
9,758
11,627 11,223
27,017 26,926 26,361
131 954 132 336 133 935
152 179 155314 155 643

409,948 411,392 414,174

159 156 164 469 166 832
221 957 216971 211,054
507 802 503 066 499 741
218,288 216,608 214,650
11,151 10,811 10,010
26,561 26,581 25,301
134 163 134 568 134 009
157 475 147 288 151 140

174 817 173 545
207 808 212*468
505 058
214,426
12,084
26,005
134 358
159 109

506 066
213,330
12,764
25,383
134 860
155512

S-14

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

Annual

July 1983
1983

1982
June

May

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

1,397.5
122.3
237.2
1,038.1

1,398.5
126.4
235.8
1,036.4

1,412.1
130.9
239.1
1,042.0

1,428.2
139.8
243.3
1,045.1

1,436.5
144.5
243.2
1,048.8

1,450.2 rl,460.6
r
!57.8
151.0
243.4
242.8
1,056.3 1,059.5

May

June

FINANCE—Continued
BANKING— Continued
Commercial bank credit, seas, adj.:
Total loans and securities j]
U.S. Treasury securities
Other securities
Total loans and leases H

bil. $
do....
do.
do....

1,316.3
111.0
231.4
973.9

1,412.1
130.9
239.1
1,042.0

1,362.0
116.3
234.9
1,010.8

1,368.8
115.8
235.9
1,017.1

1,376.1
116.5
235.9
1,023.7

1,383.1
117.8
237.1
1,028.3

1,389.4
118.2
237.6
1,033.5

11.02

1,474.4
166.1
245.0
1,063.3

Money and interest rates:
Discount rate (N.Y.F.R. Bank) @@

12.00

12.00

10.00

9.68

9.35

8.73

8.50

8.50

8.50

8.50

8.50

2

13.56

13.93

13.73

11.81
13.63

10.68

2

13.43

13.21

12.90

12.48

12.14

11.58

11.11

10.83

10.51

10.20

2
14.13
2

2
14.49
2

15.11
15.57

14.74
!5.01

15.01
14.96

15.05
15.03

14.34
14.71

13.86
14.37

13.26
13.74

13.09
13.44

13.00
13.04

12.62
12.88

12.97
12.61

12.02
12.42

12.21
12.36

11.95
12.25

4
15.32
3
14.76
3

3
11.89
3
11.89
3

11.20

13.29
13.02
12.61

14.00
13.79
12.69

12.90
13.00
12.15

10.34
10.80
9.93

10.40
10.86
9.63

9.24
9.21
8.60

8.76
8.72
8.42

8.54
8.50
8.20

8.19
8.15
7.97

8.36
8.39
8.26

8.54
8.48
8.35

8.49
8.48
8.41

8.36
8.31
8.15

9.04
9.03
8.80

7.810

8.130

8.304

8.252

8.185

8.820

13.41

percent-

Federal intermediate credit bank loans

do....

Home mortgage rates (conventional 1st
mortgages):
New home purchase (U S avg )
Existing home purchase (U.S. avg.)

percent
do....

14.20

14.51

Open market rates, New York City:
Bankers' acceptances 90 days
do.
Commercial paper, 6-month i
do....
Finance co. paper placed directly, 6-mo @ do....
Yield on U.S. Government securities (taxable):
3-month bills (rate on new issue)
percent..

14.78

13.73

r

r

3

3

10.686

12.148

12.108

11.914

9.006

8.196

7.750

8.042

8.013

334,508
316,291

344,901
331,805

28,871
27,445

31,655
28,711

27,881
26,896

30,138
28,453

29,554
27,056

27,929
28,926

31,423
29,522

34,567
28,143

do

29,517

30,034

27,982

28,024

28,619

28,650

31,691

30,777

Finance companies
Credit unions
Retailers

do
do
do

13,206
6,027
2,828
4,593

13,819
5,781
2,889
4,626

12,958
4,646
2,737
4,740

12,984
4,580
2,916
4,470

13,219
4,841
3,047
4,621

13,754
4,533
2,963
4,457

14,806
6,099
3,434
4,444

14,236
5,861
3,295
4,446

By major credit type:
Automobile
Revolving
Mobile home

do
do
do

8,471
12,775
501

8,364
13,367
4S8

7,376
12,658
507

7,162
12,728
615

7,488
12,705
522

8,041
12,614
543

10,177
12,778
486

9,716
12,491
473

do

27,673

28,011

27,143

27,768

27,363

28,781

29,676

28,359

do
do
do
do....

12,708
5,000
2,877
4,406

13,373
4,714
2,810
4,429

12,671
4,494
2,784
4,494

13,005
4,772
2,759
4,513

12,531
4,735
2,792
4,552

13,681
4,905
2,925
4,524

14,349
5,048
3,022
4,495

13,125
4,837
3,098
4,537

do
do
do

7,378
12,024
405

7,395
12,640
403

7,339
12,100
399

7,542
12,529
438

7,139
12,394
447

8,111
12,533
578

8,643
12,739
463

8,225
11,990
510

14.077

8.50
6

10.14

CONSUMER INSTALLMENT CREDIT
Total extended and liquidated:
Unadjusted:
Extended
Liquidated

mil $
do....

Seasonally adjusted:
Extended total #
By major holder:

Liquidated total #
By major holder:
Commercial banks
Finance companies
Credit unions
Retailers
By major credit type:
Automobile
Revolving
Mobile home
Total outstanding, end of year or month #
By major holder:
Commercial banks
Finance companies
Credit unions
Retailers
By major credit type:
Automobile .
Revolving
Mobile home

do....

331,697

344,798 329,358 332,303 333,285 334,971 337,469 336,473 338,372 344,798 343,151 340,343 342,568 344,748 347,189

do
do....
do
do....

147,622
89,818
45,954
29,551

152,069 146,167 147,227 147,559 148,438 149,801 149,528 149,651 152,069 150,906 150,257 151,319 152,408 153,471
94,322 91,958 93,009 93,353 93,207 93,357 92,541 93,462 94,322 95,080 93,859 94,817 94,675 95,364
47,253 45,472 45,882 45,698 46,154 46,846 46,645 46,832 47,253 46,946 46,757 47,081 47,505 47,838
30,202 26,536 26,645 26,710 26,751 26,829 27,046 27,639 30,202 28,859 27,734 27,472 27,455 27,541

do
do....
do

125,331
62,819
18,373

130,227 126,838 128,143 128,110 128,051 128,865 128,375 129,299 130,227 129,482 129,055 130,959 131,976 133,640
67,184 59,111 59,946 60,556 61,293 61,845 61,836 62,362 67,184 65,562 63,372 63,091 63,521 63,459
18,988 18,488 18,603 18,721 18,918 19,011 19,043 19,049 18,988 19,291 19,374 19,379 19,400 19,448

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FINANCE
Budget receipts and outlays:
Receipts (net)
mil $ 1599,272 '617,766 36,753 66,353 44,675 44,924 59,694 40,539 42,007
Outlays (net) .
. do.... '657,204 '728,424 55,683 59,629 64,506 59,628 61,403 66,708 66,166
6,724 -19,831 -14,704 -1,708 -26,169 -24,158
'-57,932 '-110,658 -18,930
Budget surplus or deficit ( — )
do
5
4,575 26,462 24,845
57,932 5 127,989 21,424 -4,457 20,962 16,751
Budget financing total .
. do...
3,187
6,228 25,923
3,260 14,348 21,086 22,129
Borrowing from the public
do.... '79,329 '134,912
'-6,923 18,237 -7,717
6,614 -4,335 -17,554 20,234 -1,078
Reduction in cash balances
do.... '-21,397
1,146,987
1,147,713
1,166,569
Gross amount of debt outstanding
do.... '1,003,941 '1,146,987 1,076,798 1,084,658 1,094,628 1,114,214
Held by the public
do.... '794,434 '929,346 868,523 871,783 886,131 907,218 929,346 935,574 961,497
Budget receipts by source and outlays by agency:
Receipts (net) total
mil $
Individual income taxes (net)
do

54,498
72,436
-17,938
18,103
29,895
-11,792

57,505 38,816 43,504
67,087 64,152 69,540
-9,582 -25,336 -26,036
9,916
6,419
3,497

25,341
17,919
7,422

27,296
31,303
-4,007

66,234 33,755
69,542 63,040
-3,308 -29,285
4,447 30,476
2,681 18,497
1,766 11,979

1,201,898 1,205,899 1,220,132 1,249,312 1,252,706 1,296,125
991,392 997,811 1,015,730 1,047,033 1,049,714 1,068,211

'599,272
'285,917
'61,137

'617,766
'298,111
'49,207

36,753
9,576
1,202

66,353
32,273
10,589

44,675
23,987
601

44,924
20,867
422

59,694
32,592
6,146

40,539
20,832
-461

42,007
22,452
-680

54,498
24,946
8,164

57,505
34,151
1,164

38,816
20,544
-274

43,504
15,658
4,373

66,234
35,040
4,796

33,755
6,384
-302

'182,720
'69,499

'201,131
'69,317

20,483
5,493

17,572
5,918

14,874
5,214

17,961
5,674

15,608
5,348

15,157
5,010

14,902
5,332

15,776
5,613

17,071
5,119

13,797
4,748

17,939
5,533

21,481
4,918

22,330
5,344

do
do...
do...

'657,204
'26,030
'156,035

'728,424
'36,213
'182,850

55,683
1,362
14,826

59,629
1,526
16,041

64,506
2,668
16,329

59,628
2,184
15,011

61,403
3,026
16,447

66,708
4,107
15,896

66,166
5,374
16,461

72,436
7,499
17,615

67,087
5,836
15,901

64,152
3,847
16,199

69,540
3,084
18,453

69,542
4,626
17,115

63,040
2,503
16,888

mil $
do
do...
do...

'230,304
'92,633
'5,421
'22,904

'251,268
'110,521
'6,026
'23,937

19,883
8,286
486
751

21,087
14,090
497
1,923

22,499
8,643
435
3,097

21,168
9,235
491
994

21,424
7,179
467
1,924

22,200
9,149
482
1,942

22,817
9,076
632
2,066

23,440
14,327
524
3,200

22,197
9,248
468
834

22220
9,512
494
2,061

23,405
8,014
672
2,286

24,167
8,113
487
3,354

22,234
9,679
603
878

GOLD AND SILVER:
Gold:
Monetary stock, U.S. (end of period)
mil. $.
Price at New York i$
dol. per troy oz.

11,151
459.614

Social insurance taxes and contributions
(net)
mil $.
Other
do...
Outlays total #
Agriculture Department
Defense Department military
Health and Human Services
Department §
Treasury Department
National Aeronautics and Space Adm
Veterans Administration

Silver:
Price at New York i±

dol. per troy oz.

See footnotes at end of tables.




10.518

11,148 11,149 11,149 11,149 11,148 11,148 11,148 11,148 11,148 11,144 11,139 11,138 11,135 11,132 11,131
376.010 334.403 314.982 340.102 365.952 435.564 421,755 414.993 445.431 479.893 490.408 419.696 432.188 437.555 412.841
7.947

6.674

5.578

6.497

7.136

8.725

9.458

9.892

10.586

12.396

13.964

10.619

11.694

12.976

11.749

S-15

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

Annual

1983

1982

June

May

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

FINANCE—Continued
MONETARY STATISTICS
Currency in circulation (end of period) .
bil $..
Money stock measures and components (averages
of daily figures): t
Measures (not seasonally adjusted): $
Ml
bil $
M2
do...
M3
do
L (M3 plus other liquid assets)
do ..
Components (not seasonally adjusted):
Currency ..
....
do
Demand deposits
do...
Other checkable deposits $$ ..
do
Overnight HP's and Eurodollars *
do....
Money market mutual funds
do
Savings deposits
do...
Small time deposits @
do
Large time deposits @
do
Measures (seasonally adjusted): $
Ml
M2
M3
L (M3 plus other liquid assets)
Components (seasonally adjusted):
Currency
Demand deposits
Savings deposits
Small time deposits @
Large time deposits @

1456

1562

4300
17166
20613
24913

4580
18783
22785
27774

1198
2403
656
33.0
1098
3615
7882
287 1

128 4
2349
903
41.1
172 4
3503
8590
326 4

do
do...
do
do...

1482

148 1

149 4

1492

150 1

4458
4508
4543
454 3
461 0
470 6
18487 18654 18830 18965 19087 19286
2 237 3 2 257 2 22808 2308 8 2 324 4 2 350 4
27377 27638 27900 28118 28255 28609
1272
2288
85 4
40.1
164 9
3479
8559
3206

128 3
2307
872
40.3
170 1
3486
8614
323 5

1298
2317
879
41.8
172 9
3486
8716
327 4

130 1
2296
89 8
42.4
182 3
3468
876 6
332 9

130 2
2329
93 3
41.5
185 1
3482
879 0
334 9

131 3
2376
97 3
43.9
187 6
3578
8753
339 1

4524
4534
454 4
463 2
458 3
468 7
18506 18645 18809 19036 19170 19297
22407 22602 22834 r2 317 9 2 333 9 2 352 0
27376 27670 27982 28236 28405 28660

do
do....
do
do...
do

PROFITS AND DIVIDENDS (QTRLY.)
Manufacturing corps. (Bureau of the Census):
Net profit after taxes, all industries
mil. $..
Food and kindred products
do ..
Textile mill products
do....
Paper and allied products
do...
Chemicals and allied products
do....
Petroleum and coal products
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....

1465

1274
233 1
3466
8525
322 1

128 2
2323
347 2
8593
3274

1288
232 1
3450
8729
332 l

129 6
2325
346 7
8798
334 9

130 5
2340
350 0
8832
336 1

131 3
2360
358 0
8780
339 6

154 1

1662

479 0
491 0
19436 19645
2369 2 2385 3
28813 29047
132 7
2406
101 5
45.2
191 1
3634
871 6
340 8

135 2
2477
104 0
44.3
182 2
3567
853 9
336 5

474 0
478 2
19450 19595
2 370 2 2 377 6
28824 28968
131 9
2376
366 4
8749
340 4

132 8
2398
359 3
859 1
333 8

'1557

4897
480 6
489 2 r504 5 r 4998
20183 20425 rr2 065 9 rr2 088 5 rr2 093 6
2
4270
2 415 2
2 445 9 2 465 6 2 472 8
r
2 945 7 29649

5086
2 1149
2 495 6

1389

140 4
2422
1210
56.8
1393
3263
7239
300 9

133 2
245 1
107 5
47.3
166 7
3347
798 6
314 2

133 7
2328
110 0
48.8
1596
3245
758 5
302 6

135 4
2352
114 3
48.7
154 0
r
3232
737 7
298 9

1374
2424
1202
50.6
146 7
r
3243
728 6
r
298 1

134 2
2394
335 1
7974
310 7

1356
2387
3257
755 1
2979

137 0
240 1
322 7
7338
r
296 2

r

138 0
2389
321 5
7257
300 4

r

71,028
8383
851
1460
10,324
19,666
408
333
-3705

20044
2 181
144
436
2,821
4,040
165
59
-276

4235
12,580
7,872

2320
8,038
6,449

833
2377
1,717

2,566
734
13,867

do....

3722
-209
15,762
40,317

653
1,072
3,822
10437

mil $.

68970

74591

5441

5349

5457

8937

7310

9596

6846

7997

7889

8862

12406

11 082

do....
do...
do

38,966
25004
1633

45,211
23399
5048

2,958
1467
887

2,628
2554
67

3,179

6,363

6,967

4,761

3,666

5,487

1849
622

1918
611

3,588
2694
563

4,133

1387
641

5,026
1663
520

3447
418

2534
594

3041
1955

5982
937

6,850
3792
441

mil $
do
do
do

65603
15463
8553
13304

73 660
13875
7 429
15326

5 312
694
355
1 404

5 249
'328
1 700
814

8 834
2 131
395
1 476

7 210
1505
750
1783

9 496
2863
302
1795

6 845
1251
494
1 119

7 997
1 634
230
1393

7 889
2089
1 218
663

Transportation ...
..
do
Communication
:
do...
Financial and real estate ....
do
State and municipal issues (Bond Buyer):
Long-term
do
Short-term
do
SECURITY MARKETS
Stock Market Customer Financing
Margin credit at brokers, end of year
or month
...
mil $
Free credit balances at brokers:
Margin accounts
do...
Cash accounts
...
....
do
Bonds

1897
5871
15743

2091
4 175
24456

100
456
1 660

131
166
1 882

5 208
1222
652
645
5
166
2079

464
679
2 657

124
305
2 324

518
307
2 938

306
89
2734

46
1 586
2 130

386
187
2703

8662 12 406 11 082
1846
2*707
2477
419
1*515
611
1 387 1545
1293
336
664
337
976
25
1 883
3 047
3 599
3 219

46 134
34 443

77 179
43 390

5268
5919

5667
4 848

5822
3 302

6650
4*766

6420
3 146

8082
3 357

9951
3 396

9 857
3 365

3492
2980

5897
1 714

14411

13325

12237

11783

11 729

11 396

11208

11 728

12459

13 325

13 370

3515
7 150

5,735
8390

4 175
6355

4215
6345

4 410
6730

4 470
7550

4990
7475

5520
8 120

5600
8395

5735
8 390

6257
8225

Prices:
Standard & Poor's Corporation:
High grade corporate:
Composite §
dol per $100 bond
337
43.2
Domestic municipal (15 bonds)
do....
Sales:
New York Stock Exchange, exclusive of some
stoooed sales, face value, total
mil. $.. 5.733.07

358
41.8

340
39.9

32 1
38.3

328
39.4

35 7
43.2

380
45.6

417
49.7

442
48.7

429
49.0

7.155.44

510.05

499.02

463.04

724.38

699.80

875.39

770.43

792.60

Transportation equipment (except motor
vehicles, etc.)
mil. $..
Motor vehicles and equipment
do....
All other manufacturing industries
do....
Dividends paid (cash), all industries
SECURITIES ISSUED @@
Securities and Exchange Commission:
Estimated gross proceeds, total
By type of security:
Bonds and notes, corporate
Common stock
Preferred stock
By type of issuer:
Corporate total #
Manufacturing
Extractive (mining)
Public utility

See footnotes at end of tables.




.

41,259

5237
161
-467
2550

433

292
1 152
1,428

706
-18
3,767

299 3

140 4
244 1
325 0
7222
304 0

6689
3262

336

1306
1313
595
1058
3,534

598
-321
3,523
10561

10085

139 3
2425

r
323 0
r
720 1
r

15729
1 488
241
441
2755
3658
123
114
759

14 114
2462
339
198
2062

1 786
1602

2382
1182
56.3
1409
r
3246
r
722 7
r
298 0

482 1
491 1
497 6
496 5 r507 4
512 0
20100 20508 rr2 069 9 rr2 074 8 rr2 097 1 2 1152
2 403 3 2 430 6 2 447 1 2 454 1 2 477 5 2 498 9
r
2 930 7 29605

101,302
9109
1,157
3 110
12,973
23,733
1 627
2 124
3507

17828
1845
258
408
2478
5225
280
36
906

r

9902

r

7850
2 282

r
9832
r

5 875

9083
2226

13985

14 483

15590

16713

6 195
7955

6370
7965

6090
7970

6090
8310

425
51.6

413
51.3

426
53.1

438
54.2

44 4
53.9

422

787.72

689.61

793.35

729.15

68763

641.90

51.1

S-16

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

1982
May

Annual

July 1983

June

July

Aug.

1983

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

FINANCE—Continued
Bonds— Continued
Yields:
Domestic corporate (Moody's)
By rating:
Aaa
..
Aa
A
Baa

percent..

15.06

14.94

15.34

15.77

15.70

15.06

14.34

13.54

13.08

13.02

12.90

13.02

12.72

12.44

12.30

12.54

.. do
do....
... do ..
do....

14 17
14.75
1529
16.04

1379
14.41
1543
16.11

1426
14.77
1570
16.64

14.81
15.26
16.07
16.92

14.61
15.21
16.20
16.80

13.71
14.48
15.70
16.32

12.94
13.72
15.07
15.63

12.12
12.97
14.34
14.73

11.68
12.51
13.81
14.30

11.83
12.44
13.66
14.14

11.79
12.35
13.53
13.94

12.01
12.58
13.52
13.95

11.73
12.32
13.20
13.61

11.51
12.06
12.86
13.29

11.46
11.95
12.68
13.09

11.74
12.15
12.88
13.37

do ...
do
do

14.50
1562
13.22

14.54
1533
13.68

15.08
1560
13.93

15.35
16 18
13.99

15.37
1604
14.05

14.88
1522
13.90

14.11
1456
13.69

13.19
13.88
13.08

12.57
1358
12.74

12.48
13.55
12.60

12.34
13.46
12.27

12.43
13.60
12.13

12.12
13.31
12.11

11.84
13.03
11.90

11.59
1300
11.62

11.90
13.17
11.78

Domestic municipal:
Bond Buyer (20 bonds)
Standard & Poor's Corp. (15 bonds)

do
do....

11 56
11.23

1156
11.57

12 13
11.99

12.58
12.42

10.74
11.12

10.48
10.61

9.56
9.91

9.74
9.45

9.04
9.55

9.38
9.16

8.82
8.96

9.78
9.03

9.36
9.51

do

1287

1223

1267

13.32

12 15

11 48

10.05
9.59
10.51

10.23
9.97

U S Treasury bonds taxable $

11 97
12.11
1297

10.18

10.33

10.37

10.60

10.34

10.19

1021

1064

345.40
884.36
111.95
359.81

333.11
846.72
114.49
340.90

313.66
804.37
108.41
314.58

316.31
818.41
106.28
316.68

321.30
832.11
109.64
318.34

356.89
917.27
116.18
368.32

383.92 401.57 404.83 417.61 428.91 447.11 458.20 476.19 485.45
988.71 1,027.76 1,033.08 1,064.29 1,087.43 1,129.58 1,168.43 1,212.86 1,221.47
119.97 119.34 117.83 123.83 124.32 126.88 126.08 129.21 128.21
402.70 436.43 446.37 457.74 479.72 507.66 518.15 542.75 571.73

..

By group:
Industrials
Public utilities
Railroads

Stocks
Prices:
Dow-Jones averages (65 stocks)
Industrial (30 stocks)
Public utility (15 stocks)
Transportation (20 stocks) ....

.

364.61
932.92
108.58
398.56

Standard & Poor's Corporation: §
Combined index (500 Stocks)
Industrial, total (400 Stocks) #
Capital goods (105 Stocks)
Consumer goods (191 Stocks)

1941-43=10..
do....
do
do....

128.04
144.24
13903
100.67

119.71
133.57
11998
109.37

116.35
129.68
11584
103.81

109.70
122.61
105.97
100.92

109.38
122.49
10634
102.66

109.65
122.29
106.34
102.46

122.43
137.09
119.61
115.51

132.66
148.11
131.64
126.43

138.10
153.90
139.35
133.27

139.37
156.02
142.63
134.75

144.27
162.02
151.03
133.08

146.80
165.15
154.08
133.89

151.88
170.33
159.04
144.43

157.71
176.78
163.82
149.93

164.10
184.10
173.34
154.90

166.39
187.42
177.89
156.13

Utilities (40 Stocks)
Transportation (20 Stocks)
Railroads (6 Stocks)

do
1970=10..
1941-43—10

5187
23.26
9309

54 78
19.64
7482

5488
18.50
71 16

52 13
17.21
65.49

5187
17.22
63 15

53.34
17.53
64.71

56.48
20.27
77.20

59.41
22.19
86.27

60.08
23.52
88.27

59.33
23.84
85.83

61.89
24.93
90.26

61.52
25.52
91.73

62.13
26.48
95.45

62.95
27.30
100.90

64.88
29.03
109.37

64.14
29.73
110.91

Financial (40 Stocks)
1970=10..
NewYorkCity banks(6 Stocks) 1941-43=10..
Banks outside N.Y.C. (10 Stocks)
do....
Property-Casualty Insurance (5 Stocks) do....

14.44
52.45
117.82
141.29

14.30
54.76
95.87
143.01

13.81
52.27
93.29
142.45

12.45
48.10
86.01
126.05

12.07
45.36
81.10
120.61

12.38
47.46
82.06
118.41

13.72
50.50
86.79
134.47

15.97
64.21
106.48
156.02

17.46
68.70
114.55
166.54

16.90
65.60
103.62
168.28

16.51
63.91
101.22
162.01

16.75
64.58
100.25
163.13

18.60
70.91
107.22
186.26

20.00
78.18
115.35
190.90

20.56
79.16
122.92
188.29

20.15
73.22
121.77
186.32

New York Stock Exchange common stock indexes:
Composite
12/31/65 = 50..
Industrial
do
Transportation
do....
Utility
do
Finance
do....

74.02
8544
72.61
3891
73.52

68.93
78 18
60.41
3974
71.99

67.07
7597
56.84
3940
69.16

63.10
71 59
53.07
3734
63.19

62.82
71 37
53.40
3720
61.59

62.91
70.98
53.98
38.19
62.84

70.21
8008
61.39
40.36
69.66

76.10
86.67
66.64
42.67
80.59

79.75
90.76
71.92
43.46
88.66

80.30
92.00
73.40
42.93
86.22

83.25
95.37
75.65
45.59
85.66

84.74
97.26
79.44
45.92
86.57

87.50
100.61
83.28
45.89
93.22

90.61
104.46
85.26
46.22
99.07

94.61
109.43
89.07
47.62
102.45

96.43
112.52
92.22
46.76
101.22

Yields (Standard & Poor's Corp.):
Composite (500 stocks)
Industrials (400 stocks)
Utilities (40 stocks)
Transportation (20 stocks)

percent
do....
do....
do....

520
4.90
10.15
3.40
5 41

581
5.48
10.39
4.32
5 92

597
5.65
10.27
4.47
6 07

6.28
5.90
10.87
4.85
667

6.31
5.91
11.02
4.92
697

6.32
5.94
10.77
4.95
679

5.63
5.26
10.22
4.17
6 12

5.12
4.78
9.73
3.75
522

4.92
4.60
9.62
3.53
484

4.93
4.59
9.83
3.46
508

4.79
4.44
9.48
3.24
527

4.74
4.39
9.60
3.19
524

4.59
4.26
9.52
3.04
475

4.44
4.12
9.40
2.98
445

4.27
3.96
9.12
2.81
433

Preferred stocks, 10 high-grade

do....

12.36

12.53

12.58

12.96

13.24

12.78

12.41

11.71

11.18

11.20

11.23

11.13

10.86

10.80

10.65

10.81

Sales:
Total on all registered exchanges (SEC):
Market value
mil. $..
Shares sold
millions
On New York Stock Exchange:

490,688
15910

596,670
22414

37,350
1430

35,174
1,414

41,292
1,577

47,117
1,902

61,374
2,301

79,303
2,852

75,002
2,642

73,704
2,547

69,588
2,402

65,657
2,189

81,315
2,681

75,498
2,431

415 913
12,843

514 263
18,211

31 913
1,167

30 420
1,169

35 580
1,304

40 659
1,555

52551
1,890

67 157
2,292

63927
2,129

6] 542
1,992

59712
1,920

55909
1,756

70 121
2,183

63 156
1,930

11 854

16458

1027

1,111

1,145

1,673

1,548

2,069

1,857

1,682

1,858

1,615

1,902

1,793

1,953

1,974

Shares sold (cleared or settled)
millions..
New York Stock Exchange:
Exclusive of odd-lot and stopped stock sales
(sales effected)
... millions..
Shares listed, N.Y. Stock Exchange, end of period:
Market value, all listed shares
bil. $..
Number of shares listed
millions..

1,143.79
38,298

1,305.36 1,039.18 1,017.45
39,516 38,594 38,894

993.56 1,106.56 1,120.26 1,244.38 1,291.94 1,305.36 1,349.19 1,385.49 1,431.63 1,545.81 1,547.13 1,604.02
39,064 39,070 39,177 39,262 39,400 39,516 39,688 40,298 40,468 41,090 41,508 42,321

FOREIGN TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES
VALUE OF EXPORTS
Exports (mdse.), incl. reexports, total @
Excl Dept of Defense shipments
Seasonally adjusted
By geographic regions:
Africa
Asia
Australia and Oceania
Europe
Northern North America
Southern North America
South America
By leading countries:
Africa:
Egypt
Republic of South Africa
Asia; Australia and Oceania:
Australia including New Guinea
Jaoan
See footnotes at end of tables.




mil. $.. '233,739.0 212,274.6 19,000.7 19,416.1 17,259.3 16,264.5 16,716.7 17,274.5 15,695.0 16,723.9 16,204.9 15,540.5 18,329.9 16,712.0 16,234.6
do 1 233 6770 212 193 1 18 992 4 194133 17 252 2 16 249.9 167126 17,267.0 15,689.2 16,716.4 16,200.6 15,531.5 18,327.5 16,707.5 16,228.5
18,124.3 18,822.9 18,059.6 17,463.3 17,320.3 16,671.4 15,851.9 16,346.6 17,393.0 16,325.8 16,751.6 16,073.8 15,566.4
do....
915.0
720 1
4,947.1 5,372.4
433.6
445.8
4,857.0 4,930.1

601.3
5,109.7
362.7
4,892.6

892.9
5,746.2
360.5
5,095.6

651.0
5,043.2
386.2
5,340.1

779.6
4,862.8
311.2
4,939.3

879.7
5,521.8
381.7
5,927.2

793.6
5,264.5
376.5
5,066.5

26348 2838 1 30892
1,328.1 1,573.0 1,224.7
1,336.0 1,278.5 1,235.6

25125
1,043.4
1,125.3

2 378.3
1,161.1
1,070.1

2,671 7 2 675.7
1,111.1 1,134.2
1,001.5
837.7

35560
1,272.4
791.0

3223,2
1,164.2
783.1

191 4
1747

2800
162.3

145 4
133.4

2640
146.2

2502
126.5

249 1
134.9

2812
167.4

2685
240.0

3804
1.568.4

3370
1.804.1

3077
1.814.6

2806
1.803.1

3159
1.601.0

2594
1.423.6

3296
1.781.1

3273
1.752.6

6937
5,186.8
495.9
4,562.0

'11 0974
do
do.... 163,848.7
do.... '6,435.8
do.... '69,714.7

10 271 1
64,822.2
5,699.7
63,664.2

681 9
9363 1 0380
5,545.1 5,786.2 5,793.3
662.3
470.0
495.4
5,711.4 5,639.7 4,743.1

*39 565 8
do
do.... '24,368.7
'17,732.1
do

33 723 6
18,332.1
15,256.5

3 1897
1,730.8
1,323.2

29432
1,837.9
1,437.0

26677
1,514.5
1,334.4

'2 159 4
'2'911 7

28754
23682

2936
2348

2694
2427

1778
191 9

191 7
182.7

'5 297 5 46007
do
do.... '21.823.0 20.966.1

411 o
1.710.2

491 1
1.828.8

3863
1.776.3

3519
1.732.2

do
do

S-17

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
1981

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1982

Annual

1982
May

June

July

Aug.

1983

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

FOREIGN TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES—Continued
VALUE OF EXPORTS— Continued
Exports (mdse.), incl. reexports—Continued
Europe:
France
mil.$..
German Democratic Republic (formerly
E. Germany)
mil. $..
Federal Republic of Germany (formerly
W. Germany)
mil. $..
Italy
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
United Kingdom
North and South America:
Canada
.Latin American republics, total #
Brazil
Mexico
....
Venezuela
Exports of U.S. merchandise, total §
Excluding military grant-aid
Agricultural products total .
Nonagricultural products, total
By commodity groups and principal
commodities:
Food and live animals #
Beverages and tobacco
Crude materials, inedible, exc. fuels #
Mineral fuels, lubricants, etc. #
Oils and fats, animal and vegetable
Chemicals
. ..
Manufactured goods #
Machinery and transport equipment,
total
Machinery total #
Transport equipment, total
Motor vehicles and parts
...

do
do....
do
do

1

1

'7,340 5

7 1104

6038

6653

5164

6015

572 1

666 1

5154

5610

5468

5636

6869

'295 7

2228

220

220

55

08

19

169

10 1

14 1

146

55

202

252

10,276 7

92913

8216

7649

7230

7036

6549

6786

7559

8024

732 1

6629

7900

7682

'5 360 0 4 616 1
1
2, 431.3 2,587.3
12 439 2 10 644 7

446 1
265.7
913 3

499 4
134.4
928 1

328 8
71.8
885 2

308 0
55.1
805 5

349 4
77.1
935 6

386 5
80.0
833 1

344 1
160.6
838 1

3686
147.7
7925

379 0
266.4
8606

387 5
219.9
885 0

386 0
179.3
1 021 5

353 2
219.5
9620

3 1895 2 942 7 2667 5 2634 5
2,782.8 2,924.3 2,588.5 2,387.7
319 1
3343
3612
3181
1201 1 1 2026 10054
7952
4406
5018
494 0
460 8
18,589.3 18,980.3 16 870.3 15,943.9
18 581.0 18 977 5 16 863 2 15 929 3
34034 3 129 1 24460 24924
15 185.9 15 851 2 14 424 3 13 451 5

2837 9

3 089 1 2 5123 2 377 8

2,562.2
3060
10426
402 5

2,118.6
2363
6332
449 2

15,980.7
15 976 6
2 388 1
13 592 5

16,886 7 15319.1 16,290 1 15818.8 15 198.8
16 879 2 15 313 3 16 282 6 15814 4 15 189 7
2 887 4 3 049 7 28875 3 115 2 3 018 0
13 999 3 12 269 4 13 402 5 12 703 6 12 180 8

'39 564 3 33 720 2

do.... '38,950.1
do.... 1 '3,798 2
do
17,788
7
1
do
5 444 9
do....
do....
do
do....

30,086.3
34227
118169
52062

1
228,960.8
1

207,157.6
228,898 7 207 076 2
'43
338
5
36 622 6
1
185,622 6 170 535 0

mil $ '30 290 8
do.... '2,914 7
do.... '20,992.4
mil. $.. '10,279.0
do.... '1,750.3

23 950 4
30262
19,248.4
12,728.8
1,540.9

do
'21 187 1 19 890 5
do.... '20,632.5 16 738 6
mil. $..
do
do....
.... do ...

'95,717.2
'62 945 5
'32,790.9
'162140

87 128 1
59 324 2
27 823 9
13 906 8

2 1614
2625
1,839.6
1,143.5
102.2

2 1723
2213
1,598.7
1,090.4
141.7

1 7224 18625
1,535.6 15910

1,844.7
2017
5049
402 6

1,956.2
2148
6400
392 8

2 671 6 2 6755 35558 3 223 2

1,861.6
1948
6266
390 0

1 722 3 1 874 2 1 691 6 1 816 6 1 798 8 1 758 0 2 093 7
1670
2116
3798
2575
'l93 1
3503
171 5
1,350.5 1,272.0 1,328.1 1,515.4 1,663.4 1,546.9 1,576.6
996.8
954.9 1,073.3 1,206.1
846.0
881.9 1,006.3
157.3
125.6
146.8
118.3
105.0
117.3
99.1
1 648 6 17150 1 548 7 1 487 8 1 455 2 16472
13485 1 2742 13217 13907 12025 1 1554

7,782.5 8 1757 75973 67386 67563 7 1365 60834 68464
5203 1 55232 5083 1 46643 4928 1 48892 4 451 i 45224
2,580.0 26528 25156 20815 1,828 8 2248 1 16327 23267
14362 13255 10808 10295 10407 10840
9195
9579

5242

1,754.9
1955
7123
265 3

1,776.7
1854
746 7
199 5

1,705.7
1988
681 2
134 8

17 913.0
179106
3 188 1
14 724 9

16 360 7
16 356 2
2 981 1
13 379 6

1 963 6 2 098 2
2236
227 1
1,458.5 1,609.8
681.1
843.6
139.5
114.9

1 904 2 1 769 0
199 3
213 4
1,645.4 1,495.7
759.4
872.6
129.3
156.7

1 565 1 1 491 8 1 704 1 1 586 5 1 557 7
1 2139 10873 1*332 7 1 315 5 1 269 6
6 1742
4 252 5
19225
9587

6406 1
3 989 1
24177
1 076 1

8 041 1
4 920 0
3'l218
1 349 1

6794 1 68653
4 513 6
22812
1 288 1

VALUE OF IMPORTS
General imports, total
Seasonally adjusted
By geographic regions:
Africa
Asia
Australia and Oceania
Europe
Northern North America
Southern North America
South America
By leading countries:
Africa:
Egypt
Republic of South Africa
Asia; Australia and Oceania:
Australia, including New Guinea
Japan

do.... '261,304 9 2243 951 9 20 804 5 218109 19 763 2 22 867 8 20 187 8 212193 19 002 0 18 720 2 20 149 0 17 592 6 203112 19 807 8 21 932 9
do
20 476 8 21 1870 19 849 3 22 930 0 20 581 3 21 006 0 18 892 4 19 154 4 20 020 9 19014 9 19 525 2 19 771 1 21 514 4
do
'27 070 6 217 770 1
do.... '92,032 6 285
169 5
do
'3 352 7 23 130 5
do.... '53,409 7 253 412 7
do.... '46,432.0 2246,497.7
do.... '23,477 4 2 23 525 0
do
'155264 14 444 1

Latin American republics, total #
Brazil
Mexico
Venezuela
By commodity groups and principal
commodities:
Agricultural products, total
Nonagricultural products, total
Food and live animals #
Beverages and tobacco
Crude materials, inedible, exc. fuels #

90 7
1475

224
144 6

23
1590

85
1844

19 2
227 1

mil. $.. '2,514.8 2 22,304.6
do
'37 612 1 37 743 7

181.1
37594

215.5
3 117 2

219.7
2 887 9

220.4
3 814 7

203.1
2 904 2

252.7
3 274 0

479.5

5397

4428

4756

410 1

4140

4698

37

36

28

46

11 2

33

32

981 1 949 0
4137
3500
8.9
34.8
14830 10373

'3973
'2,445 3

do

'464138
do.... '32,023.3
do
'4 474 5
do.... '13,765 1
do
'5,566 0
mil. $..
do....
do....
.. do ..
do....
do....
do
do....
do

Manufactured goods #
Machinery and transport equipment
Machinery total #
Transport equipment
Automobiles and parts

do....
do....
do
do....
do....




2

2

5 545 3
2

2

2

2

539

119748
2
52 301 4
227.6
13 094 8

46 476 9
32,512.6
2
4 285 3
2
15
565 9
2
4 767 7
2

950 0
62783
221 4
46024

3,462.0 38295 4,238 7 39079 4 009.8 3,625 6 3868 1 37537 4 534.4 42278
1 8812 2 210 3 2 1008 19723 1 7796 2 1268 1 9824 1 8064 20326 2 131 3
1 090 1 1 210 3 1 141 9 1 562 4 1 1737 1 336 6 1 384 1 996 6 1 252 2 1 396 6

465
138.6

Mineral fuels, lubricants, etc
Petroleum and products
Oils and fats, animal and vegetable
Chemicals

See footnotes at end of tables.

874 4
1 695 1 14677 1 262 7 1 586 0 1 4238 1 2883 1 271 1 8668
6987 1 90613 69208 7 1554 6 1336 57564 67398 6 1854 69560
323 1
227 2
2054
288 9
345 0
281 1
261 2
245 5
216 6
43587 47435 42418 47120 4220 1 43810 46580 3 7670 4 434 4

2
5472
1 966 8

do
do....

Europe:
France
do.... '5,851.4
German Democratic Republic (formerly
E Germany)
mil $
'477
Federal Republic of Germany (formerly
W Germany)
mil $ '113790
Italy
do.... '5,189 0
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
do....
'347.5
United Kingdom
do.... '12,8346
North and South America:
Canada

9113 1 317 6
76846 7395 1
2449
299 2
49234 49070
4,070.3 4,399 5
18247 23095
1 145 1 1 182 9

510
172 1

179
1423

950
1627

16 3
1628

40
2635

172.3
154.4
2 695 1 2 486 2

196.0
2 953 2

158.1
2 894 4

169.7
3 440 2

147.6
3 080 2

4527

6702

4348

471.9

4928

29

54

57

53

53

967 2
420 4
7.1
1 1814

989 2
471 1
22.7
1021 2

887 4
3674
25.1
7749

40686 4 398 1 34592 3 828 4 4 236 3 3 907 2 40096 3622 1
2,624.6 3,011.3 2,550.6 2,884.1 2,776.3 3,061.0 2,604.6 2,963.1
3437
4275
315 4
346 8
313 2
391 9
374 8
440 1
1 238.3 15782 1 230.8 14353 1 4489 1 2999 1219 1 14187
2930
2814
361 9
3923
3870
3992
5040
5289

3 866 9
2,885.0
430 6
12859
4725

1221 1 1 090 5 957 1 1 025 4 872 9
4946
4593
4985
4596
3794
10.2
7.7
25.7
31.8
27.6
1 1515 12104 1 1397 1 2176 10796

'17,003.4 215,421.7 1,348.2 1,334.7
'244,301.4 2228,530.2 19,456.3 20,476.2
'15,237.6 2 14
452 7 1 267.2 12726
'3 138 3 23 364 0
3212
2924
771.6
'11,193.4 28,589.4
790.5
2
'81,416.9 265,409.2 4,167.4 5,426.6
'75 577 3 592 396 4 37494 50253
38.8
'479.5
405.8
43.1
'9 445 9 29 493 5
8403
820 7
2
'37,291.9 233,148.4 3,203.9 3,091.3
'69,627.2 273,319.6 7,051.3 6,929.7
'38 212 2 39 456 8 35577 37023
'314152 2233 862 8 34936 32274
'26.216.9 29.360.6 2.977.3 2.780.7

512
1628

1,148.6 1,348.0 1,302.0 1,428.6 1,248.0 1,234.3
18,614.7 21,519.8 18,885.8 19,790.7 17,754.0 17,485.9
1 1225 1301 1 12666 13843 12327 1 1928
2513
300 1
310 1
3053
2875
2660
705.0
695.3
624.8
782.1
715.8
701.3
5,942.7 6,353.1 5,200.6 5,946.5 5,037.4 5,467.6
5 454 9 59540 4 741 4 5 486 9 4 419 7 4 843 7
32.3
46.6
24.4
32.2
28.9
31.8
8976
8697
8270
7393
7518
698 9
2,501.4
5,646.5
3 1087
25378
2.270.6

2,941.1
6,700.7
38670
28337
2.532.5

2,581.1
5,894.2
3 419 1
2475 1
2.202.1

2,616.0
6,187.3
3 422 8
27645
2.436.6

2,509.1
5,543.0
30445
24985
2.178.6

2,229.1
5,517.3
30382
2'479 2
2.163.0

37527 4531 7 4227 1
2,408.3 2,801.1 3,001.9
331 6
383 6
336 2
1 194 8 1 328.8 13457
2849
4249
4280

1,529.8 1,312.9
18,619.3 16,279.6
13466 1 1978
235 1
3535
691.9
630.1
5,141.6 3,704.4
4 440 6 30017
38.5
30.1
867 1
8599
2,469.2
6,152.4
32217
29307
2.482.4

1 064 5 1 044 6
4606
4489
20.0
25.2
8978
922 1

1,379.5 1,489.6
18,931.7 18,318.1
1300 1 13092
2577
283 4
711.7
767.5
3,864.9 3,763.1
32606 32875
32.0
30.1
1 Oil 0
8967

14500
261 9
860.1
5,033.2

32.0
9276

2,270.3 2,805.4 2,877.8 3,047.5
5,925.5 7,050.1 6,731.5 7,288.3
30170 36780 36355
29085 33722 30960
2.605.4 2.988.6 2.762.2

June

S-18

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

Annual

July 1983

1982
May

June

July

Aug.

1983

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

FOREIGN TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES—Continued
Indexes
Exports (U.S. mdse., excl. military grant-aid):
Unit value
1977 - 100
Quantity
do....
Value
do

'1508
1
128.8
*194 1

1525
115.1
1756

1543
122.5
189 1

1526
126.5
193 1

1535
111.8
1716

151.3
107.1
162 1

150.8
107.8
162.6

1516
113.3
1718

1510
103.2
1558

152.2
108.9
165.7

154.0
104.5
160.9

1550
99.7
1546

154.1
118.2
182.3

1548
107.5
1665

1526
105.7
1613

1

1703
'1052
'179 1

1675
999
1674

1673
1024
1713

1659
1083
1796

1674
972
1627

165 1
114.0
1883

164 1
101.3
1662

1662
105.2
1747

164 1
95.3
1565

1642
93.8
1540

1636
101.4
1659

1620
89.4
1448

1622
103.1
1673

1607
101.5
163 1

1589
113.7
1806

*406
796
1
123 495

400 955
115905

37 178
10299

37012
10 514

31 425
9080

29224
8894

31778
9061

34,234
9402

32,472
8923

30,342
8869

31,458
8584

thous sh tons . 1'464 420
mil. $.. 177.059

376,446
155.511

27300
13.170

34464
13.875

33,829
12.924

37,436
15.605

30,598
12.426

34,515
13.532

27,291
11.552

29,057
11,263

28,145
12.407

2487
r
67.6
3119

2188
60.3
2777

General imports:
Unit value
Quantity
.
Value

do
do
do

Shipping Weight and Value
Waterborne trade:
Exports (inch reexports):
Shipping weight
Value

thous sh tons
mil $

General imports:
Shipping weight
Value

TRANSPORTATION AND COMMUNICATION
TRANSPORTATION
Air Carriers (Scheduled Service)
Certificated route carriers:
Passenger-miles (revenue)
Passenger-load factor
Ton-miles (revenue) total
Operating revenues (quarterly) # §
Passenger revenues
Cargo revenues
Mail revenues
Operating expenses (quarterly) §
Net income after taxes (quarterly) §
Domestic operations:
Passenger-miles (revenue)
Cargo ton-miles
Mail ton-miles
Operating revenues (quarterly) §
Operating expenses (quarterly) §
Net income after taxes (quarterly) §

mil $
do
do
do .
do
do. .

36502
30 579
2480
675
2
36 922
533

bil
mil
do

19872
3350
998

mil $
do
do

International operations:
Passenger-miles (revenue)
Cargo ton-miles
Mail ton-miles
Operating revenues (quarterly) §
Operating expenses (quarterly) §
Net income after taxes (quarterly) §

25896
590
32754

24889
586
31949

bil
percent
mil

2152
584
2725

2

209 54
3026
1004

1726
257
82

mil $
do
do

2
6390
2

2582
64.0
3153

1897
250
77

4943
2430
399

426
202
32

470
185
31

1979
254
79

2023
258
77

2094
56.4
2716

1920
55.9
2527

2092
57.8
2717

2075
56.7
2571

1936
60.2
2462

1675
270
84

1595
258
78

1734
253
117

17.09
220
81

16.42
236
78

21.25
288
94

1804
263
88

491
235
34

325
233
36

357
208
47

366
166
30

293
184
29

362
217
33

384
216
32

678

654

654

624

618

716

656

125.1

121.3

121.9

126.6

125.3

!26.1

130.8

r

1561
254
80

5

15.63

5

17.48

7604
7431
65
536
214
32

559
203
32

451
205
31

1912
1777
83

1601
1574
13

6595
-186

20 12
54.9
2583

9834
8317
601
165
8479
172

7350
7231
31

29 014
29277
2
-360
50 17
2335
376

25 16
630
3094

9222
7 767
602
171
9063
43

2

bil
mil
do

2367
636
2910

Urban Transit Systems
Passengers carried total

.

.

..

7,949

mil.

7,714

r

635

645

584

631

636

Motor Carriers
Carriers of property, large, class I, qtrly.: @
100
3910

100
3937

199

58

48

182

41

40

100
16489

Operating revenues total
mil $
Net income, after extraordinary and prior period
charges and credits
mil $
Tonnage hauled (revenue), common and contract
Freight carried — volume indexes, class I and II
intercity truck tonnage (ATA):
Common and contract carriers of property
(qtrly.)
average same period, 1967 — 100..
Common carriers of general freight,
seas, adj
1967—100..

r

128.9

30899
28925
535

2
27 507
2
252627

571

7222
6746
145

6612
6148
145

6482
6026
139

6,487
6 171
75

2

262 473
767
3
1202

6821
265
340

6500
114
161

6331
184
436

6 126
256
173

132.3

132.4

130.9

132.5

129.7

147.0

P

133.6

Class I Railroads $
Financial operations, qtrly. (AAR), excl. Amtrak:
Operating revenues total #
mil $
Freight
do
Passenger excl Amtrak
do
Operating expenses
Net railway operating income
Ordinary income
Traffic:
Ton-miles of freight (net) total, qtrly
Revenue ton-miles qtrly (AAR)
Price index for railroad freight

do
do...
do
bil
do
1969—100

2

28
560
2
1386
3
1922

911.9
911 7
327.6

r

r

799.6
7997
3514

3514

2080
2080
3515

3520

3520

190.9
1909
351.9

3518

3517

193.8
1938
3519

355.2

355.4

1919
355.3

200
6200
68
4130
66

215
60.82
68
4102
72

212
5866
64
43 15
72

191
59 17
65
4177
72

188
61.34
63
4189
62

210
64.28
70
4126
65

190
61.87
62
39 19
58

195
62.28
49
39.94
49

159
62.69
55
40 10
58

181
65.86
63
41.95
68

201
62.23
68
43.33
71

382

305

2909
3,063
3442
2,829
236

223

228

1979
2,182
2328
2,027
288

746
632
779
566
384

9.580

9.134

5.533

4.281

1.926

1,265

"1.230

2040
3553

3554

Travel
Hotels and motor-hotels:
Restaurant sales index
same month 1967—100
Hotels: Average room sale
fi
dollars..
Rooms occupied
% of total..
Motor-hotels' Average room sale j[
dollars
Rooms occupied
% of total..
Foreign travel:
U.S. citizens* Arrivals (quarterly)
. thous
Departures (quarterly)
do....
Aliens' Arrivals (quarterly)
do
Departures (quarterly)
do....
Passports issued
do

194
56.39
68
3831
67

196
61.71
63
41.16
64

8,905
9,978
11976
9,933
3222

2
9,388
2
10,275
2
10909
2

9,047
3664

371

2349
2800
2722
2233
496

National narks, recreation visits # #

49.787

48.901

4.042

6.770

See footnotes at end of tables.




do....

314
P

1.332

458
P

1.334

474
P

2.255

P

392

S-19

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982
May

Annual

1983

1982
June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

TRANSPORTATION AND COMMUNICATION—Continued
COMMUNICATION
Telephone carriers:
Operating revenues #
Station revenues
Tolls message
Operating expenses (excluding taxes)
Net operating income (after taxes)
Phones in service, end of period .. . .
Telegraph carriers:
Domestic:
Operating revenues
Operating expenses
Net operating revenues (before taxes)
Overseas, total:
Operating revenues
Operating expenses
Net operating revenues (before taxes)

mil. $..
do
do
do
do....
mil

66,499
28 117
26 507
44593
11,910
1649

73,808
31678
28 099
51269
11,951
1578

6,080
2591
2321
4216
998
164 1

6,238
2660
2379
4315
1,037
1627

6225
2665
2 348
4292
1,059
1622

6,329
2679
2 428
4 189
1 148
161 7

6291
2712
2338
4366
987
161 4

6,327
2736
2334
4 417
986
1608

6,310
2745
2308
4481
061
1595

6,005
2730
2 342
4592
740
1578

6,215
2750
2294
4 125
1,069
1563

6,198
2744
2 138
4 113
1,081
1562

mil $
do
. do

7792
6238
1127

8093
6787
868

68 1
554
90

700
55 8
106

684
56 6
82

69 1
59 2
65

669
69 6
70

665
54 3
84

662
56 4
61

683
58 0
79

673
57 1
64

652
558
58

5777
4353
117.0

6077
4952
83.7

509
412
7.5

538
41 7
9.0

482
40 2
5.8

500
420
5.5

519
43 1
4.0

503
426
5.3

502
429
4.5

499
458
3.9

508
427
5.1

489
41 7
4.6

do..
do
do....

6,628
2735
4 704
3929
1,420
1554

CHEMICALS AND ALLIED PRODUCTS
CHEMICALS
Inorganic Chemicals
Production:
Aluminum sulfate, commercial (17% A12O3) $
thous. sh. tons..
Chlorine gas (100% C12) $
do.. .
Hydrochloric acid (100% HC1) $
do....
Phosphorus, elemental $
do..

1,294
10767
2,502
426

1,183
9 136
2,490
361

91
794
215
31

111
782
225
31

94
783
198
31

111
698
199
26

99
684
183
29

84
756
193
31

96
734
189
30

96
708
182
28

80
787
203
30

86
759
217
27

103
812
219
32

10414
788
1,077

9225
650
895

807
51
73

786
54
72

794
44
71

731
54
74

696
53
70

768
56
72

752
59
68

722
41
74

824
47
75

789
50
79

787
52
77

696
761

630
635

53
53

55
51

41
53

54
52

51
58

56
51

55
54

52
50

62
54

48
60

53
61

10 440
3577

*8478
4 136

726
4 152

687
4 195

686
4231

685
4202

651
4229

643
4 160

658
4 199

663
4 136

639
4074

572
3957

667
3805

thous. sh. tons..
Ammonium nitrate, original solution $ . . d o
Ammonium sulfate $
do
Nitric acid (100% HNO3) $
do

19,076
8937
6
2 194
9077

15500
7331
1789
7588

1,523
664
154
664

1356
573
156
585

1203
490
161
524

1 173
515
146
543

1 196
516
141
558

1 167
559
145
608

1 137
564
125
614

1,156
552
128
580

1,117
592
5
121
630

1,065
564
154
595

1,270
647
165
712

Nitrogen solutions (100% N) $
Phosphoric acid (100% P2O5) $
Sulfuric acid (100% H2SO4) t

3 177
9,922
40795

5
2427
8,524
31953

4
268
640
2443

4
230
673
2462

4
211
696
2551

5
185
760
2703

4
211
749
2772

5
134
802
2894

5
151
682
2714

5
137
780
2721

5
147
749
2658

4
150
807
2830

233
920
3 134

16
903
3
1068
6478

13 139
892
5 186

857
929
552

967
917
375

1065
998
340

1 184
926
517

1230
909
389

1258
881
358

966
883
313

1048
892
495

1223
818
431

1240
773
383

1474
686
543

do...
do
do. .
do

22391
2834
13308
1203

20337
2645
11997
1218

1736
244
1022
109

1811
251
911
142

1872
317
933
146

1734
148
979
139

1756
229
1013
158

1580
207
982
64

1912
139
1 177
172

1 193
125
684
55

2504
122
1714
125

1 755
131
1 124
27

1 937
182
1,289
63

do
do....
do
do....

264
327
8601
159

262
319
7 154
131

51
23
664
22

29
30
483
19

19
20
599
5

16
5
643
18

16
25
504

17
33
661
0

15
28
489
15

12
25
584
9

16
13
461
0

34
35
860
9

Sodium
Sodium
Sodium
Sodium

hydroxide (100% NaOH) $
do....
silicate, anhydrous i
do
sulfate, anhydrous $
do....
tripolyphosphate (100% Na5P3O10) $
do....
Titanium dioxide (composite and pure) $ . do
Sulfur, native (Frasch) and recovered:
Production . . .
thous Ig tons
Stocks (producers') end of period
do..

1

r

r
635
3701

661
3634

Inorganic Fertilizer Materials
Production:
Ammonia, synthetic anhydrous $

do.. .
do....
do..

Superphosphate and other phosphatic fertilizers
(100% P2O5):
Production
thous. sh. tonsStocks end of period
do
Potash sales (K2O)
fl
do.
Exports, total #
Nitrogenous materials
Phosphate materials
Potash materials
Imports:
Ammonium nitrate
Ammonium sulfate
Potassium chloride
Sodium nitrate

. ..

.
.

3

(2)

26
54
674
0

458

r

627

1,933
219
1,258
48

1,977
161
1,122
33

44
33
765
23

39
18
679
16

Industrial Gases
Production:
Acetylene $
mil cu ft
Carbon dioxide, liquid, gas, and solid
thous. sh. tons..
Hydrogen (high and low purity) $
mil cu ft
Nitrogen (high and low purity) $
do
Oxygen (high and low purity) $
do....

3946

5 161
5

3813
103 278
490 285
430,610

5

406
5

288
5

317
5

271

284
5

3687
91305
483 781
357 943

317
7679
39 142
30689

333
7637
40833
30678

330
7773
41 133
30044

325
7515
42247
28742

20
85
243
4023

14
199
3682

16
58
197
3347

19.2
956
685

18.7
1042
537

204
974
572

17
57
188
3913
164
767
480

5

254

253

257
5

5

5

237
S

228
5

248
5

291
7929
43243
27466

271
7893
41 479
27*701

310
8327
45448
29 147

13.8
97 1
48.0

27
45
212
4097
23.7
887
57.7

24
56
20 G
4178
22.9
753
60.6

27
56
277
4702
22.0
763
72.7

295
7276
40 190
27241

312
8014
41 163
27419

297
7 191
39330
27 109

300
7849
40 150
26006

66
192
3946

20
43
129
4275

103
3824

187
3070

187
773
690

21.5
943
544

21.5
832
58.7

Organic Chemicals §
Production:
Acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) ..
Creosote oil
Ethyl acetate (85%)
Formaldehyde (37% HCHO)

.

Glycerin, refined, all grades
Methanol synthetic
Phthalic anhydride

mil Ib
mil gal
mil. Ib .
do

'297
1
819
'277 1
5 720 7

do....
mil gal
mil. Ib..

299.1
42917
'8695

*226
*81 0
*232.6
4 691 1
229.5
4094 1
'6910

mil tax gal
do ..

5712
83.3

601 1
821

419
575

526
580

519
599

443
557

533
491

619
48.1

616
45.5

650
82.1

608
76.7

586
69.9

.mil wine gal
do
do....

2307
2260
5.4

r
283 1
r

203
202
4.5

219
217
4.7

235
224
5.1

22 1
232
4.0

256
255
4.0

23.7
236
3.9

319
288
5.7

353
346
6.5

35 1
345
7.4

365
297
15.5

1

1

ALCOHOL
Ethyl alcohol and spirits:
Production
Stocks end of period
Denatured alcohol:
Production
...
Consumption (withdrawals)
Stocks, end of period
See footnotes at end of tables.




.

275 1
6.5

27
62
106
4905
r
!6.4
904
71.7

21.2

June

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-20
1981

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are .as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1982

July 1983

1982

Annual

May

June

July

Aug.

1983

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

115.0
1,137.1
3458
489.6
543.5

112.2
1 139 1
3378
4595
478.1

May

CHEMICALS AND ALLIED PRODUCTS—Continued
PLASTICS AND RESIN MATERIALS
Production:
Phenolic resins
mil. lb..
Polyethylene and copolymers
do....
Polypropylene
do
Polystyrene and copolymers
do....
Polyvinyl chloride and copolymers
do....
MISCELLANEOUS PRODUCTS
Explosives (industrial), shipments, quarterly
mil lb
Paints, varnish, and lacquer, shipments:
Total shipments
mil $
Architectural coatings
do....
Product finishes (OEM)
do
Soecial ouroose coatings
do....

1

1
1,688.0
12,603.6
'4 007 8
'5,915.2
'5,618.4

1

4,209.8
12,208 9
'3 551 8
'5,060 0
'5,370.7

3 003-6

25149

83957
3,968 9
27372
1.689.5

82993
4051 7
25483
1.699.3

102.5
9423
2878
4354
491.4

102.7
9447
2716
4222
490.5

91.8
101.1
89.7
9744 1 053.7 1 053.7
2804
2610
273 1
441.1
460.5
432 1
r
481.0
408.5
374.3

835 1
4336
2354
166.1

93.4
1,020 1
3110
421 1
452.4

91.3
1 083.4
2864
352.1
405.5

6564
3024
2064
147.6

5890
254.7
2025
131.8

5332
239.1
1818
112.3

5829

675 1

7912
4159
2228
152.5

107.0
9984
2875
4340
454.9

7449
3907
2040
150.2

7982
408.7
2226
166.9

7738
379.3
2344
160.1

101.9
104.5
1 092.9 1,050.3
3515
3513
405.8
432.2
452.0
392.6

4875

5699
5
5190
5
231.6
5
171
1
5

116.3

5493
256.5
176.4
116.3

6887
346.3
195.8
146.5

ELECTRIC POWER AND GAS
ELECTRIC POWER
Production:
Electric utilities, total
By fuels
By waterpower

mil. kw.-hr.. 2,294,812 2,241,211 177,147 186,128 210,584 205,656 180,662 172,966 173,377 184,722 195,680 172,485 182,494
.
do. . 2 034 129 1 931 998 149 176 158 176 183 289 181 761 160,767 153 215 150 081 156,962 166,361 144,536 152,193
260 684 309 213 27971 27953 27294 23894 19896 19750 23297 27760 29318 27950 30302
do

Sales to ultimate customers, total (Edison Electric
Institute) $
mil. kw.-hr.. 2,153 796 323 115 350
541 426 3 555 609
Commercial §
do
799 885 740 193
Industrial §
do
3
4091
4 145
Railways and railroads
do
Residential or domestic
do.... 735 724 3742 619
3
14975
14 866
Street and highway lighting
do
51055 351
772
Other public authorities
. .
.
do. .
3
6,640
6,145
Interdepartmental
do....
Revenue from sales to ultimate customers (Edison
Electric Institute) $
mil. $.. 111,584 3 122,026
GAS
Total utility gas, quarterly
(American Gas Association):
48013
48418
Customers end of period total
thous
44209
Residential
. do .
44567
3,570
3,620
Commercial
do....
186
183
Industrial
do
48
48
Other
do
15380
'14 157
Sales to customers total
tril Btu
4601
Residential
do
'4733
2360
Commercial
do
'2 444
8220
'6769
Industrial
do
199
'212
Other
do
'63 362
56340
Revenue from sales to customers total
mil $
'23 665
19218
Residential
do
9,231
'11,538
Commercial
do....
'27 296
27,246
Industrial..
do...
'864
645
Other
do....

510,039
135 801
181 910
1042
173,001
3930
12,861
1,494

526,540
125,226
187 908
1 191
193,729

3458
13358
1,581

563,084
151 910
193 918
1038
198,141
3633
12,901
1,543

29,440

33,485

29,440

30,803

48253
44405
3,613
187
48
3051

47894
44,116
3,546
184
48
2399

876
459
1674
42

405
285
1,670
39

13348
4408
2,162
6607
172

10789
2,395
1,409
6,832
152

48418
44,567
3,620
183
48
3302
1,151
614
1,483
54
16 179

512 758
133 118
188 374

1006
171 862

3752
13,524
1,211

6,406
3,175
6,361
237

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
Stocks end of period i
Imports
Whisky:
Production i
Stocks end of period iji
Imports
Wines and distilling materials:
Effervescent wines:
Production
Taxable withdrawals
Stocks end of period
Imports
Still wines:
Production iji
Taxable withdrawals $
Stocks end of period $
Imports

15203

196.45
176 57
1322

18.22
1656
1559

18.19
1722
1528

17.17
16 10
14 45

19.50
1626
14 31

15.64
14.88
1399

15.07
13.83
1400

13.65
13 14
1343

13.31
12.27
1322

14.77
12.79
1389

14.56
12.66
14.46

16.78
15.07
16.05

15.54
1549
1621

1098

1083

685

657

1050

1468

1395

1124

11.14

10.91

437 66
60443
106.03

33 29
61672
9.12

37 20
61684
10.86

33 47
61496
7.29

3274
56560
8.96

34 93
60493
9.87

36 33
60553
12.75

43 13
60368
11.75

5168
60443
8.29

2993
605.23
12.41

605.87
4.90

7.24

6.56

7.09

137 78
4

mil tax gal
mil. proof gal..

2449 45
61378
117.93

mil tax gal
do
mil. proof gal..

9668
54107
86.53

9096
53339
76.60

754
54725
6.88

781
54548
8.09

494
54459
5.40

457
50107
5.88

666
53959
7.19

831
53600
9.89

773
53369
8.18

663
53339
5.54

656
53296
9.59

7.52
53457
3.02

4.95

4.43

4.83

mil wine gal
do....
do
do....

30.73
27.27
1153
7.66

3078
29.03
13 15
8.35

2 18
2.57
1336
0.67

292
1.98
1365
0.70

251
1.21
1552
0.52

311
2.17
1556
0.67

339
1.90
1652
0.71

377
6.55
14 64
0.81

270
2.85
1402
1.13

250
3.99
13 15
1.29

280
1.45
1431
1.01

2 16
1.01
15 16
0.51

227
2.28
15 14
0.62

6.77

0.72

do
do....
do
do....

46623
363.64
60441
107.60
188.20

55401
396.24
69527
113.79

381
28.62
46753
9.45

497
30.96
43501
1061

5 18
25.76
40823
8.83

2996
29.17
39540
9.99

22961
34.14
702 10
9.13

1.86

11.68

6.12
26.42
65475
7.78
10.09

558
33.06
62077
8.41
9.87

9.35

2.08

7.50
25.16
67070
12.42
7.39

8.58

1.37

7207
71.06
70562
11.94
27.96

2364
29.58
69527
11.47

190.23

16279
27.10
51220
9.93
43.17

Distilling materials produced at wineries
See footnotes at end of tables.




193.69
17670
1295

do....

71.36

9.61

June

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

Annual

S-21
1983

1982
May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Jan.

Dec.

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.Y.)

mil. Ib
do
$ per Ib..

Cheese:
Production (factory) total @
mil Ib
American whole milk @
do
Stocks, cold storage, end of period
do....
American whole milk
.
..
..
do
Imports
do
Price, wholesale, cheddar, single daisies
(Chicago)
$ per Ib
Condensed and evaporated milk:
Production case goods @
mil. Ib..
Stocks, manufacturers', case goods, end of
period
mil Ib
Exports
do
Fluid milk:
Production on farms $
do....
Utilization in mfd dairy products @ ..
do
Price, wholesale, U.S. average
$ per 100 Ib..
Dry milk:
Production:
Dry whole milk @
mil Ib
Nonfat dry milk (human food) @
do....
Stocks, manufacturers', end of period:
Dry whole milk
do
Nonfat dry milk (human food)
do....
Exports, whole and nonfat (human food)
do....
Price, manufacturers' average selling, nonfat dry
milk (human food)
$ per Ib

1,228.2
429.2
1
1.535

1,257.0
466.8
(7)

4,277.6
2,642.3
709.6
623.0
247.7

4,539.8
2,750.5
963.5
880.8
269.3

18.8

1.672

1.684

1.684

757.9

734.9

46.0

51.9

34.9

19.3

8
334.0
8

5416

256.4
510.0

300.0
466.8

9
133.9
9

18 202 9
759.4

1,121.3
673.2

1,141.5
655.7

9
374.9
9

8

8
803.9
8

18.2

22.7

864.3
765 1
25.6

24.6

28.7

1.684

1.684

1.684

1.683

1.686

1.686

352.6
216.3
233.2
1,073.5
963.5 1,015.5
9
985.0
928.2
880.8
46.8
17.5
24.4

416.9
255.7

408.1
261.4

429.2
278.1

1,103.2
1,017.9
22.6

1,116.7
1,030.8
22.1

1,135.9
1,044.9
22.8

1.686

1.680

1.666

1.666

1.666

1.675

51.7

57.4

59.7

61.6

51.4

51.4

48.4

60.7

74.6

0.1

0.2

0.4

0.4

0.5

11,292
6,760
13.80

10,627
6,400
13.80

12,036
7,409
13.60

11,933
7,293
13.50

12,487
7,672
13.30

9
8.5
117.7

7.6
115.7

10.5
135.0

9.1
137.2

9.0
156.8

9
5.0
84.4
19.5

3.8
92.5

5.0
81.4

5.0
89.5

5.4
99.0

2.9

27.9

23.6

22.9

0.940

0.942

0.942

0.943

0.941

329.4

318.2

310.9

279.8

254.5

1.5

296.7
198.5
982
3.7

""44222"6
142.9
4
797
2.4
0.2

6,364.4
4,411.0
1,953.4

3
5,079.8
3
3,250.8
3

184.0

181.6

8

103.3

51.9

9

2.5

1.8

2.4

0.6

8
35,723
8

135,795
79,098
13.60

92.7
1,314.3

102.2
1,400.6

8

6.0
86.7

6.0
93.3

8

18.2

121.1
574.7

1956
89 1

187.8

126.5
549.7

9

133,013
76,391
13.80

198.0

126.1
533.1

9

712.3
20.6

8

13.20

120.7
527.9

21,652
13.20

13.20

13.30

0.5

33,983
19470
13.60

0.3

13.80

0.3

13.90

32,854
18,445
13.90

8
29.4
417.5

22.4
3390

24.3
296.9

8
96
1275

73
89.8

6.0
93.3

20.4

23.1

16.7

13.7

12.1

22.4

54.5

0.6
9

9

9

10.4
10

1

0.939

485.4

Q.93Q

1.684

12,033
"13.20

GRAIN AND GRAIN PRODUCTS
Exports (barley, corn, oats, rye, wheat)
Barley:
Production (crop estimate) U
Stocks (domestic), end of period, total $
On farms $
Exports, including malt §
Corn:
Stocks (domestic) end of period total $
On farms $
Off farms
Exports including meal and flour

mil. bu..
do....
do....
do
do....
do
do
do .
do

Oats:
Production (crop estimate) 1J
.
mil bu
Stocks (domestic), end of period, total $
do....
On farms $
do
Off farms
do....
Exports, including oatmeal
do....
Price, wholesale, No. 2, white (Minneapolis)
$ per bu..
Rice:
Production (crop estimate)
mil bags #
California mills:
Receipts domestic rough
mil Ib
Shipments from mills, milled rice
do....
Stocks, rough and cleaned (cleaned basis), end
of period
mil. Ib..
Southern States mills (Ark., La., Tenn., Tex.):
Receipts rough from producers
.... mil. Ib
Shipments from mills milled rice
do
Stocks, domestic, rough and cleaned (cleaned
Exports
do....
Price, wholesale, No. 2, medium grain (Southwest Louisiana)
.
. . $ per Ib
Rye:
Production (crop estimate) 11
mil. bu..
Stocks (domestic), end of period $
do....
Wheat:
Production (crop estimate) total U
... mil bu
Spring wheat 1j
do
Winter wheat jj
do
Distribution, quarterly @@
do....
Stocks (domestic), end of period, total $
do....
On farms $
do
Off farms
do....
Exports, total, including flour
do...
Wheat onlv
do....
See footnotes at end of tables.




3,918.3

3,524.8

2

2

479.3
333.1
231.2
101.9
95.9

2g 201 6
6,967.7
5,033.8
1,933.8

2,159.3
2

509.2
365.2
314.1
51.1
12.8

522.4
418.1
293.9
124.2
66.4

339.4

344.8

243.7

248.5

245.8

268.7

269.1

264.9

11
4

149.7
4
94.1
4
55.7

418.1
293.9
124.2

501.4
3534
148.0
6.3

7.5

4.9

8.6

5.7

1.5

3.0

1.9

7.6

560.0

2

8 397 3
8,423.8 333,904.1
6,156.9 32,758.5
2,266.9 1,145.6
1,924.9
212.4

5
2 285 9
5
1,356.0
5

179.8

119.8

112.8

929.9
107.4

8 423.8
6,156.9
2,266.9
166.5

161.5

169.6

157.6

169.8

173.8

0.1

0.2

0.1

0.3

174.9

1,829.0
149.1

U

2

617.0
473.7
397.9
75.8
5.8

4
152.0
4
127.2
4

24.8
0.6

0.8

0.3

0.3

0.3

0.8

0.2

473.7
397.9
758
0.3

581.3
4860
95.3

4
229.1
4
190.6
4

332.5
272.5
599

519.0

38.5

0.3

7

()
2

182.7

2

154.2

3,359
2,267

2,986
1,619

204
210

77
279

723
161

225
332

76
110

505
81

346
63

139
47

140
103

189
162

145
152

240
166

510

503

577

356

344

174

108

369

462

503

491

428

385

381

10,821
7,354

11,482
7,020

552
602

406
583

434
505

1,198
559

3,278
615

1,507
541

714
542

720
550

588
403

712
569

526
668

357
495

325
529

2,763
6,801

3,170

1,610

1,308

1,012

1,270

370

809

3,232
199

3,170
307

241

3,064
316

2,684
490

1,757

538

3,276
431

2,451

661

2,826
320

3,186

5,516

446

438

0.256

0.166

0.165

0.163

0.160

0.165

0.165

0.165

0.155

0.180

0.170

0.165

0.165

0.165

0.170

2

2

20.8
10.9

18.8
7.9

2

2,799
2
695
2,104
2,526
2,178.0
955.6
1,222.4
1,647.7
1.610.8
2

4

165

3.1

10.9

8.0

470

654

4

6.4

0.175
"26.1

2

2,809
2
700
2,108
2,473
2,520.5 41,163.9
1,166.1 44581.0
582.9
1,354.5
1,527.5
118.9
114.8
1.493.6
2

""1,937

6

6

987

394

157.9
155.7

118.7
117.9

126.8
124.0

132.4
130.8

1,877.0
886.3
990.7

2,520.5
1 166.1
1,354.5

2,987.1
14210
1,566.0
99.9
98.5

96.0
94.1

88.9
88.5

4

146.8
143.1

155.0
146.3

137.4
131.1

121.7
111.8

1,541.4
4
694.8
4
846.5
102.7
95.3

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-22
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

July 1983

1982

1982

May

Annual

June

July

Aug.

1983

Sept.

Nov.

Oct.

Jan.

Dec.

Feb.

Mar.

May

Apr.

June

FOOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS; TOBACCO—Continued
GRAIN AND GRAIN PRODUCTS— Continued
Wheat flour:
Production:
Flour t
thous sacks (100 Ib )
Millfeed ±
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....

283 966
5,045
634 381

284 965
5,136
640 158

21886
393
49018

22471
406
50215

23 153
424
52333

24669
448
55826

24213
435
54340

24965
450
56328

23867
429
53778

24473
441
54783

24425
445
54765

23393
425
52713

26762
489
58692

3460
15,839

4276
14,518

1,760

3744
944

352

1,196

3563
698

593

824

4276
185

1,587

3,734

3689
2,692

4,256

3,193

10.844
'10.347

10.545
'10.600

10.550

10.500

10.538

10.188

10.475

10.388

10.463

10.450

10.163
10.200

10.300

10.753

10.813

10.950

15,058

15 146

1,223

1,360

1,306

1,377

1,364

1,337

1,270

1,223

1,221

1,274

1,315

392
238

345
204

0.265

0.250

0.265

194.0

193.6

48.8

35
22

34
25

0.690

0.668

thous animals
do....

2478
32,819

2729
33,907

Prices, wholesale:
Beef steers (Omaha)
$ per 100 Ib..
Steers, stocker and feeder (Kansas City) .... do....
Calves vealers (So St Paul)
do

63.84
64.26
7725

64.30
62.79
77 70

87,850

79,328

44.29

55.21

58.35

59.01

59.70

63.18

63.12

57.27

53.90

14.9

22.4

21.8

22.4

23.1

26.6

28.5

28.2

24.6

11.213

POULTRY AND EGGS
Poultry:
Slaughter
mil. Ib..
Stocks, cold storage (frozen), end of period, total
mil. Ib..
Turkeys
do
Price, in Georgia producing area, live broilers
$ per Ib..
Eggs:
Production on farms
mil. cases §..
Stocks, cold storage, end of period:
Shell
thous cases §
Frozen
mil. Ib..
Price, wholesale, large (delivered; Chicago)
$ per doz..

2
2

425
282

0.275

0.250

0.255

0.240

2

32
23

0.608

0.235

0.616

326
185

346
192

359
209

0.240

0.265

0.245

0.240

0.255

14.8

16.4

15.5

15.8

35
28

25
28

18
25

23
24

32
23

0.602

0.627

0.662

0.649

0.684

4
221
2,893

204
2,554

246
2,828

202
2,615

194
2,820

59.33
63.70
7588

61.20
66.34
7500

64.03
66.71
7550

67.70
65.90
77 12

67.51
63.88
7600

6,421

5,762

7,339

7,010

6,816

55.23

57.24

57.78

51.37

47.84

47.40

45.73

23.7

23.4

21.9

18.6

16.0

15.1

14.4

0.235

4

0.659

16.4
4

34
25

29
28

0.617

1,342

313
188

4

48.4

47.9
2

0.604

0.265

1,110

329
194

4

345
204

565
436

0.668

0.662

4

0.641

0.270

0.680

LIVESTOCK
Cattle and calves:
Slaughter (federally inspected):
Calves
Cattle

Hogs:
Slaughter (federally inspected)
thous. animals..
Prices:
Wholesale, average, all weights (Sioux City)
$ per 100 Ib..
Hog-corn price ratio (bu. of corn equal in value
to 100 Ib. live hog)
Sheep and lambs:
Slaughter (federally inspected)
thous. animals..
Price, wholesale, lambs, average (Omaha)
$ per 100 Ib..

5,789

6,273

52.23

53.98

mil. Ib..
do....
do....
do....

38,675
578
1,847
1,832

37,266
554
1,566
2,015

do
do
do....
do....

22629
266
486
1,317

Price, wholesale, beef, fresh, steer carcasses,
choice (600-700 Ibs.) (Central U.S.)
$ per Ib..

0.998

72.10
66.07
8288

70.18
63.70
8500

66.18
64.17
8484

65.14
66.42
81 12

167
167

9,097
2
504
147
215

22789
302
540
1,446

52
116

5462
2
197
49
158

1.013

1.151

1.112

58.78
62.21
7500

58.91
61.24
75.00

4

4

1,634
46.75

48.50

143
124

9,659
554
115
114

52
146

56
67

5,928
302
43
69

0.930

0.929

0.926

48.25

50.50

50.00

108
234

9,165
474
112
246

133
194

40
113

41
180

5837
254
42
194

1.026

1.008

0.955

57.25

4

59.82
59.17
7840
20,068

1,577

1,493
60.50

61.25
63.55
8460
18,310

20,043

66.25

726
8,762

692
8,770

609
8,192

65.90
60.41
71 00

509

457

617

508

508

53.50

58.50

59.75

58.75

59.00

4

3,151
4
573
114
208

2,786
571
104
177

3,268
581
136
170

3,038
603
133
178

3,147
616
115
187

4

1,961
4
310
44
153

1,738
315
42
127

1,929
306
55
112

1,758
285
46
123

1,890
273
40
131

0.939

0.966

1.006

1.078

1.050

30
4
8

27
8

36
8

30
8

30
9

1,159
4
224
15
50

1,021
216
18
42

1,303
235
21
49

1,250
273
32
48

1,227
293
22
47

324.1
1.369

314.3
1.219

289.5
1.180

281.3
1.162

274.9
1.173

53.00

MEATS
Total meats (excluding lard):
Production, total
Stocks cold storage, end of period
Exports (meat and meat preparations)
Imports (meat and meat preparations)
Beef and veal:
Production total
Stocks cold storage end of period
Exports
Imports

Lamb and mutton:
Production total
Stocks cold storage end of period

mil Ib
do

Pork (excluding lard):
Production, total
Stocks, cold storage, end of period
Expoi'ts
Imports

111
158

4

93
9

88
9

1.024

328
11

356
9

mil. Ib..
do....
do....
do....

15,719
264
347
432

14,121
219
282
498

42
43

3,550
2
264
32
50

19
42

18
45

3,240
183
16
44

17
43

22
51

3,638
219
19
40

Prices, wholesale:
Hams, smoked #
Index, 1967=100..
Fresh loins, 8-14 Ib. average (N.Y.)
$ per Ib..

266.5
1.137

297.9
1.277

289.2
1.301

299.4
1.386

299.6
1.376

305.6
1.366

327.5
1.415

342.7
1.349

342.0
1.232

353.2
1.229

330.6
1.291

245.0
1.085

194.2
0.924

16.8
0.940

11.9
0.800

13.0
0.830

20.3
0.860

' 14.3
0.870

14.4
0.880

14.4
0.820

17.4
0.850

46.0
0.910

42.7
1.020

19.0
0.990

3.8
0.960

14.4
1.000

1.200

1 476
299
1.450
338

1 335
213
1.450
360

1 282
264
1.450
330

1 602
307
1.450
491

1 640
412
1.450
608

2005
445
1.450
570

1 356
196
1.330
510

1602
346
1.330
469

1 556
384
1.330
(3)

1 332
310
1.330

1 373
232
1.330

1 253
259
1.415

1 502
292
1.415

1.415

258

290

337

374

380

298

286

288

85
2
8

4

r

MISCELLANEOUS FOOD PRODUCTS
Cocoa (cacao) beans: x
Imports (incl. shells)
thous. Ig. tons..
Price, wholesale, Accra (New York)
$ per Ib..
Coffee (green):
Inventories (roasters', importers', dealers'),
end of period
thous. bags jj .
Roastings (green weight)
do

(3)
(3)

Imports total
From Brazil
Price, wholesale, Santos, No. 4 (N.Y.)
Confectionery, manufacturers' sales (?

16555
3,243
1.594
5,189

17416
3,372
1.420
5,456

350

383

Fish:
Stocks cold storage end of period
See footnotes at end of tables.




do
do....
$ per Ib..
mil. $..
mil Ib

379

386

383

347

306

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

Annual

S-23

1982
June

May

July

1983
Oct.

Sept.

Aug.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Mar.

Feb.

Apr.

June

May

FOOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS; TOBACCO—Cont.
MISCELLANEOUS FOOD PRODUCTS— Cont.
Sugar (United States):
Deliveries and supply (raw basis): §
Production and receipts:
Production
thous. sh. tons..
Deliveries, total
For domestic consumption..
Stocks, raw and ref., end of period

do....
do
do....

(4)
(4)
(4)
(4)

1 751

4551

1 299

837

1 624

934

1308

1 236

984

133

90

520

167

133

164

219

140

238

333

14,286

15,598

17,425

16,207

18,222

12,567

13,748

15,092

14,170

15,799

16,018

4675
37,226
25,012

23,910
17,725

30,179
41,903

5034
24,805
25,541

74,480
29,006

92,236
29,126

5371
50,528
11,714

24,189
23,898

38,339
19,565

45,958
23,013

43,953
29,965

33,631
24,428

5919
48240

6,265
60590

5784
49 167

7595
55802

6,789
56655

6,415
54068

6766
49538

5,915
33075

6,828
48686

6,091
42701

5,590
54360

4,260
47466

269

292

234

279

291

259

261

220

229

197

255

216

5.670

5.797

4.461

5.844

5.894

6.734

6.144

5.589

5.614

5.811

4.249

4.319

4.687

15,078

15,200

13,492

31,470

27,205

979 157

58512

2837

15619

2212

thous. sh. tons-

5,054

2,616

142

218

360

$ per lb..
do

0.198
0303

(4)

0 195
0300

0.208
0300

thous. lb..

190,254

16,518

14,309

mil lb

'2064

53,960
24,820

Exports raw and refined

sh tons

Imports, raw and refined

5,157
10,922
9731
3,311

Prices, wholesale (New York):
Raw
Refined (excl excise tax)
Tea, imports

(4)

182,613

1 478

(4)
(4)

TOBACCO
Leaf:
Production (crop estimate)
Stocks, dealers' and manufacturers',
end of period i
Exports, incl. scrap and stems
Imports, incl. scrap and stems
Manufactured:
Consumption (withdrawals):
Cigarettes (small):
Tax-exempt
Taxable
Cigars (large), taxable
Exoorts. cigarettes

.

'1 982

mil lb
thous. lb..
do....

5080
575,255
335,920

5371
562,260
295,740

millions..
do
do....
do....

92,006
638 114
3,258
82.582

82,078
614017
3,056
73.585

LEATHER AND PRODUCTS
LEATHER
Exports:
Upper and lining leather

159,804

17,449

18,610

18,486

12,065

10,417

11,842

9,726

10,786

11,052

12,453

380,383

331,388

28,566

28,629

23,993

28,310

28,943

28,897

26,320

23,512

27,831

31,757

r

247 047
67^704
16637
4,030

21 490
5^709
1,367

20 859
6^468
1,302

19,251
3^958

20,697
6^620
1,580

19,075
5',911
1,334

18,231
3^890
1,391

21,161
5^133
1,537

24,423
5J38
2,196

331

378

784
268

20 735 21,224
6^327
6^082
1 493 1,392

r

do....
do
do....

289,745
74,'662
15,976
3,556

do....

9,688

693

742

636

thous. sq. ft..

Price, producer:
Sole, bends, light

192,193
2

306.7

index, 1967=100..

LEATHER MANUFACTURES
Footwear:
Production total
thous pairs
Shoes, sandals, and play shoes, except athletic
Slippers
Athletic
Other footwear
Exports

Prices, producer: *
Men's leather upper, dress and casual
index, 12/80=100..
Women's leather upper
Women's plastic upper

index, 1967=100..
index, 12/80=100..

7,717

23,859
r
5,723
r
l,888

20,782
4J39
1,684

267

354

394

365

267

433

447

534

587

577

595

649

635

536

497

436

637

553

486

103.1

105.2

106.0

101.2

106.2

106.3

106.4

107.0

107.0

104.5

105.2

106.9

106.6

107.0

104.6

104.6

214.4
99.6

215.8
97.9

214.1
98.3

218.5
98.5

219.0
99.1

219.5
99.1

220.0
99.7

221.8
99.8

221.8
99.8

221.8
99.2

218.5
99.1

r

219.5
r
98.8

220.4
98.7

220.2
98.9

224.6
99.9

225.0
99.8

LUMBER AND PRODUCTS
LUMBER— ALL TYPES #
National Forest Products Association:
Production, total
Hardwoods
Softwoods
Shipments total
Hardwoods
Softwoods
Stocks (gross), mill, end of period, total
Hardwoods
Softwoods
Exports, total sawmill products
Imports, total sawmill products
SOFTWOODS
Douglas fir:
Orders, new
Orders, unfilled, end of period

mil. bd. ft..
do
do....
do
do
do....

3

29,592
3
6835
22,757
3
29
491
3
6655
22,836

3

2,333
400
1,933

2,247
391
1,856

2,004
337
1,667

2,484
397
2,087

2,481
412
2,069

2,682
394
2,288

2,623
374
2,249

2 450

2 260

2 506

2353

2 162

2435

2290

2632

2683

2,338
443
1,895

2 308

2 513

465

438

381

377

407

398

1,843

2,075

1,982

2,073

1,864

2,099

1,955

1,802

5,915
1 786
4,129

5,853
1,789
4,064

5,867
1 797
4,070

5,977
1 802
4,175

6,163
1 799
4,364

5,986
1 789
4,179

5,881
1 783
4,098

888

874

888

962

758

916

501
488

r
565
r

r 477

495

r

396

do....
do....
do....

5,927
1,945
3,982

5,724
1,761
3,963

do....
do....

9,518

9,421

848

mil. bd. ft..
do....

6,393
429

'473
r
480

r

r
469
r

478
1,000

r
468
r
525
r

r
517
r
513
r

r
552
r
558
r

r
509
r
470
r

980

567
510
r
487
r
559
r
908

48
14
35

40
9
30

31
8
23

42
14
28

31
7
24

41
8
33

r

Production
.
Shipments
Stocks (gross), mill, end of period

do
do ..
do....

6395
6,463
844

Exports, total sawmill products
Sawed timber
Boards, planks, scantlings, etc

do....
do....
do....

523
129
394

471
125
345

Price, wholesale:
Dimension, construction, dried, 2" x 4", R.L.
$ per M bd. ft.




2,445
393
2,052

2,251
419
1,822

5,976
612
r
5743
r
5793
r
862

See footnotes at end of tables.

2,376
388
1,988
2 363

2,560
382
2,178

26,960
3
5077
21,883
3
27
163
3
5261
21,902

545
500
943

r

947

941

502

r

419

437

435

1,853

2,197

2,231

5,724
1,761
3,963

2,016
5,770
1,735
4,035

5,950
1,699
4,251

5,997
1,655
4,342

5,924
1,564
4,360

781

879

933

1,055

885

1,153

533
612

683
707

505
666

656
698

635
684

714
692

360

r

568
572

r

r
505
r
506
r

r
448
r
493
r

31
6
25

39
8
31

907

862

r

642
588

916
41
11
30

r

612
546

982
45
7
38

r

697
624

1,055
51
16
35

452

682
649

1,088
60
17
43

693
706

1,075
63
16
48

S-24

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

Annual

July 1983
1983

1982
May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Nov.

Oct.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

LUMBER AND PRODUCTS—Continued
SOFTWOODS— Continued
Southern pine:
Orders, new
Orders, unfilled, end of period

mil. bd. ft..
do....

'6,128
418

•6,016
438

513
463

599
467

493
409

537
427

508
401

607
438

512
435

488
438

590
476

486
486

615
528

571
529

do....
do....

'6,143
•6,129

•6,186
•5,996

490
496

556
595

547
551

582
519

643
534

563
570

513
515

505
485

521
552

515
476

561
573

550
570

Production
Shipments

Stocks (gross), mill and concentration yards, end
of period
mil. bd. ft..
Exports, total sawmill products

thous. bd. ft..

1,284

1,474

1,334

1,295

1,291

1,354

1,464

1,456

1,454

1,474

1,444

1,483

1,471

1,451

227,020

245,221

19,318

26,989

18,752

17,778

22,926

19,908

22,203

20,273

19,753

18,314

18,375

21,244

21,552

661
390

568
389

718
422

709
426

781
439

601
595

636
569

710
685

713
705

722
768

1,161

1,115

Prices, wholesale (indexes):
Boards, Xo. 2 and better, 1" x 6", R.L.
1967=100..
Flooring, C and better, F. G., 1" x 4", S.L.
1967-100..
Western pine:
Orders, new
Orders, unfilled, end of period

mil. bd. ft..
do....

Production
Shipments

do....
do....

Stocks (gross), mill, end of period

do....

7,235
219

r

6,880
324

r
584
r

r
598
r

r

304

r

7,261
7,342

r
6,681
r

r
553
r

r
592
r

1,104

r

6,775

l,055

328

556

1,230

622

1,200

617
303

r

r

631
618

r

r

r

1,213

1,232

727
336

r

713
694

r
597
r

r

r
592
r

r
594
r

355

578

1,246

671
364

r

r

r

r
495
r

363

587
651

r

662

1,178

r
650
r

1,114

515
324

554

1,055

1,061

1,128

r

1,153

Price, wholesale, Ponderosa, boards. No. 3,
1" x 12" R L (6' and over)
$ per M bd ft
HARDWOOD FLOORING
Oak:
Orders unfilled end of period
Shipments
Stocks (gross), mill, end of period

mil bd ft
do....
do....

2.8
83.1
10.1

4.8
75.0
12.0

18
6.0
10.2

2.1
6.2
11.8

22
5.8
11.4

3.3
6.7
11.3

27
7.3
10.4

2.8
6.7
10.6

3.4
6.3
10.9

4.8
6.2
12.0

6.7
8.0
9.3

6.4
6.5
8.7

6.5
8.7
8.4

6.4
8.5
7.3

METALS AND MANUFACTURES
IRON AND STEEL
Exports:
Steel mill products
Scrap
Pig iron

thous. sh. tons..
do
do....

2,904
'6,456
16

1,842
6,804
54

194
812
1

180
806
6

146
577
1

152
542
1

158
607
18

133
434
1

109
620
21

97
375
(2)

95
625
1

92
372
(2)

89
563
1

106
564
1

Imports:
Steel mill products
Scrap
Pig iron

do....
do....
do....

19,898
'562
433

16,663
474
322

1,696
57
71

1,784
49
35

1,113
37
9

1,451
45
15

1,191
37
14

1,146
35
41

1,258
38
11

1,090
27
13

1,098
35
5

1,158
29
7

1,113
78
1

1,182
58
1

thous. sh. tons..
do....
do
do....

'43,260
'41,981
'85,097
8,118

27,840
•27,477
'56,452
6,421

2,418
2,611
5,077
7^650

2,320
2,303
4,715
7,551

2,119
2,033
4,336
7',352

2,122
2,133
4,377
7,117

2,078
2,106
4,357
6^954

1,975
2,134
4,226
6,628

1,924
1,773
3,757
6,479

1,687
1,855
3,611
6,421

1,832
2,223
4,257
6,143

1,877
2,488
4,396
6,069

2,332
2,855
5,092
6,151

Prices, steel scrap, No. 1 heavy melting:
Composite
$ per Ig. ton..
Pittsburgh district
do....

90.17
100.50

61.51
66.71

62.85
64.00

55.21
59.50

53.84
57.50

54.77
58.00

53.48
58.00

52.32
55.00

48.94
51.50

48.61
51.50

55.19
62.50

61.13
68.00

70.50
79.00

68.64
77.00

'73,174
'72,181
28^328

36,495
36,956
14,715

4,358
5,306
1J99

2,525
4,964
L865

869
4,795
1^508

909
4,193
1,532

744
3,943
1J424

1,470
3,161
1,395

1,728
3,065
898

2,365
1,569
826

2,463
395
463

1,970
622
320

2,314
477
206

567

1,268
5,201
(2)

Iron and Steel Scrap
Production
Receipts, net
Consumption
Stocks, end of period

Ore

Iron ore (operations in all U.S. districts):
Mine production
thous. Ig. tons..
Shipments from mines
do....
Imports
do....
U.S. and foreign ores and ore agglomerates:
Consumption at iron and steel plants
Exports (domestic)

do....
do

96,645
94,958
5,546

49,872
55,234
3,177

6,672
4,896
391

7,182
4,342
604

6,746
4,'705
324

5,848
4,369
57

5,361
4,'249
501

4,368
4J92
339

3,395
3^664
486

2,655
3,565
235

674
3,882
(2)

646
3,978
2

Stocks, total, end of period
At mines
At furnace yards
At U.S. docks

do....
do
do.:..
do....

60,243
12734
36,203
6,571

52,621
16948
29,923
5,750

57,645
28,314
24,209
5,122

58,457
26,380
26,909
5,168

59,065
25297
28,860
4,908

57,833
22 137
30,276
5,420

55,774
19,042
31,326
5,406

54,480
17423
31,501
5,556

52,647
16098
30,953
5,596

52,621
16948
29,923
5,750

45,534
12997
26,896
5,641

42,624
14 345
22,904
5,375

do....

775

477

22

58

35

33

14

25

32

15

61

29

37

20

Pig iron:
Production (including production of ferroalloys)
thous. sh. tons..
Consumption
do ....
Stocks, end of period
do....

73,570
75,074
859

•43,136
•44,541
580

3,904
3,975
747

3,595
3,648
758

3,516
3,554
728

3,277
3,431
697

3,160
3261
681

3,077
3,201
649

2,648
2,837
603

2,712
2,883
580

3,192
3,266
659

3,264
3,175
641

4,206
4,141
626

4,333
4,420
630

213.00

213.00

213.00

213.00

213.00

Manganese (mn. content), general imports

3,852

39,615
16 184
18,909 '"l 7,292
3,711
4,522

Pig Iron and Iron Products

$ per sh. ton..

206.00

Castings, gray and ductile iron:
Orders, unfilled, for sale, end of period
thous. sh. tons..
Shipments, total
do. ...
For sale
do

736
11,801
6,587

536
8,222
4,681

651
741
432

610
756
428

611
616
359

608
630
404

575
631
369

505
618
351

521
584
334

536
450
266

570
625
366

582
655
370

Castings, malleable iron:
Orders, unfilled, for sale, end of period
thous. sh. tons..
Shipments, total
do....
For sale
do....

32
422
200

14
285
120

24
27
12

24
29
11

16
21
7

16
23
10

15
22
8

13
19
7

13
18
7

14
18
6

17
21
7

16
23
8

Price, basic furnace

See footnotes at end of tables.




60.00
67.50

June

S-25

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1982

1981

Annual

1982

May

June

July

Aug.

1983

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

METALS AND MANUFACTURES—Continued
Steel, Raw and Semifinished
Steel (raw):
Production
Rate of capability utilization

Steel castings:
Orders, unfilled, for sale, end of period
thous sh tons
Shipments, total
do....
For sale, total
do

7 127
555

7292
589

4,588

5,969

5,399

278
239
251
55

297
206
341
81

298
240
305
78

'72,903
473

6678
509

6050
477

5719
438

5538
424

5299
41 9

5262
402

4 546
359

4456
340

5570
434

5,676
490

161
1,023
926

276
101
93

250
91
82

232
63
56

222
65
58

213
68
62

181
63
56

172
56
50

161
45
39

162
53
48

157
54
48

87,014

59,783

5,149

5,372

4,514

4,724

4,760

4,309

4,088

4,234

4,583

5598
4,903
7397
1,458

3408
3,424
4 136
782

306
290
330
74

291
284
316
68

257
272
259
56

269
265
300
41

283
280
269
44

291
321
261
36

260
237
260
49

255
210
260
51

229
237
254
42

thous. sh. tons.. '120828
percent
783

373
1 743
1 558

7412
579

Steel Mill Products
Steel products, net shipments:
Total (all grades)
thous. sh. tons..
By product:
Semifinished products
do
Structural shapes (heavy), steel piling
do....
Plates
.
do
Rails and accessories
do....
Bars and tool steel total
Bars: Hot rolled (incl. light shapes)
Bars: Reinforcing
Bars: Cold finished

do
do....
do....
do....

13828
'7,770
4371
1,620

9440
'4,857
3,526
1,013

846
434
321
87

855
440
319
92

668
304
296
66

766
361
325
76

746
347
322
73

715
238
323
68

639
280
293
64

615
312
241
59

756
415
253
85

756
366
232
75

1 078
588
422
94

892
446
350
92

Pipe and tubing
Wire and wire products
Tin mill products
.
Sheets and strip (incl. electrical), total
Sheets- Hot rolled
Sheets: Cold rolled

do....
do....
do
do....
do
do....

10,286
1,694
4927
36,924
13451
14396

5,026
1,332
4321
27,914
9052
11 132

476
123
338
2,367
759
957

388
123
386
2,661
848
1 069

274
113
331
2,285
758
884

246
112
386
2,340
746
919

228
113
502
2,295
665
915

220
108
251
2,189
657
878

224
89
266
2,063
637
832

220
83
294
2,247
656
974

232
98
380
2,355
769
941

224
99
321
2,366
797
940

283
131
406
3,045
1 000
1,239

252
124
369
2,841
958
1,126

By market (quarterly):
Service centers and distributors
Construction, incl. maintenance
Contractors' products
Automotive
Rail transportation
Machinery, industrial equip., tools
Containers packaging ship materials
Other

do
do....
do
do....
do
do.. .
do
do .

17637
'8,446
3230
13,154
2 162
4624
5292
'32 469

'12972
6,260
2290
'9,295
1 030
2582
4471
'20 883

Steel mill shapes and forms, inventories, end of
period — total for the specified sectors:
mil. sh. tons..
Producing mills, inventory, end of period:
Steel in process
mil. sh. tons..
Finished steel
do
Service centers (warehouses), inventory, end of
period
.
mil sh tons
Consumers (manufacturers only):
Inventory end of period
do
Receipts during period
do....
Consumption during period
do

3213
1,651
598
2,791
277
689
1 115
5676

3099
1,568
548
2,311
183
491
1 252
4 546

3539
1,370
634
2,453
203
538
1 133
5270

3029
1,379
543
2,036
159
446
837
4201

30.0

22.1

28.1

26.9

26.5

25.8

24.8

24.0

23.0

22.1

22.1

22.0

11.3
74

8.1
53

10.9
69

10.4
65

10.2
65

9.9
63

9.6
60

9.3
58

8.6
56

8.1
53

8.1
51

7.9
53

2

12236
506
2
207
2
982
2
85
2
182
2
384
2
1 816

54

47

50

51

50

50

48

47

47

47

47

47

59
71.7
724

41
54.9
567

53
4.8
52

49
4.7
51

48
4.3
44

46
4.4
46

44
4.5
47

42
4.7
44

41
3.8
39

40
3.4
34

42
4.2
41

41
4.0
41

4,948
'1,913

3,609
2,045

321
167

300
188

297
182

287
186

271
181

275
180

266
164

275
157

279
164

246
160

273
179

270
175

do....
do....

'710.7
'142.5

679.4
214.3

51.0
19.5

66.5
15.5

42.2
16.7

78.2
17.9

52.8
16.9

52.7
18.9

60.1
18.2

47.8
17.5

53.1
22.1

47.0
21.7

36.6
24.1

73.7
21.8

do....
do

344.2
'2819
07600

401.2
200 1

19.9
164

48.5
19 9

24.2
133

42.6
143

23.6
220

59.5
204

42.1
12 1

27.3
126

56.1
139

13.4
132

15.4
206

51.2
159

07600

07600

07600

07600

07600

07600

07600

07600

07600

07600

07600

07600

mil Ib..
do
do
do

13,237
10328
5?978
1 581

11,960
9 108
5329
1 306

971
762
441
116

1,113
834
498
143

879
744
444
102

1,100
111
462
104

1,014
781
465
108

1,059
727
417
101

943
719
419
98

1,108
679
390
85

906
769
461
105

915
749
434
112

Inventories, total (ingot, mill products, and
scrap), end of period
mil. Ib..

6,607

6,200

6,684

6,577

6,626

6,508

6,434

6,431

6,391

6,200

6,102

6,034

1,538.2
1 544 0
'1 4302
'113.8

1,135.1
1 2250
10773
'147.8

97.0
993
905
8.8

90.0
939
85 8
8.0

84.6
995
85 7
13.8

81.1
91 5
74 1
174

75.3
947
756
19.0

86.5
950
80 1
14.9

89.4
114 2
98 1
16.1

81.0
1028
85 4
17.5

90.7
945
766
17.8

78.2
96 1
772
18.9

92.0
1209
1052
15.8

89.0
117 1
970
20.1

520

392

349

286

607

534

NONFERROUS METALS AND PRODUCTS
Aluminum:
Production, primary (dom. and foreign ores)
thous. sh. tons..
Recovery from scrap (aluminum content)
do....
Imports (general):
Metal and alloys, crude
Plates, sheets, bars, etc
Exports:
Metal and alloys, crude
Plates sheets bars etc
Price primary ingot 99 5% minimum
Aluminum products:
Shipments:
Ingot and mill prod, (net ship.)
Mill products total
Sheet and plate
.
Castings

Copper:
Production:
Mine, recoverable copper
Refinery primarv
From domestic ores
From foreign ores
Secondary, recovered
as refined

. ..

$ per Ib

thous. met. tons..
do
do
do....

1

do

6319

do
do

5025
3593

'5187
'2598

47 5
204

50 6
292

47 5
272

429
258

573
299

562
276

423
262

39 7
219

506
34.0

426
270

655
44 1

947
71 6

739
450

do....
do....

340.6
28.1

381.1
35.0

39.1
1.6

20.4
1.6

33.5
2.9

34.0
5.4

36.6
9.9

40.2
8.6

34.3
0.8

22.8
1.1

33.4
13.4

14.5
0.7

19.6
1.5

23.0
2.0

21.4
3.2

Consumption, refined
(by mills, etc.)
thous. sh. tons..
Stocks refined end of period .
do
Price, electrolytic (wirebars), dom., delivered
$ per Ib..

2045
511

1,790
668

0.8512

0.7431

0.8022

0.8402

0.8207

Imports (general):
Refined, unrefined,
scrap (copper cont )
Refined
Exports:
Refined and scrap
Refined

See footnotes at end of tables.




..

407
592

485
587
0.7487

0.7149

0.7105

0.7100

0.7106

390
668
0.7241

0.7297

0.7423

6,993
56 5

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-26
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

1982

Annual

July 1983

May

June

July

Aug.

1983

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

METALS AND MANUFACTURES—Continued
NONFERROUS METALS AND
PRODUCTS— Continued
Copper-base mill and foundry products, shipments
(quarterly total):
425
530
94

2,622
2,847
471

2,014
2,393
405

445.5
641.1

515.9
528.8

42.1
46.1

42.6
44.8

37.0
34.4

42.9
44.2

41.7
41.9

45.0
44.6

42.1
41.9

45.4
41.5

44.7
41.3

39.4
37.4

'37.2
41.0

36.6
41.3

do....
do..

68.7
1,167.1

50.1
'1,066.2

1.9
82.1

5.4
84.5

1.6
73.0

8.5
90.7

2.3
87.9

8.2
95.3

1.9
83.2

2.4
83.1

2.1
82.3

8.1
70.9

r

2.4
80.4

6.3
83.1

6.5

Stocks, end of period:
Producers', ore, base bullion, and in process
(lead content), ABMS
thous. met. tons..
Refiners' (primary), refined and antimonial
(lead content)
thous. met. tons..
Consumers' (lead content)
fl
do....
Scrap (lead-base, purchased), all smelters
(gross weight)
thous. met. tonsPrice, common grade, delivered
$ per Ib..

83.3

75.0

85.6

82.1

79.2

79.0

75.1

76.6

75.9

75.0

75.3

73.6

65.3

59.0

59.5

79.5
123.2

74.1
77.4

61.7
81.7

69.0
88.3

66.6
84.2

61.7
83.5

66.6
84.2

69.0
79.4

73.6
77.4

73.5
77.4

78.1
80.0

85.6
78.3

80.4
79.0

83.5
77.5

58.8
0.3653

33.5
0.2554

32.7
0.2609

36.1
0.2476

39.3
0.2718

34.8
0.2582

31.6
0.2532

30.6
0.2319

37.1
0.2161

33.5
0.2047

27.9
0.2203

25.9
0.2112

21.6
0.2073

23.6

Tin:
Imports (for consumption):
Ore (tin content)
metric tons..
Metal un wrought unalloyed
do .
Recovery from scrap, total (tin cont.)
do....
As metal
do . .
Consumption, total
do....
Primary
do.. .

232
45,874
15,438
1
1,587
'54,373
'40,229

1,931
27,939
12,368
1,641
53,450
38,700

0
2,966
1,065
140
5,000
3,600

156
2,055
1,025
140
5,100
3,700

93
2,450
1,000
155
4,900
3,600

186
2,742
940
145
4,700
3,400

194
1,697
996
121
4,700
3,400

289
2,409
1,019
164
4,600
3,300

88
2,233
1,008
192
4,500
3,200

277
2,100
1,000
130
4,400
3,100

173
3,434
886
116
4,400
3,200

51
1,867
914
114
4,700
3,400

34
2,365
971
176
4,900
3,600

45
3,578

6,081
5,988
7.3305

'9,357
3,152
6.5392

261
4,953
6.6284

662
4,653
6.0826

375
3,888
6.1255

305
2,910
6.2549

175
2,940
6.3904

249
2,970
6.2475

241
3,437
6.1347

256
3,152
6.1434

368
4,609
6.2443

382
3,513
6.5070

298
3,815
6.6772

221
6,332

tons..

312.4

'303.1

25.6

27.0

21.3

27.4

25.7

27.8

25.9

23.3

25.0

22.9

25.5

22.9

do
do....

117.7
'611.9

49.3
'456.1

4.0
35.3

4.9
39.8

0.7
27.8

2.8
26.2

3.9
34.9

9.1
49.1

2.3
61.5

3.6
41.0

3.7
35.9

2.1
25.4

2.5
42.6

2.4
51.2

do....
do

'60.6
'288.7

53.1
207.9

6.2
17.7

3.9
17.3

3.1
17.3

2.6
17.5

3.6
17.9

4.0
17.6

4.7
17.1

4.7
16.8

4.7
17.2

3.8
16.7

5.2
!4.4

5.1
14.6

'393.0
'834.2
0.3

254.3
697.4
0.3

21.5
58.8
0.1

21.5
65.8
(2)

18.7
56.3
0.0

20.4
60.7
(2)

24.1
61.4
(2)

24.8
60.8
(2)

18.7
53.7
(2)

18.1
50.8
0.1

18.2
61.8
1.4

20.7
59.9
(2)

22.7
68.8
(2)

22.4
66.6
(2)

44.7
81.9
0.4455

24.6
62.0
0.3847

35.3
60.8
0.3467

27.9
57.7
0.3460

20.5
62.0
0.3566

14.9
57.7
0.3779

15.9
56.1
0.3964

19.9
56.0
0.4083

21.5
62.2
0.4039

24.6
62.0
0.3846

21.9
69.7
0.3860

22.1
65.8
0.3806

19.4
r
70.7
0.3790

17.9
65.7
0.3800

Heating, combustion, atmosphere equipment, new
orders (domestic) net, qtrly #
mil $..
Electric processing heating equipment
do....
Fuel-fired processing heating equip
do....

470.0
106.9
225.4

'296.9
65.4
128.2

Material handling equipment (industrial):
Orders (new) index seas adj
1967—100

382.0

249.2

221.4

241.2

235.1

209.5

266.0

188.4

206.0

18,734
19,784

13,988
14,859

1,228
1,402

1,558
1,567

787
931

1,207
1,042

1,160
1,312

1,220
1,113

1,299
1,379

31,885

18,553

1,587

2,216

824

1,265

1,484

1,312

1,447

Brass mill products
Copper wire mill products (copper cont.)
Brass and bronze foundry products

mil Ib
do....
do

Lead:
Production:
Mine recoverable lead
thous met tons
Recovered from scrap (lead cont.)
do....
Imports (general), ore (lead cont.), metal
Consumption total

Exports incl. reexports (metal)
Stocks, pig (industrial), end of period
Price, Straits quality (delivered)

do....
do....
$ per Ib..

Zinc:
Mine prod., recoverable zinc
thous. met.
Imports (general):
Ores (zinc content) ..
.
Metal (slab, blocks)
Consumption (recoverable zinc content):
Ores
Scrap all types
...

Slab zinc: @
Production, total $
thous. met. tons..
Consumption fabricators
....
do
Exports
do
Stocks, end of period:
Producers', at smelter (ABMS)
do....
Consumers'
do...
Price, Prime Western
$ per Ib..

1

1

548
634
107

497
575
90

r

3
2,845

4,900
3,500
235

6.6
60.4

(2)

MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT

Industrial trucks (electric), shipments:
Hand (motorized)
number..
Rider-type
do
Industrial trucks and tractors (internal combustion
engines) shipments
number..
Industrial supplies, machinery and equipment:
New orders index seas adjusted
1977 — 100
Industrial suppliers distribution: t
Sales index seas adjusted
1977—100..
Inflation index, not seas. adj. (tools, material
handling equip., valves, fittings, abrasives,
fasteners, metal products, etc.)
1977=100..
Fluid power products shipments indexes: *
Hydraulic products, seas, adj
1972=100..
Pneumatic products seas, adj
do....
Machine tools:
Metal cutting type tools:
Orders new (net) total
Domestic
Shipments total
Domestic
Order backlog, end of period
Metal forming type tools:
Orders, new (net), total
Domestic
Shipments, total
Domestic
Order backlog, end of period
See footnotes at end of tables.




606
96
25.9

53.8
18 1
14.4

73.3
17.5
26.9

150.7

70.3
244
19.7
215.8

123.4

94.6

91.1

90.9

88.3

90.8

92.1

87.8

84.1

83.6

84.7

83.9

85.9

88.2

142.3

120.9

123.5

121.3

120.0

119.1

115.9

109.8

106.8

100.7

103.5

104.2

107.6

113.5

112.0

144.3

153.1

153.7

153.8

154.0

153.8

154.0

153.7

153.5

153.7

153.9

154.6

154.8

279
249

208
202

218
194

232
194

191
195

198
186

178
191

170
172

166
184

143
174

169
182

168
183

178
190

180
185

190
194

mil. $ . 2,228.10
do.... 1,945.80
do.. 4,104.50
do.... 3,552.45
2,873.3
do....

1,064.45
889.60
2,894.75
2,598.60
1,043.0

68.00
53.75
246.60
224.15
2,022.2

91.65
55.15
324.60
296.55
1,789.2

70.40
57.55
203.55
173.75
1,656.0

60.45
49.25
212.50
184.30
1,504.0

52.60
47.20
224.40
192.65
1,332.2

72.85
59.10
150.60
132.30
1,254.4

62.75
47.45
155.70
134.80
1,161.5

85.80
84.20
204.30
184.20
1,043.0

57.05
51.35
107.40
93.40
992.6

77.40
69.55
128.80
116.70
941.2

89.65
84.95
134.40
119.70
896.5

79.25
73.65
112.95
100.55
862.8

716.75
616.85
991.10
824.20
427.0

433.30
371.75
709.65
599.75
150.6

37.95
27.40
49.25
44.90
288.2

34.25
29.25
84.55
75.35
237.8

36.15
30.40
46.80
40.65
227.2

26.05
22.70
44.70
38.90
208.6

34.30
30.20
51.45
45.95
191.4

46.35
42.55
50.10
42.25
187.6

25.45
21.90
37.80
33.70
175.3

35.15
33.50
59.85
41.50
150.6

34.80
28.95
45.45
38.05
140.0

20.10
18.70
29.55
26.55
130.5

35.85
32.50
41.85
36.40
124.5

39.30
37.40
37.85
35.00
126.0

do....
do
do....
do
do....

"93.75
88.35
"98.80
"88.60
"857.8

P

"41.70
"37.90
"37.05
"35.05
"130.6

June

S-27

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
1981

Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1982

Annual

1982

May

June

July

Aug.

1983

Sept.

Nov.

Oct.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

June

May

Apr.

METALS AND MANUFACTURES—Continued
MACHINERY AND
EQUIPMENT— Continued
Tractors used in construction, shipments, qtrly:
Tracklaying total
units
mil. $..
Wheel (contractors' off-highway)
units
mil. $..
Tractor shovel loaders (integral units only),
wheel and tracklaying types
units.,
mil $
Tractors, wheel, farm, nonfarm (ex. garden and
construction types), ship., qtrly
units.,
mil $

15789
1,569.9
4309
410.9

8278
895.1
2443
222.2

2589
272.7
685
60.6

2 106
255.1
714
67.2

1 193
102.9
497
36.3

33,369
1 6055

24,128
1 0223

7,432
2990

5,403
2486

5,057
1732

141,170
34793

93,775
27487

25,754
737 7

18,843
5832

21,111
6735

;i
234
3

16.0

14,612
539.1

ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT
5,660

5,237

5,280

3,708

3,070

3,730

3,509

3,490

3,221

2

2,364

2,159

2,137

-2,789

2,266

1 619

1 106

1 161

2

1 229

1 151

1 298

2

1 561

1 282

1,313

2,257
61
203
219
170
432
156
364
244

2,097
17
167
241
168
381
109
360
245
2 136

2,350
31
218
339
202
401
80
347
261

2,117
71
206
260
195
310
80
319
251

1,892
84
178
238
175
262
73
252
193
1 812

2,179
89
213
264
190
363
103
364
260

2,158
130
197
294
183
336
97
353
251

2,744
309
248
309
232
403
117
420
283
2082

2,507
259
214
313
200
361
111
352
236

2,597
300
259
249
252
463
112
416
282

96
99
225

126
133
232

140
113
260

127
114
236

138
126
257

129
108
274

120
112
274

119
134
288

112
127
301

28
625.2

66
603.1

605.1

3,512
531.9

530.7

thous..

53,598

54,214

3,584

3,640

3,629

4,750

Radio sets, production, total market
Television sets (incl. combination models),
production total market

thous..

31,476

31,782

2,460

2

3,179

2,284

4,052

2

thous

18480

16405

1 292

2

1 710

1 177

1 420

2

30,482
3692
2,484
3 179
2,328
4 944
1,605
4365
2,977
7785

26,683
2761
2,170
2781
2,035
4364
1,340
4019
2,728
7536

2,232
419
169
200
150
359
112
322
195

2,341
289
160
207
293
437
161
352
214
1 677

2,196
145
187
199
166
456
151
323
196

1,417
1,496
2,785

1,156
1,368
3,042

69
113
246

85
123
248

78
96
230

Household major appliances (electrical), factory
shipments (domestic and export) #
thous..
Air conditioners (room)
do
Dishwashers
do....
Disposers (food waste)
do
Ranges
do....
Refrigerators
do
Freezers
do....
Washers
.
.. .
do
Dryers (incl. gas)
do....
Vacuum cleaners (qtrlv )
do

3,720

5,819
3,624

Batteries (auto.-type replacement), ship

GAS EQUIPMENT (RESIDENTIAL)
Furnaces, gravity and forced-air, shipments.. ..thous..
Ranges, total, sales
do....
Water heaters (storage), automatic, sales @
do....

PETROLEUM, COAL, AND PRODUCTS
COAL
Anthracite:
Production
Exports
Price wholesale*
Bituminous:
Production t

Residential and commercial

do....
do....
do....
do....

370
86
6374

340
77
6374

378
121
6374

338
107
6380

344
43
6380

323
5
6360

303
2
6359

400
30
6342
66850

818352

829 211

70 656

71 231

59 868

72 091

67 203

70068

63043

62 177

60 573

58979

728,543
595,575
127,527
60,888

703,682
592,591
104,593
40,859

54,585
45,523
8713
3,616

55,730
47,330
8 121
3,476

63,563
55,140
7933
3,118

63,274
54,742
8002
3,056

56,522
48,348
7,665
2,922

54,762
46,248
7,994
2,755

56,531
47,699
8,137
2,691

59,888
50,814
8,231
2,586

53,279

45,699

6,498

349

279

490

530

509

520

695

843

thous sh tons

Consumption, total
Electric power utilities
Industrial, total
Coke plants (oven and beehive)

313
106
6375

319
45
6375

329
41
6390

4 198
980
6403

5423
2,249
5822

thous sh tons
do....
Index 1967—100

do....

5,440
1

179,607
163 356
16,251
6446

189,085 187,248 192,664 184,238 184,429 183,985 189,028 190,551 189,085
175 053 171 892 176911 168 845 169 403 169 329 174 579 176 308 175 053 171 725 172 205
14,656 14,449 14,243 14,032
15^356 15,753 15,393 15,026
14,032
4625
5 157
4892
6518
5422
5788
6 153
4625
6216

do
Index, 1967—100..

110243
4937

105 244
5304

10057
5296

thous. sh. tons..
do

42,786
28486

28,115
29 908

2533

Stocks, end of period:
Oven-coke plants, total
At furnace plants
At merchant plants
Petroleum coke "i"
.

do....
do
do ..
do

6,724
6320
403
900

8,190
7858
331
1 344

963

7,871
7489
382
1 091

1 088

Exports

do....

1,251

1,109

154

175

1 171
129

7,969
7639
330
1 244

61

141

62

66

8,190
7858
331
1 344
34

40,287
7334

3,451
7178

r

3,888
7182

3,286
7184

2,848
7184

3,360
7183

2,838
7353

3,282
7336

4,090
7200

2,381
7197

Stocks, end of period, total
Electric power utilities
Industrial, total
Oven-coke plants
Exports
Price wholesale

do....
do
do....
do

10626
5293

9071
5339

7507
2429

2672

7 293
5349

8603
534.4

9850
533.9

6,270
2438

2452

4 376
529.2

6258
536.0

6,077
535.6

2528

2,218

2404

2284

1 407

1 379
51

1 317

1 324

37

99

72

2,899
692.9

3,462
678.5

3,028
678.4

3,186
678.4

7 700
535.5

6020
534.6

4 465
531.5

2540

5,509
2670

r

COKE
Production:
Beehive and oven (byproduct)
Petroleum coke §

.

r

r

r

2565

r

r

1 170 1 338

66

PETROLEUM AND PRODUCTS
Crude petroleum:
Oil wells completed
number..
Price wholesale
Index 1967—100
Gross input to crude oil distillation
units
mil. bbl..
Refinery operating ratio
% of capacity..
All oils, supply, demand, and stocks: ±
Xew supply total
fl
. .
Production:
Crude petroleum
Natural gas plant liquids
Imports:
Crude and unfinished oils
Refined products
Change in stocks, all oils (decrease, — )
Demand total
Exports:
Crude petroleum
Refined products
See footnotes at end of tables.




r

37,684
8035

388.1
r
75

r

4662

r

259.4
r
47.0

r

4,654.2
69

r

4,442.6
70

r

379.1
r
69

r

59225

r

5 608 2

r

4667

r

do....
do....

3,128.6
605.5

r

3,156.7
r
585.1

r

269.2
48.4

r

do....
do

1,654.2
5342

1,3524
r
5140

110.0
r
39 1

mil bbl

do....
do
do....
do....

r

63.4
6078 1

83.2
133.9

-53.7

r

5 880 4

86.3
211.2

122.0
r
378

4852

8.1
16.8

268.4
r
48.7

139.0
r
436

r

471 0

r

2.8
18.3

r

378.0
r
71

r

376.7
74

r

4792

r

4708

r

267.6
r
49.0

r

261.0
r
47.3

r

115.5
r
470

120.3
r
44.2

r

4997

13.5

1.1
r

399.6
75

r

126,6
r
359

33.3

15.0

4824

4866

7.1
15.9

9.4
17.2

r
r

376.8
71
4838

269.7
r
49.5

5.5
18.2

r

r

489.5

8.4
20.5

364.4
71

r

368.8
70

354.1
68

308.0
65

344.7
66

349.9
69

483 1

r

461 3

4566

391.7

430.5

449.2

260.9
r
49.9

r

266.5
r
52.0

267.7
53.4

242.5
45.9

269.0
49.0

260.6
46.3

100.7
42.0

97.4
38.2

68.7
34.6

75.1
37.4

102.7
39.6

122.8
r
496
22.8

r

473.5

r

r

18.5

5.5

474 4

r

r

r

7.9
15.7

r

22.9

-20.9

-56.4

0.2

506.8

487.9

437.8

504.8

467.6

6.0
20.7

3.6
26.5

7.3
16.9

5.4
19.4

2.6
21.6

-25.3

3,514
678.4

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-28
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1982

1982

1981

May

Annual

July 1983

June

Aug.

July

1983

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

PETROLEUM, COAL, AND PRODUCTS—Continued
PETROLEUM AND PRODUCTS— Continued
All oils, supply, demand, and stocks ± — Continued
Domestic product demand, total #
do....
Gasoline
do
Kerosene
do....

5,861.1
24156
46.3

•"5,582.9
r
2 396
1
r
47.0

do....
do
do....

1,032.5
7620
367.7

r
974.9
r
6265
r

do....
do
do....

5.6.0
124.0
535.0

do
do....
do....
do....
do

1 4836
593.8
230.3
177.3
712.5

mil. bbl..
do

2,349.4
2062

Distillate fuel oil
Residual fuel oil
Jet fuel
Lubricants
Asphalt
Liquefied gases

.

Stocks end of period total
Crude petroleum
Strategic petroleum reserve
Unfinished oils, natural gasoline, etc
Refined products
Refined petroleum products: :i:
Gasoline (incl. aviation):
Production
Stocks end of period

Prices (excl. aviation):
Wholesale regular
Index 2/73—100
Retail, regular grade (Lundberg/Platt's): 1j
Leaded
$ per gal
Unleaded *
. . do .
Aviation gasoline:
Production
. . .
..
. mil bbl
Stocks, end of period
do....
Kerosene:
Production
do
Stocks, end of period
do....
Price, wholesale (light distillate)
Index, 1967=100..
Distillate fuel oil:
Production
mil. bbl
Imports
do
Stocks end of period
do .
Price, wholesale (middle distillate)
Index, 1967=100..
Residual fuel oil:
Production
mil. bbl..
Imports
do
Stocks end of period
do....
Price, wholesale
Index, 1967-100..
Jet fuelProduction
Stocks end of period,

•"449.9
206 1
2.5

r

460.0
206 1
2.4

•"450.7
1969
3.2

•"460.6
1988
•"4.4

•"450.3
1976
4.2

r
68.8
r
474
r

r
75.2
r

•"80.0
r
462
29.8

r
477
r

•"480.1
2036
5.8

457.7
1858
5.6

413.6
1694
4.3

480.0
2128
3.9

443.4
1958
3.9

88.5
496
•"32.7

85.6
488
29.3

79.3
439
29.4

89.9
487
31.6

81.4
409
31.6

r
4.5
4.1
4.8
3.5
3.5
4.1
4.3
4.3
4.5
'3.3
4.8
4
10.6
14
7
183
152
8.9
5.6
37
16.5
15.3
3.8
62
r
r
r
r
r
r
r
43.5
37.6
39.6
•"43.9
44.0
47.5
50.9
64.7
45.8
547.3
43.4
40.8
r
l 4299 1 3467 1 3602 1 393 51 408 51 414 01r 432 4 1r 4552 1 429 9 1 4528 1 431 9 13754
r
'608.3 '612.8 •"626.5
635.6
647.5 •"643.6
643.6
609.5
•"618.6
661.5
672.2
670.4
261.0
264.1
273.6
284.6
293.8
293.8
267.2
277.9
290.0
300.6
306.1
311.8
158.1
174.0
173.3
166.1
174.3
176.4
173.9
167.2
165.4
158.1
165.6
165.9
r
r
r
r
r
r
5779
6283
562.9
604 2
•"608 7
621 5 •"6297
6423 r628 3
6257
5938
5390

4.2
78
37.0

369.6

r

460.2
207 1
3.2
r

r

r
63.8
r

73.5

75.8
484
31.2

459.4
2H4
3.0

r

r
450
r

48 1
'31.1

29.7

r

30.4

44 1
31.0

74.2

31.6

r

r
51.0
r
!244
r

r

2,322.1
1968

196.7
1756

6125

5557

11.5
2.7

8.9
2.3

09
2.5

436
11.0

420
10.4

24
8.9

6660

r

203.5
1795

r

210.7
1850

'200.1
1876

196.5
1933

194.9
1946

188.9
191 9

•"203.2
1968

187.3
2109

5827

6288

6363

6284

6172

6087

5985

5767

0.9
2.4

0.9
2.4

11
2.4

0.7
2.2

0.8
2.2

0.7
2.5

0.4
2.3

27
9.3

27
9.1

26
9.5

34
9.8

40
10.2

43
11.3

983.0

985.9

13757
683.6
317.7
166.4
5257

164.3
2099

183.4
1862

186.7
1853

551 4

5363

5162

0.7
2.6

05
2.5

06
2.5

07
2.4

44
10.4

41
9.4

38
88

39
89

27
83

r

538 3

560 7

895.3

893.2

(')
(')

1,039.8

r

996.4

975.9

974.2

984.4

976.3

969.7

992.1

975.2

•"959.4

938.2

906.9

951.3
r
340
178.6

81 2
23
1136

81
9
r
31
1237

848
r
39
1482

777
•"25
1587

797
18
161 2

88.0
r
28
170.1

85.8
r
44
185.6

82.3
34
178.6

71.7
18
168.2

598
16
1477

61 7
13
1187

65 1
22
1032

1,058.1

1,012.7

928.7

974.6

1,024.0

1,022.2

998.8

999.2

1,041.5

1,054.5

985.3

927.4

871.8

812.6

835.8

878.2

482.1
292 1
78.0
1,239.0

r
390.4
r

r
35.0
r
230
r

•"30.3
r
262
61 8
1,120.7

29.6
r
243
63.6
1,129.0

29.7
r
25 1
664
1,139.3

30.6
232
66.2
1,144.0

29.0
24.0
21 4
177
60.7
53 1
1,056.6 1,034.1

25.8
21 3
463
1,053.0

282
223
466
1,086.2

1,052.5

1,102.3

305
406

294
368

31 2
41 7

282
405

303
422

294
402

42
140

37
14 1

40
13 1

42
127

4
6.4
19.9

5.9
22.1

8.4
24.4

10.7
27.3

953.8
63 1
191.5

mil bbl
. do

3532
41 1

r

283 1
66.2
1,182.0
r

59.0
1,191.6

3570
36.8

r
280
r

41.7

r

32.2
195
r
60.7
1,229.5
r

319
r
204
r
589
1,237.1

279
399

r

46
13.6

300
398

r

r

29.9
17
1
r
526
1,250.0
r
30
r

r

r

5
407

293
•"39 6

44
13.4

39
12.6

44
12.6

44
12.6

36
12.5

r

30 4
408

r

r

Lubricants:
Production .
Stocks, end of period

do
do....

606
14.3

51 6
12.5

46
13.5

46
13.4

Asphalt:
Production
Stocks, end of period

do....
do....

123.5
19.6

119.4
15.9

10.5
27.1

12.5
r
25.3

r

13.1
22.0

13.4
17.3

12.4
14.5

13.7
13.1

9.7
14.1

7.5
15.9

Liquefied gases (incl. ethane and ethylene):
Production, total
At gas processing plants (L P G )
At refineries (L.R.G.)
Stocks (at plants and refineries)

do....
do
do....
do....

573.4
4586
114.8
134.7

r
557.5
r
459
0
r
98.5
r

r
48.5
r

r
45.5
r

r
45.7
r

•"46.8
r
38 1
. -"8.7
111.2

r
46.1
r

•"47.0
r
390
8.0
107.1

•"46.3
385
7.8
101.9

•"49.0
r
405
8.4
•"94.0

51.5
430
8.5
83.6

43.7
36 1
7.6
81.2

47.0
379
9.1
82.8

45.9
362
9.7
86.0

94.0

398
8.7
106.8

367
8.8
109.4

364
9.3
109.8

369
9.3
110.1

r

4

PULP, PAPER, AND PAPER PRODUCTS
PULPWOOD AND WASTE PAPER
Pulpwood:
Receipts
thous cords (128 cu ft )
Consumption
do....
Stocks, end of period
do....

:3
78
:!

929
79,725
6,250

( 2a )
()
(2)

Waste paper:
Consumption
Stocks, end of period

thous. sh. tons..
do

:

13,083
1 081

( 22 )
( )

WOODPULP
Production:
Total all grades 4f . .
Dissolving and special alpha
Sulfate
Sulfite
'
Groundwood
Semichemical

thous sh tons
do....
do '
do
do.
do,...

:i

(a)
(*)
( 2a )
()
(2)
(2)

Stocks, end of period:
Total, all mills
Pulp mills
Paper and board mills
Xonpaper mills

do....
do....
do
do .

Exports, all grades, total
Dissolving and special alpha
All other

do....
do....
do....

Imports, all grades, total
All other
See footnotes at end of tables.




do....
do....

53413
1,356
38669
1 795
5703
3,754
1,081
540
486
54
:

'3,678
784
"2,894
"4,086
201
3.885

3

(*}
( 22 )
()
(2)
"3,395
631
"2,763
:i

3,894
162
3.732

:i

326
69
257

302
55
247

261
32
229

279
60
219

298
52
246

237
50
186

247
55
192

285
51
234

234
59
174

271
30
240

332
58
274

346
78
267

312
40
272

302
g
294

287
12
275

289
283

350
17
333

541
g
533

303
18
285

375
18
357

264
g
256

309
23
286

265
9
257

338
20
318

301
11
289

378
23
355

Q

S-29

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982
May

Annual

1983

1982
June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

PULP, PAPER, AND PAPER PRODUCTS—Continued
PAPER AND PAPER PRODUCTS
Paper and board:
Production (Bu. of the Census):
All grades, total, unadjusted
thous. sh.
Paper
Paperboard
Wet-machine board
Construction paper and board . . .

(55 )
(5)
( 5)
( 5)
()

tons..
do....
do
do....
do

66,440
30850
31582
160
3847

1967—100
do....

258 1
231.7

Selected types of paper (API):
Groundwood paper, uncoated:
Orders, new
Orders, unfilled, end of period
Shipments

thous. sh. tons..
do....
do....

'1449
100
'1463

rl

Coated paper:
Orders new
Orders, unfilled, end of period
Shipments

do
do....
do

'4853
360
4 940

J

Uncoated free sheet papers:
Orders, new
Shipments

do ...
do

J
7735
1

Producer price indexes:
Paperboard
Building paper and board

Unbleached kraft packaging and industrial
converting papers:
Shipments
thous. sh. tons..

254 9
239.4

255 9
240.0

255 0
239.8

255 4
244.4

250 7
243.4

248 0
241.5

247 6
241.0

244 1
242.0

243 3
241.1

116
102
115

113
99
118

138
117
121

113
100
124

125
104
121

131
99
139

121
93
126

108
91
112

122
96
115

4998
325
5032

381
307
408

432
306
431

399
312
400

443
307
443

407
285
433

446
282
447

415
308
433

412
325
398

444
319
442

'7820
1
8 187

621
669

645
670

610
628

674
705

640
684

684
716

656
695

642
649

704
735

686
682

r

'3,688

!469
r
91
l 459

rl

r

8234

r
244
r

258 8
240.2

1
241.4
r

!03

100
r

!08

r

412
307
427

2466
243.3

2484
246.1

2489
249.3

128
106
123

122
101
127

132
100
133

499
342
460

r
439
r
332
r

504
380
462

833
805

r
742
r

758

748
761

r

447

272

291

271

326

296

315

327

280

330

308

r

r

4 438

365

358

339

383

359

387

383

372

388

374

r

r

8946
8915
194

8 117
8074
250

743
718
357

652
610
399

617
614
402

642
598
446

557
601
403

698
684
417

657
691
395

599
744
250

685
604
331

653
605
380

do....
do
do....

4753
4735
38

4,574
4525
86

385
376
86

383
381
89

363
351
101

372
363
110

353
353
110

406
398
118

373
389
102

330
346
86

403
370
119

378
350
147

Consumption by publishers H
do....
Stocks at and in transit to publishers, end of
period
thous. metric tons..

10,165

10,115

879

803

769

806

836

928

893

908

807

961

854

1,012

1,003

992

952

898

861

832

854

Imports
thous sh tons
Price, rolls, contract, f.o.b. mill, freight allowed
or delivered
Index, 1967=100..

6977

6 531

620

570

460

520

489

587

567

498

801
545

316.2

322.4

319.4

318.4

318.4

318.4

318.4

299.8

299.8

234 846

18777

20071

18 610

20 414

20657

21 064

19 043

Tissue paper production

do

Newsprint:
Canada:
Production
. . . thous metric tons
Shipments from mills
do....
Stocks at mills end of period
do
United States:
Production
Shipments from mills
Stocks at mills, end of period

Paper products:
Shipping containers, corrugated and solid fiber
shipments
..mil sq ft surf area

rl

3,880

'4518

rl

3

3

308.0

246 152

291

304

396

405

680
676
384

695
713
366

724
683
407

406
394
159

r
364
r

399
404
157

880

r

920

823

805

•780

753

433

620

538

599

299.1

299.1

299.1

299.1

299.1

17 540

19980

18 715

21 891

20 466

20 777

r
56.01
r

64.50
91.77

44.53
95.02

55.28
87.31

r

768

316
399

r

362
161
878

2496
255.7

299.1

Folding paper boxes shipments ... thous. sh tons
mil. $..

RUBBER AND RUBBER PRODUCTS
RUBBER
Natural rubber:
Consumption
Stocks end of period

thous. metric tons..
do

634.67
142.43

Imports, incl. latex and guayule ....thous. Ig. tons..

662.41

Price, wholesale, smoked sheets (N.Y.).... $ per lb..

4

Synthetic rubber:
Production
Consumption

thous. metric tons..
do....

Stocks, end of period
do....
Exports (Bu. of Census)
thous. Ig. tons..
TIRES AND TUBES
Pneumatic casings, automotive:
Production
. .

660.60
r
95.42

0.576

r
65.63
r

r
48.75
r

97.74

r
53.27
r

r
48.87
r

95.38

90.21

88.99

95.42

618.27

56.19

63.39

38.67

54.35

40.60

54.36

51.37

49.45

33.01

49.63

48.54

62.11

63.44

0.453

0.453

0.461

0.465

0.468

0.445

0.426

0.421

0.418

0.440

0.485

0.578

0.578

0.568

171.11 156 83 13971 145 47 147.89
148.45 154.52 135.82 150.45 158.14
r
364.42 r352.92 r342.84 r326.64 r304.27

154.37
131.00

122.37
136.82

116.51
136.06

155.16
131.70

153.86
140.22

170.06
158.19

r

r

r

269.66

280.97

284.76

283.52

22.04

22.83

21.13

20.47

18.86

20.24

18.61

24.44

24.91

31.66

2,021.45 1,831.78
1,889.71 1,744.83
349.02

r
r
r
63.34
32.69
68.90
110.83 105.39 110.16

r

269.66

334.63

284.62

24.73

25.23

20.40

318.80

294.56

181,762

178,500

14,856

15,669

12,293

14,835

15,528

15,381

13,585

13,972

15,497

14,992

15,370

16,325

Shipments total
Original equipment
Replacement equipment
Exports

do..
do....
do
do....

201,105
41,711
153,716
5^678

201 236
38,633
158,688
3^915

17,700
2',817
14,625
'258

18938
3,022
15,583
'333

17 851
2,919
14,605
'327

15325
2,652
12,337
'336

14521
3,518
10,606
'397

14 102
2,458
11,263
'381

15038
3,701
11,031
'306

18034
4,232
13,353
'499

17,782
4,143
13,185
454

do....

40,863

40,763

40,192

38,685

38,116

38,436

39,955

43,839

45,483

50,287

51,921

Exports (Bu. of Census)
Inner tubes, automotive:
Exoorts (Bu. of Census)

do....

11,088

39,955
5,971

19,428
4,074
15,018
'336
43,475

16,421
3,038
13,199
'264

Stocks, end of period

18216
3,970
13,989
'257
45,337
463

653

381

454

385

489

377

474

308

352

424

392

436

do....

3.428

1.924

102

178

195

162

201

192

162

113

174

72

157

134

138

See footnotes at end of tables.




thous

r

0.545

S-30

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

1982
1981
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS
Annual

July 1983

1982
June

May

Aug.

July

1983

Sept.

Nov.

Oct.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

25,367

28,383

33,569

320.9

335.3

339.2

340.4

June

STONE, CLAY, AND GLASS PRODUCTS
PORTLAND CEMENT
Shipments, finished cement

thous. bbl..

1

382,692

'343,463

30,984

35,388

34,527

35,957

35,351

34,106

27,431

22,718

18,931

17,660

50592
716
4334

44086
409
3250

3984
37
290

4392
48
310

4262
38
31 6

4255
35
348

4446
43
375

4358
36
36.6

397.5
24
28.5

335.1
29
18.6

309.4
24
21.9

285.5
19
16.3

o

o

(7)

o

o

(7)

(7)

(7)

o

CLAY CONSTRUCTION PRODUCTS
Shipments:
Brick, unglazed (common and face)
mil standard brick
Structural tile except facing
thous sh tons
Sewer pipe and fittings vitrified
.
do
Facing tile (hollow), glazed and unglazed
mil. brick equivalent..
Floor and wall tile and accessories, glazed and
unglazed
mi sq ft
Price index, brick (common), f.o.b. plant or N.Y.
dock
1967-100..

8

39.3
2998

11.3

2.4

2949

234

300.2

312.5

952 283

871 331

309.5

26 1

310.0

234

310.9

266

319.0

249

259

266

320.7

319.2

319.2

239

320.7

247

232

320.9

r

GLASS AND GLASS PRODUCTS
Flat glass mfrs ' shipments

thous $

Glass containers:
Production

thous. gross..

Shipments domestic total i
Narrow-neck containers:
Food
Beverage
Beer
..
Liquor and wine

do

Stocks, end of period

27,934

25,982

28,009

24,714

27,716

23,364

17,950

23,372

24,030

26,963

26774

28991

25,165

28,184

26515

25,956

22,888

21,013

23,015

20,812

26,415

1,993
4417
6747
1686

2,411
4343
7332
1846

2,515
3318
7,415
1513

3,071
5 164
8,935
2045

28728
60248
115680
24003

31 160
61 020
104 483
22266

2520
5699
9695
1852

2834
6326
10254
1943

2598
5732
8661
1607

3489
6029
9 111
1 777

3365
5 193
8261
1849

2483
4888
8 122
2 165

62,404

63,372

4,978

5,417

4,832

5,752

5,840

5,891

4,965

4,547

4,864

4,356

5,190

do....

25,119
2 840

22,315
2 615

1,848
182

2,019
198

1,542
193

1,767
259

1,790
217

2,177
230

1,647
172

1,457
166

2,029
190

1,534
161

1,842
168

do

46,683

45,634

51433

49,982

50,532

50,244

52,988

49,467

48,718

45,634

45,801

49,092

49,884

11497
11 687

10,863
10967

855
809

949
965

912
923

1,009
945

966
971

1,044
1 036

898
945

895
923

925
986

857
911

905
1 110

1,053
1 131

6,718

531

772

469

728

733

724

625

742

401

454

513

636

401

421

384

394

445

411

342

488

283

277

195

235

31

31

32

37

thous. gross..

Narrow-neck and wide-mouth containers:
Medicinal and toilet

27,293

5

2,086
4482
7,599
1937

do
do
do
do

Wide-mouth containers:
Food and dairy products

309,376
307 231

321,373
319 022

236 813

220 472

219 074

GYPSUM AND PRODUCTS @
Production:
Crude gypsum (exc byproduct) .
Calcined

thous sh tons
do

Imports, crude gypsum

do....

7,593

Sales of gypsum products:
Uncalcined

do....

4,904

Calcined:
Industrial plasters
Building plasters:

.

All other (incl. Keene's cement)
Board products total
Lath
Veneer base
Gypsum sheathing .

.

Type X gypsum board
Predecorated wallboard
5/16 mobile home board

38

34

37

264

14
6

16
8

16
7

15
8

13759
59
325
208

13093
39
286
264

971
3
20
20

1 120
4
26
25

9 295
3446
122
4
304

8447
3486
119
453

618
262
9
38

716
299
11
40

370

do....

225
157

do
do
do....

4,528

39

do

mil sq ft
do
do
do

1

'430
(6)

6

1098
3
24
22
702
298
10
38

40

37
6

34
(6)

(6)

(6)

6

6

21

23

(6)

6

( )6

21

20

6

21

(6)

6

6

19

36
(6)

(6)

22

6

21

1 169
4
26
23

1 140
3
23
25

1 216
3
25
27

1 134
3
25
28

1 218
3
28
27

1 132
3
23
26

1 113
3
23
24

1425
3
32
28

1312
3
28
30

749
315
11
42

733
303
10
42

774
330
10
47

741
293
10
35

801
319
9
31

718
301
9
52

715
279
9
59

933
352
11
66

844
322
10
76

3
570
3
207
3

506
201
305

567
217
350

3
728
3
274
3

622
256
366

634
267
367

609
244
365

470
225
245

489
227
262

526
238
288

425

404

430

14,232
14,229
2433
11,101
695

13,231
13,228
] 432
11,101
695

12,433
12,431
1 432
10,225
774

TEXTILE PRODUCTS
FABRIC
Woven fabric, finishing plants: *
Production (finished fabric)
Cotton
Manmade fiber and silk fabrics

mil. linear yd
do
do

7514
2652
4962

6656
2465
4 192

531
196
335

3
663
3
259
3

366
133
233

525
200
325

3
661
3
259
3

402

534
201
334

526
193
334

Inventories held at end of period
Cotton
Manmade fiber and silk fabrics

do....
do
do

686
273
413

637
257
380

692
293
400

662
282
380

668
278
390

664
271
393

363
637
257
380

do
do....

485
182
302

673
285
389
439
178
261

652
267
385

Backlog of finishing orders
Cotton

660
282
378
529
194
334

456
185
271

450
195
255

420
186
234

430
222
208

40

453

1529

416

15,731
15,728
7545
7,575
608

403

554
254
300

455

COTTON
Cotton (excluding linters):
Production:
Ginnings JI
thous running bales
Crop estimate
thous net weight bales §
Consumption
thous running bales
Stocks in the United States, total, end of period #
thous. running bales..
Domestic cotton, total
do....
On farms and in transit
do
Public storage and compresses
do....
Consuming establishments
do....
See footnotes at end of tables.




2
15
2

150
15646

2

11526
12010

5409

4938

392

13,777
13,776
3752
9,268
756

14,232
14,227
2433
11,101
695

8,117
8,116
924
6,292
900

460

317

386

3474

7,170
7,169
728
5,542
899

6,399
6,397
300
5,269
828

16,362
16,359
10617
4,998
744

16,439
16,436
10475
5,293
668

3

r

5288

r

8823
r

391

15,033
15,031
4,209
10,190
632

r

!0 574
3

3

549

431

441

11,399 10,358
11,397 10,356
•767
896
'8,796
9,713
•793
788

9,522
9,520
844
7,908
768

341.2

S-31

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

1982

Annual

May

June

July

Aug.

1983
Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

Max-

June

TEXTILE PRODUCTS—Continued
COTTON AND MANUFACTURES— Cont.
Cotton (excluding linters) — Continued
8,021
Exports
thous. running bales..
17
Imports
thous. net-weight bales §..
Price (farm), American upland ^
cents per lb..
54.0
Price, Strict Low Middling, Grade 41, staple 34
3
(1-1/16"), average 10 markets
cents per lb..
83.0
Spindle activity (cotton system spindles):
Active spindles, last working day, total
mil.
15.4
Consuming 100 percent cotton
do....
5.5
Spindle hours operated, all fibers, total
bil.
91.8
Average per working day
do....
0.357
Consuming 100 percent cotton
do....
33.6
Cotton cloth:
Cotton broadwoven goods over 12" in width:
Production (qtrly.)
mil. sq. yd..
3,913
Orders, unfilled, end of period, compared with
avg. weekly production
no. weeks' prod..
14.1
Inventories, end of period, compared with
avg. weekly production
no. weeks' prod..
5.6
Ratio of stocks to unfilled orders (at cotton
mills), end of period
0.40
Exports, raw cotton equiv. thous.
net-weight §
480 lb. bales..
345.6
Imports, raw cotton equivalent
do....
766.3
MANMADE FIBERS AND MANUFACTURES
Fiber production, qtrly:
Acetate filament yarn
mil. lb
257.0
Ravon staple including tow
do
4606
Noncellulosic, except textile glass:
Yarn and monofilaments
do.... 3,792.8
Staple, incl. tow
do..
4,191.1
Textile glass fiber
do.... 1,041.1
Fiber stocks, producers', end of period:
Acetate filament yarn
mil. lb..
14.3
Rayon staple, including tow
do....
31.1
Noncellulosic fiber, except textile glass:
Yarn and monofilaments
do..
337.0
Staple, incl. tow
do....
329.8
Textile glass fiber
do
1462
Manmade fiber and silk broadwoven fabrics:
Production (qtrly ) total #
mil sq yd 11 2287
Filament yarn (100%) fabrics #
do.... 3,850.9
Chiefly rayon and/or acetate fabrics
do....
Chiefly nylon fabrics
do....
Spun yarn (100%) fab., exc. blanketing #.. do. . 6,431.4
584.1
Rayon and/or acetate fabrics, blends
do....
Polyester blends with cotton
do
4 5170
Acetate filament and spun yarn fabrics
do.... 1,002.2
Manmade fiber gray goods, owned by weaving
mills:
Ratio, stocks to unfilled orders, end of period
Prices, manufacturer to mfr., f.o.b. mill:
50/50 polyester/carded cotton printcloth, gray,
48", 3.90 yds./lb., 78x54-56
$ per yd..
Manmade fiber textile trade:
Exports, manmade fiber equivalent
mil. Ibs.. 637.73
Yarn, tops, thread, cloth
do.
318.89
Cloth, woven
do....
208.48
Manufactured prods., apparel, furnishings do....
318.84
Imports, manmade fiber equivalent
do....
639.08
Yarn, tops, thread, cloth
do....
130.52
Cloth woven
do
9538
Manufactured prods., apparel, furnishings do....
508.56
Apparel, total
do....
434.87
Knit apparel
do....
184.70
WOOL AND MANUFACTURES
Wool consumption, mill (clean basis):
Apparel class
mil. lb..
127.8
Carpet class
do ....
10.9
2
Wool imports, clean yield
do....
75.3
Duty-free
do....
26.1
Wool prices, raw, shorn, clean basis, delivered to
U.S. mills:
Domestic — Graded territory, 64's, staple 2-3/4"
5
and up
cents per lb..
2.78
5
Australian, 64's, Type 62, duty-paid
do....
3.16
Wool broadwoven goods, exc. felts:
Production (qtrly.)
mil. sq. yd..
165.0
FLOOR COVERINGS
Carpet, rugs, carpeting (woven, tufted, other),
shipments quarterly
mil sq yds

9906

APPAREL
Women's, misses', juniors' apparel cuttings:
Coats
thous. units..
Dresses
do
Suits (incl pant suits jumpsuits) .
do
Skirts
do
Blouses
thous. dozen..
See footnotes at end of tables.




14,845
136 176
13'605
91 025
30!322

6,079
39
57.6

484
13
55.8

498
4
58.1

396
1
59.9

342
2
52.8

351
10
55.5

293
1
59.8

382
3
59.9

377
(t;)
57.3

438
1
56.0

368
(")
56.4

487
1
59.9

612
(")
59.7

464
("i
'61.7

64.4

60.5

62.4

61.1

65.0

60.4

59.0

58.6

58.2

59.6

60.2

61.7

66.0

65.3

66.9

"70.7

14.2
5.3
61.7
0.320
30.2

15.3
5.6
6.6
0.327
2.5

14.9
5.6
4
7.8
0.310
4
2.9

14.7
5.5
5.4
0.268
2.0

14.6
5.4
6.3
0.314
2.4

14.5
53
4 '
0.307
4
2.8

14.4
5.3
6.6
0.328
2.5

14.3
5.2
6.2
0.309
2.3

14.2
5.3
6.7
0.270
2.6

14.3
5.3
6.4
0.323
2.3

14.3
5.3
6.8
0.340
2.5

14.2
5.3
9.7
0.390
3.1

5.3

5.3

2.5

2.6

10.2

10.2

10.3

6.0

5.9

4.9

4.8

0.44

r

r

3,856

11.1
7.1

r

961

9.6

8.8
7.2

6.3

12.7
11.2

976

942

10.7

9.2

8.7

5.9

8.6
5.8

9.4

11.8

5.7

6.1

0.65

0.65

0.82

0.88

0.81

0.63

0.68

0.61

0.52

0.59

0.59

0.47

239.2
601 3

24.3
54 1

24.8
478

22.7
41 4

15.7
487

18.4
493

20.7
444

18.4
536

16.4
476

20.1
67.2

15.1
55 5

18.2
56.7

9091 6
3,305.5
379.2
427.5
4 7363
118.5
35470
919.3

2 281 0
829.9
105.8
105.5
1 1947
28.6
9050
221.8

2 171 3
805.9
89.6
100.2
1 0945
26.9
8178
239.2

2 287 0
900.7
88.3
111.5
1 1208
32.5
8149
233.0

438.55
20059
132.57
237.96

42.01
1842
12.11
23.59

44.21
2065
13.36
23.56

33.93
16 12
10.66
17.80

33.13
14 70
9.32
18.44

35.86
1606
11.29
19.80

36.87
1687
12.03
19.98

32.54
1578
11.53
16.76

31.08
14 87
10.35
16.21

31.54
1346
9.24
18.09

30.79
1338
8.70
17.41

36.72
15 55
10.40
21.17

807.10
132.58
93 34
674.51
485.31
193.09

67.85
12.27
8 74
55.58
4045
15.32

91.93
12.48
9 14
79.46
53 04
21.76

77.34
9.50
6 58
67.83
4358
17.80

100.05
14.40
10 44
85.65
6091
26.41

82.75
12.95
9 09
69.80
4838
21.52

70.14
10.65
7 41
59.49
4059
20.04

68.76
11.78
7 69
56.97
37 82
16.64

59.16
10.04
6 31
49.12
3245
10.80

78.89
13.20
8 84
65.69
45 12
17.11

71.19
10.92
7 15
60.27
39 57
15.87

75.78
14.45
9 12
61.33
38 10
15.03

105.0
9.8
61.4
21.4

8.2
0.9
6.0
2.0

9.4
0.8
6.6
2.6

5.9
0.6
4.0
1.7

8.0
1.0
4.2
2.0

8.3
1.2
4.7
1.8

7.1
0.7
2.9
1.4

0^8
3.6
1.3

4
9.4
4

0.6
3.7
1.2

8.8
0.8
6.0
2.2

9.6
1.0
6.2
2.0

•42.8
4.1
5.0
1.5

240
3.21

240
3.04

240
2.94

240
2.87

2.76

2.69

2.67

2.79

'2.73

'1 93
2.73

2.99

240
3.36

4
4

4
4

10.0

1159

36 1

188

229

909 3

242 7

226 7

225 9

r

6.7
1.9

'1 93
2.71
r

1 93
2.71

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-32
Unless otherwise stated in footnotes below, data
through 1978 and descriptive notes are as shown
in the 1979 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1981

1982

1982
May

Annual

July 1983

June

July

Aug.

1983

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

20.969

23.030

23.306

25.415

26.424

26.395

457

397

529
475

''587
528

-653

June

TEXTILE PRODUCTS—Continued
APPAREL— Continued
Men's apparel cuttings:
Suits
thous. units..
Coats (separate) dress and sport
do ..
Trousers (separate), dress
do....
Slacks (jean cut) casual
do ..
Shirts, dress and sport
thous. doz..
Hosiery, shioments
thous. doz. oairs..

14,686
17880
175 445
38,112
304.826

288.704

22.248

23.888

29.632

22.725

24.466

27.540

22.561

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....

72852
39 102
70633
69944
33,039

80407
48584
77773
73953
41,381

18302
10657
17680
18 113
9,317

17,572
10579
16,919
18869
11,456

24,454
16332
23,767
20252
11,868

Backlog of orders end of period #

92640
43 262
44555
13 173

99094
50465
45946
13551

96 189
46878
46 114
13334

94,892
46001
44,138
13912

99,094
50,465
45,946
13,551

11 047

10 934

10693

10374

10934

11 314

14 485

13220

13619

14,485

do.. .
thous. lb..
mil. $..

13 1950
89,076
8,551

9 297.8
50,063
4,775

9565
5,045
453

7399
4,059
434

564.0
3,437
445

466.1
2,801
370

646.5
3,665
77

602.4
3,225
378

624.7
3,130
102

1,287.3
6,394
421

697.8
3,742
321

795.1
3,642
508

1,418.9
6,143
1,006

thous..
do....

6,225
5,749

5,049
4,696

510
468

561
523

439
405

356
334

429
406

431
406

407
382

366
344

457
431

474
433

575
517

do....
do....
do.
mil.
do
do....

8,535
6,209
2326

7,980
5,758
2221

774
584
190
'8.4
r
64
2.0

651
452
199
r6
7.3
r8
51
6
2.2

630
430
200
7.4
r
5.2
2.2

609
409
200
•7.5
5.4
2.2

671
488
183
r
8.4
r
6.2
2.3

656
488
169
"11
r
5.3
2.4

743
558
185
r
9.0
r
6.5
r
2.5

632
448
184
r
8.6
6.1
r
2.5

596
414
182
r
8.5
r
5.9
r
2.6

628
442
185
r
8.2
r
6.1
r
2.1

821
600
221
r
8.4
r
6.2
2.2

762
578
184
r
8.5
r
6.4
r
2.1

837
630
207
r
9.1
r
6.9
2.2

904
668
236
6
10.1
6
7.5
6
2.6

1 471
1,495

1 126
1,127

1 213
1,158

1 364
l,213

1,377
1,319

1,379
1,412

1,350
1,357

1,296
1,299

1,164
1,162

1,126
1,127

1,180
1,190

1,248
1,270

1,235
1,238

1,191
1,201

1,191
1,154

1,209
1,084

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

6

.

do.. .

Aircraft (complete) and parts

do. .

Missiles, space vehicle systems, engines, propulOther related operations (conversions, modificaAi re-raft (complete);
Shipments # #
Airframe weight # #
Exports, commercial :!::!:
MOTOR VEHICLES (NEW)
Passenger cars:
Factory sales (from U.S. plants), total tt
Domestic tt
Retail sales, total, not seasonally adj t
Domestics ^
Imports §
Total, seas, adjusted at annual rate t
Domestics §
Imports §

Retail inventories, end of period, domestics: § t
Not seasonally adjusted
thous
Seasonally adjusted
do

r

r6

r6

r

r

2.0

2.3

2.2

2.9

2.2

2.4

2.5

2.4

2.3

thous
do....
do....
do

538 12
470.86
2,998.6
563.9

37430
334.05
3,067.0
702.5

45.70
42.55
309.5
71.2

38.66
35.72
275.5
83.3

3429
32.27
261.9
44.1

21.18
18.39
263.0
47.7

26.30
23.70
217.4
61.0

27.42
23.48
262.8
49.5

27.39
23.71
253.6
56.8

22.42
19.60
232.7
50.2

26.88
24.71
277.3
59.1

44.33
42.12
260.2
69.7

56.59
54.75
313.4
69.3

54.45
52.21
277.2
77.9

60.81
58.14
355.8
88.5

do....
do....

8,444
2,432

7,754
2,293

708
189

717
206

626
203

627
214

625
200

655
195

678
181

765
220

595
191

569
181

725
219

728
208

773
215

1,701
1,514

1,905
1,778

193
180

212
197

166
154

142
134

155
146

142
132

127
118

130
122

141
133

160
150

221
207

191
179

2 063 8
M5.7
:!
138.3

191 3
4.6
12.5

1553
4.1
11.7

162.2
3.9
10.1

140.4
3.4
10.4

1938
3.9
10.1

149.7
3.5
9.6

199.4
3.6
10.0

179.2
3.8
12.5

7

168.9
7
4.4
7
10.9

160.4
3.8
9.8

183.6
3.5
11.9

210.8
3.6
10.1

214.6
4.2
9.8

206.4
3.9
10.4

5
559.4
170.50

'539.5
124.35

526.9
12.89

569.0
13.81

615.2
9.37

704.9
7.79

665.5
6.62

636.2
10.31

566.4
9.80

537.9
9.04

7

495.7
7.32

519.5
9.42

518.4
11.30

522.8
12.83

533.5
11.87

525.1

838.92

738.48

72.03

73.27

51.73

56.50

57.33

54.44

43.28

42.27

47.58

56.22

70.78

69.48

78.19

2,185

2,430

226

226

197

193

182

193

215

246

189

177

227

244

254

117,635
70 928
7,239
8,615

95,228
62 901
4,020
6,034

8,023
5 240
504
790

8,382
5 388
376
598

6,046
4 025
305
680

7,826
5 582
228
597

6,910
4 900
335
320

6,421
4 279
378
211

7,683
5 479
282
93

9,687
7 098
288
69

6,062
4 053
158
25

6,949
4599
136
19

10,079
6375
157
42

do....
do....
do....

'44,901
'41,435
17 916
17,288
16,485
14,819

17,236
15,515
'7 071
'6,321
4,295
4,095

1,794
1,694
487
487
9,253
8,478

1,339
1,244
586
586
8,500
7,820

1,369
1,369
179
179
7,187
6,507

1,060
992
373
373
6,829
6,217

967
913
583
583
5,895
5,337

890
650
884
134
5,283
4,710

610
525
249
249
4,866
4,378

765
477
231
231
4,295
4,095

494
440
501
501
4,301
4,155

447
411
299
297
4,153
4,041

444
334
207
207
3,916
3,914

205
205
615
614
4,326
4,323

376
376
797
797
4,747
4,744

Freight cars (revenue), class 1 railroads (AAR): :j:
Number owned, end of period
thous..
Held for repairs, % of total owned
Capacity (carrying), total, end of mo
mil. tons..
Average per car
tons..

1,111
6.9
89.37
80.43

1,039
8.7
84.87
81.68

1,090
7.7
88.19
80.92

1,083
8.0
87.71
81.02

1,077
8.1
87.47
81.19

1,069
7.9
86.94
81.35

1,059
8.3
86.24
81.44

1,053
8.4
85.86
81.54

1,047
8.6
85.43
81.60

1,039
8.7
84.87
81.68

1,035
8.8
84.77
81.93

1,033
8.9
84.72
81.98

1,031
9.2
84.55
82.01

1,028
9.5
84.44
82.18

1,026
10.0
84.18
82.03

2.9

Inventory-retail sales ratio, domestics § t
Exports (BuCensus) assembled cars
To Canada
Imports (BuCensus), complete units ##
From Canada total
Registrations li, total new vehicles
Imports, incl. domestically sponsored

Trucks and buses:
Factory sales (from U.S. plants), total (<> (" ..thous..
Domestic (" (<>•
do....
Retail sales, seasonally adjusted: t
Light-dutv up to 14 000 Ibs GVW
Medium-duty, 14,001-26,000 Ibs. GVW
Heavy-duty, 26,001 Ibs. and over GVW

do
do....
do....

Retail inventories, end of period, seasonally
adjusted t
thous..
Exports (BuCensus), assembled units
do....
Imports (BuCensus), including separate chassis
and bodies
thous..
Registrations/] new vehicles, excluding buses not
produced on truck chassis
thous..
Truck trailers and chassis, complete (excludes
detachables), shipments
number..
Trailer bodies (detachable), sold separately
Trailer chassis (detachable), sold separately

do....
do....

5

1 7466
5
73.9
5
151.7

4

r>

2.8

3.1

3

3.2

2.6

2.2

r

212
198

RAILROAD EQUIPMENT
Freight cars (new), for domestic use; all railroads
and private car lines (excludes rebuilt cars and
cars for export):
<
Shipments .
number..
Equipment manufacturers
do....
Equipment manufacturers
Unfilled orders, end of period
Equipment manufacturers

1

footnotes at end of tables.




1.7

S-33

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

FOOTNOTES FOR PAGES S-l THROUGH S-32
General Notes for all Pages:
r
p
e
c

Revised,
Preliminary,
Estimated,
Corrected.

Page S-l
t Revised series. See Tables 2.6 - 2.9 in the July 1983 SURVEY for revised estimates back to
1980. See Tables 2.6 - 2.9 in the July 1982 SURVEY for revised estimates for 1977-79. Pre-1977
estimates are available in The National Income and Product Accounts of the United States,
1929-76: Statistical Tables.
$ Includes inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments.
* New series. Detailed descriptions begin on p. 18 of the Nov. 1979 SURVEY. See note "t"
for this page for information on historical data.
§ Monthly estimates equal the centered three-month average of personal saving as a percentage of the centered three-month moving average of disposable personal income.

PageS-2
1. Based on data not seasonally adjusted.
* Includes data not shown separately.
$ Revised series. For wholesale see note "$" for p. S-8. For manufacturing see note "t"
for p. S-3. For retail see note "t" for p. S-8.
t See note "t" for p. S-3.
§ See note "t" for p. S-8.
@ See note "$" for p. S-8.
* New series. Data back to 1967 are available from the National Income and Wealth
Division, Bureau of Economic Analysis.

PageS-7
1. Computed from cumulative valuation total.
2. Index as of July 1, 1983: building, 357.3; construction, 383.0. Revised index as of Jan.
1, 1982: building, 323.3; construction, 344.9.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
§ Data for July, Sept.,Dec. 1982, and Mar. and June 1983 are for five weeks; other months
four weeks.

Page S-8
1. Advance Estimate.
U Home mortgage rates (conventional first mortgages) are under money and interest rates
on p. S-14.
§ Data include guaranteed direct loans sold.
$ Effective April 1983 SURVEY, wholesale trade data have been revised for Jan. 1973-Dec.
1982. Revised data are available upon request.
t Effective April 1983 SURVEY, retail trade data have been revised for 1978-1983. Revised
data and a summary of the changes are available from the Census Bureau, Washington, D.C.
20233.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.

Page S-3

PageS-9

$ Revised series. For wholesale see note "$" for p. S-8. For manufacturing see note "t"
for this page. For retail see note "t" for p. S-8.
t Revised series. Data have been revised back to 1972. A detailed description of these
revisions and historical data appear in the reports "Manufacturers' Shipments, Inventories,
and Orders" M3-1.10 (1972-1980) and M3-1.12 (1977-82), available from the Bureau of
the Census, Washington, D.C. 20233.
§ See note "t" for p. S-8.
@ See note "$" for p. S-8.
* New series. Data back to 1967 are available from the National Income and Wealth
Division, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
* Includes data for items not shown separately.

1. Advance estimate.
2. Effective Jan. 1979 data, sales of mail-order houses are included with department store
sales.
3. As of July 1.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
$ Revisions for Jan. 1977-Oct. 1979 appear in "Current Population Reports," Series P-25,
No. 870, Bureau of the Census.
U Effective with the January 1983 SURVEY, the seasonally adjusted labor force series have
been revised back to January 1978. Revised monthly series appear in the January 1983 issue
of Employment and Earnings. Effective with the February 1982 SURVEY, the labor force
series have been revised back to 1970 to reflect the 1980 Census of Population. Seasonal
adjustment factors were revised accordingly. Revised monthly series appear in the February
1982 issue of Employment and Earnings. Revised annual series will appear in the March
1982 issue of Employment and Earnings, U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics.
* New series. The participation rate is the percent of the civilian noninstitutional population in the civilian labor force. The employment-population ratio is employment as a percent
of the total noninstitutional population, 16 years and over.
t See note "t" for p. S-8.

PageS-4
1 . Based on data not seasonally adjusted.
t See note "t" for p. S-3.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
$ Includes textile mill products, leather and products, paper and allied products, and
printing and publishing industries; unfilled orders for other nondurable goods industries are
zero.
If For these industries (food and kindred products, tobacco, apparel and other textile products,
petroleum and coal, chemicals and allied products, and rubber and plastics products) sales
are considered equal to new orders.

PageS-5
1 . Based on unadjusted data.
2. Beginning with data for January 1983, the index is affected by a change in methodology
used to compute the homeownership component. For additional information regarding this
change see p. S-36 of the Feb. 1983 SURVEY.
t See note "t" for p. S-3.
@ Compiled by Dun & Bradstreet, Inc.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
§ Ratio of prices received to prices paid (parity index).
H Revisions, back to 1975 for some commodities, are available upon request.
$ See note "$" for p. S-4.

PageS-6

PageS-10
1. This series has been discontinued.
§ These unemployment rates are for civilian workers only. The unemployment rate for all
workers, including the resident armed forces, was 9.8 in June 1983.
t Effective June 1983 SURVEY, data have been revised back to April 1981 (not seasonally
adjusted) and January 1978 (seasonally adjusted) based on the March 1982 benchmark levels
and updated seasonal adjustment factors. See "BLS Establishment Estimates Revised to
March 1982 Benchmarks," in the June 1983 issue of Employment and Earnings. Effective
June 1982 SURVI Y. data have been revised back to 1977 based on March 1981 benchmark
levels and updated seasonal adjustment factors. See "BLS Establishment Estimates Revised
to March 1981 Benchmarks," in the June 1982 issue of Employment and Earnings. Effective
July 1981 SURVI Y. data have been revised back to 1974 to reflect new benchmarks and new
seasonal adjustment factors. See "BLS Establishment Estimates Revised to March 1980
Benchmarks," in the July 1981 issue of Employment and Earnings.
H See note "T' for p. S-9.

Page S-l 1

t See note "t" on p. S-10.
1. See note 2 for p. S-5.
$ This series is not seasonally adjusted because the seasonal component is small relative to
2. Index no longer available from the source, BLS; see also p. S-36 of the Feb. 1983 the trend-cycle and/or irregular components and consequently cannot be separated with
SURVEY.
sufficient precision.
§ For actual producer prices of individual commodities see respective commodities in the
H Production and nonsupervisory workers.
Industry section beginning p. S-l 9. All data subject to revision four months after original
publication.
t Revised series. Stage-of-processing producer price indexes have been revised back to
PageS-12
1976 to reflect updated industry input-output relationships and improved classification of
1, This series is not seasonally adjusted because the seasonal component is small relative
some products.
to the trend-cycle and/or irregular components and consequently cannot be separated with
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
$ Effective Feb. 1983 SURVEY, data have been revised back to 1978 to reflect updated sufficient precision. Use the corresponding unadjusted series.
2. This series has been discontinued.
seasonal factors. Effective Feb. 1982 SURVEY, data have been revised back to 1977 to reflect
t See corresponding note on p. S-10.
updated seasonal factors. These revisions are available upon request.
If Production and nonsupervisory workers.
@ Effective with the Feb. 1983 SURVEY, the percent change and indexes as shown here
$ Earnings in 1977 dollars reflect changes in purchasing power since 1977 by dividing by
have been revised back to 1967 except for the transportation group and services which were
Consumer Price Index.
revised back to 1978. These revisions as well as those for indexes not shown here are available
§ Wages as of July 1, 1983: Common, $15.35; Skilled, $20.05.
Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, Washington, D.C. 20212.
Digitizedfrom
for the
FRASER



S-34

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

PageS-13

PageS-16

1. Average for Dec.
2. Reported annual; monthly revisions are not available.
3. Effective December 1, 1982, there was a break in the series. The key changes involved
additions to the reporting panel and the exclusion of broker or dealer placed borrowings
under any master note agreements. Previous statistics do not reflect these changes.
II Effective April 1982 SURVEY, the series for work stoppages involving six or more workers
have been discontinued and have been replaced by series for work stoppages involving 1,000
or more workers.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
§ For demand deposits, the term "adjusted" denotes demand deposits other than domestic commercial bank and U.S. Government, less cash items in process of collection; for
loans, exclusive of loans to and Federal funds transactions with domestic commercial banks
and include valuation reserves (individual loan items are shown gross; i.e. before deduction
of valuation reserves).
# New series. Beginning Dec. 1978, data are for all investment account securities; comparable data for earlier periods are not available.
(&, Insured unemployment (all programs) data include claims filed under extended duration provisions of regular State laws; amounts paid under these programs are excluded from
state benefits paid data.
@(g^ Insured unemployment as a percent of average covered employment in a 12-month
period.

1. Beginning Jan. 1981 data, U.S. Virgin Islands trade with foreign countries is included.
§ Number of issues represents number currently used; the change in number does not
affect the continuity of the series.
$ For bonds due or callable in 10 years or more.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
@ Data may not equal the sum of the geographic regions, or commodity groups and
principal commodities, because of revisions to the totals not reflected in the component
items.

Page S-14
1. Data are for fiscal years ending Sept. 30 and include revisions not distributed to the
months.
2. Average for the year.
3. Daily average.
4. Beginning Jan. 1981, data are for top-rated only. Prior data cover a range of top-rated
and regional dealer closing rates. See also note 3 tor this page.
5. Beginning Oct. 1981, data represent the total surplus or deficit (budget surplus or deficit plus
off-budget surplus or deficit). See also note 1.
6. Interest rate charged as of July 1, 1983 was 10.22.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
§ The Department of Health, Education, and Welfare was redesignated as the Department of Health and Human Services by the Department of Education Organization Act.
H Adjusted to exclude domestic commercial interbank loans and Federal funds sold to
domestic commercial banks.
$ Rates on the commercial paper placed for firms whose bond rating is Aa or the equivalent. Data through Oct. 1979 show a maturity for 120-179 days. Beginning Nov. 1979, maturity is for 180 days.
% Data through Oct. 1979 show a maturity for 150-179 days. Beginning Nov. 1979, maturity is for 180 days.
$$ Courtesy of Metals Week.
@@ Average effective rate

PageS-15
1. Beginning 1983, the reporting Frequency has been changed from a monthly to a quarterly
basis.
t Effective Feb. 1983 SURVEY, the money stock measures and components have been revised
back to 1959. Effective April 1980 SURVEY, the monetary aggregates were redefined by the
Federal Reserve. The redefinition was prompted by the emergence in recent years of new
monetary assets—for example, negotiable order of withdrawal (NOW) accounts and money
market mutual fund shares—and alterations in the basic character of established monetary
assets—for example, the growing similarity of and substitution between the deposits of thrift
institutions and those of commercial banks. Monthly data from 1959 to date are available
from the Banking Section of the Division of Research and Statistics at the Federal Reserve
Board, Washington, D.C. 20551.
$ Composition of the money stock measures is as follows:
Ml.—This measure is currency plus demand deposits at commercial banks and interest-earning
checkable deposits at all depositary institutions—namely NOW accounts, automatic transfer
from savings (ATS) accounts, and credit union share draft balances—as well as a small
amount of demand deposits at thrift institutions that cannot, using present data sources, be
separated from interest-earning checkable deposits.
A/2.—This measure adds to Ml overnight repurchase agreements (RP's) issued by commercial banks and certain overnight Eurodollars (those issued by Caribbean branches of
member banks) held by U.S. nonbank residents, money market mutual fund shares, and
savings and small-denomination time deposits (those issued in denominations of less than
$100,000) at all depositary institutions. Depositary institutions are commercial banks (including
U.S. agencies and branches of foreign banks, Edge Act corporations, and foreign investment
companies), mutual savings banks, savings and loan associations, and credit unions.
M3.—This measure equals M2 plus large-denomination time deposits (those issued in denominations of $100,000 or more) at all depositary institutions (including negotiable CD's) plus
term RP's issued by commercial banks and savings and loan associations.
L.—This broad measure of liquid assets equals M3 plus other liquid assets consisting of
other Eurodollar holdings of U.S. nonbank residents, bankers acceptances, commercial paper,
savings bonds, and marketable liquid Treasury obligations.
$$ Includes ATS and NOW balances at all institutions, credit union share draft balances,
and demand deposits at mutual savings banks.
* Overnight (and continuing contract) RP's are those issued by commercial banks to the
nonbank public, and overnight Eurodollars are those issued by Caribbean branches of member
banks to U.S. nonbank customers.
@ Small time deposits are those issued in amounts of less than $100,000. Large time
deposits are those issued in amounts of $100,000 or more and are net of the holdings of
domestic banks, thrift institutions, the U.S. Government, money market mutual funds, and
foreign banks and official institutions.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
§ Number of issues represents number currently used; the change in number does not
Digitized foraffect
FRASER
the continuity of the series.
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
(gi@ Annual data for 1978-82 and monthly data for 1982 have been revised to exclude
private
placements.
* „-._:..-•
Federal Reserve Bank
of St.Monthlv
Louis revkinnc fw io7« y i

Page S-17
1. See note 1 for p. S-16.
2. Beginning Jan. 1982 data, the Customs value is being substituted for the f.a.s. value.
# Includes data not shown separately.
§ Data may not equal the sum of geographic regions, or commodity groups and principal
commodities, because of revisions to the totals not reflected in the components.

PageS-18
1. See note 1 for p. S-16.
2. Annual total; quarterly or monthly revisions are not available.
3. Before extraordinary and prior period items.
4. For month shown.
5. Domestic trunk operations only (averaging about 90 percent of domestic total).
6. See note 2 for p. S-17.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
§ Total revenues, expenses, and income for all groups of carriers also reflect nonscheduled
service.
$ Beginning Jan. 1977, defined as those having operating revenues of $50 million or more.
II Average daily rent per room occupied, not scheduled rates.
@ Effective January 1, 1980, contract carriers are not included because the data filed by
these carriers were substantially reduced in scope, in accordance with the ICC revised reporting
regulations.
## Data represent entries to a national park for recreational use of the park, its services,
conveniences, and/or facilities.

PageS-19
1. Reported annual total; monthly revisions are not available.
2. Less than 500 short tons.
3. Beginning Jan. 1981, data represent gross weight (formerly phosphoric acid content
weight) and are not comparable with data shown for earlier periods.
4. A portion of data is being withheld to avoid disclosing information for individual
companies; not comparable with other published data.
5. A portion of data is being suppressed because of not meeting publication standards.
For nitrogen solutions, see also note 4 for this page.
6. Includes those amounts being withheld from the monthly data.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
§ Data are reported on the basis of 100 percent content of the specified material unless
otherwise indicated.
$ Revisions, back to 1977 for some commodities, are available upon request.
^T Data for Jan. 1977-June 1979 exclude potassium magnesium sulfate; not strictly comparable with data shown for other periods.

Page S-20
1. Reported annual total; monthly or quarterly revisions are not available.
2. Reported annual total, including Hawaii; monthly data are preliminary and subject to
change.
3. Beginning 1982, the reporting frequency has been changed from a monthly to a quarterly
basis. For 1982, see also note 1 for this page. Revised quarterly data for 1979 through 1981
are available upon request.
4. Annual total includes data for Hawaii; not distributed to the months.
5. Effective with Jan. 1983, data are not directly comparable with those shown for earlier
periods. They are based on a new sample of approximately 150 establishments, which was
selected using the 1981 annual survey "Paints and Allied Products" panel as a universe
frame.
§ Data are not wholly comparable from year to year because of changes from one classification to another.
$ Revisions back to 1977 are available upon request.

PageS-21
1. Based on quotations for fewer than 12 months.
2. Crop estimate for the year.
3. Stocks as of June 1.
4. Stocks as of June 1 and represents previous year's crop; new crop not reported until
June (beginning of new crop year).
5. Previous year's crop; new crop not reported until Oct. (beginning of new crop year).
6. See note "@@" for this page.
7. Data are no longer available.
8. See note 2 for p. S-22.
9. Effective with this reporting, data are reported on a monthly basis.
10. Data for Apr.-Dec. 1982 are not available.
11. July 1 estimate of the 1983 crop.
§ Excludes pearl barley.
# Bags of 100 Ibs.
U Revised crop estimates back to 1975 are available upon request.
@ Revisions, back to 1977, for some commodities, are available upon request.
$ Revisions back to 1975 are available upon request.
@@ Data are quarterly excent for June fmvprirm \™ ~~A n/i~..\ —i c- , /

PageS-22
1. Based on quotations for fewer than 12 months.
2. Effective with this reporting, data are for 3-month intervals.
3. Data are no longer available.
4. See note 9 for p. S-21.
§ Cases of 30 dozen.
If Bags of 132.276 Ibs.
$ Revisions for Jan.-July 1979 (back to 1975 for grindings of wheat) are available upon
request.
@ Revisions back to 1977 are available upon request.
# Effective Apr. 1981 SURVEY, the wholesale price of smoked hams has been discontinued
and has been replaced with the comparable price index. Annual indexes prior to 1979 and
monthly indexes prior to Feb. 1980 are available upon request.

PageS-23
1. Crop estimate for the year.
2. Average for seven months; price not available for July, Aug., and Oct.-Dec.
3. Annual total; monthly revisions are not available.
4. Data are no longer available.
§ Monthly data reflect cumulative revisions for prior periods.
$ Revisions back to 1975 are available upon request.
# New series. Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics.
# Totals include data for items not shown separately.

PageS-24
1. Annual data; monthly revisions not available.
2. Less than 500 short tons.

PageS-25
1. Annual data; monthly revisions are not available.
2. For month shown.
3. Effective Jan. 1981, data are revised back to Jan. 1980. Inventory data formerly calculated by the Bureau of the Census are now based on the Steel Service Center Institute monthly
Business Conditions report.

PageS-26
1. Annual data; monthly revisions are not available.
2. Less than 50 tons.
3. Data shown in the April and May 1983 issues of the SURVEY were incorrect.
U Includes secondary smelters' lead stocks in refinery shapes and in copper-base scrap.
@ All data (except annual production figures) reflect GSA remelted zinc and zinc purchased for direct shipment.
$ Source for monthly data: American Bureau of Metal Statistics. Source for annual data:
Bureau of Mines.
# Includes data not shown separately.
t Effective July 1980 SURVEY, data are revised and shown on a new base. The sample size
has been restored to 100 firms and the base has been changed to 1977= 100. The revised series
are not comparable to previously published data.
# New series. These indexes are based on shipments of hydraulic and pneumatic products
reported by participating members of the National Fluid Power Association. Data back to
1959 are available upon request.

PageS-27
1. Total stocks for bituminous coal and lignite exclude residential and commercial stocks
and are not comparable with data prior to Jan. 1980.
2. Data are for five weeks; other months 4 weeks.
3. For month shown.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
@ Beginning July 1977, data are representive of those manufacturers reporting and are
not an average of the total industry; they are not directly comparable with earlier data.
# New series. Annual data prior to 1978 and monthly data prior to April 1979 are available upon request.
§ Includes nonmarketable catalyst coke.
If Includes small amounts of "other hydrocarbons and alcohol new supply (field production)," not shown separately.
t Revisions back to Jan. 1978 are available upon request.
$ Effective with 1981 petroleum data, the Energy Information Agency has changed some
definitions and concepts to reflect recent developments in refining and blending practices.
These changes include adding a category for gasohol production to motor gasoline production and accounting more precisely for distillate and residual fuel oil processed further after
initial distillation. A description of these changes appears in the May 1981 issue of Monthly
Energy Review, U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Information Administration.

PageS-28
1. Simple averages of prices are no longer available.
2. See note 5 for p. S-29.
3. Reported annual totals; revisions not allocated to the months.
4. Effective with Jan. 1983, data include road oil. Total road oil data for 1982 were (thous.
bbl.): 591, domestic demand; 610, production; 47, stocks.




S-35

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

July 1983

U Prices are mid-month, include taxes, and represent full service; comparable prices prior
to Jan. 1979 are not available.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
# New series. See note "H" for this page.
$ Except for price data, see note "$" for p. S-27.

Page S-29
1. Reported annual total; revisions not distributed to the months.
2. Effective Jan. 1980, data are no longer available.
3. Average for 11 months; no price for Aug. 1980 or June 1981.
4. Average for 11 months; no price available for Nov. 1980 or for Oct. 1981.
5. Monthly data will be discontinued as of April 1982 SURVEY, due to budgetary limitations. The related annual report, MA26A, will continue to be published.
U Source: American Paper Institute. Total U.S. estimated consumption by all newspaper
users.
§ Monthly data are averages of the 4-week periods ending on the Saturday nearest the end
of the month; annual data are as of Dec. 31.
$ Data are monthly or annual totals. Formerly weekly averages were shown.

PageS-30
1. Reported annual total; revisions not allocated to the months.
2. Crop for the year.
3. Data cover five weeks; other months, four weeks.
4. Data are not available prior to Jan. 1980.
5. See note "$" for this page.
6. Monthly and annual data for regular basecoat plasters are not available; sales of "all
other" represents total sales of building plasters. See also note 1 for this page.
7. Data withheld to avoid disclosing operations of individual companies.
8. Represents total shipments for Jan.-May 1982. See also note 7 for this page.
# New series. Data for finishing mills have replaced data for weaving mills, which are no
longer available.
# Includes data for items not shown separately.
H Cumulative ginnings to the end of month indicated.
§ Bales of 480 Ibs.
$ Beginning Jan. 1982, shipments include those for direct export; such shipments for 1981
were 2,165 thous. gross.
@ Annual totals are based on advance summaries and reflect revisions not distributed to
the months.

PageS-31
1. EffectiveJan. 1,1978, includes reexports, formerly excluded.
2. Annual total includes revisions not distributed to the months.
3. Average for crop year; Aug. 1-Jul. 31.
4. For five weeks; other months four weeks.
5. Monthly average.
6. Less than 500 bales.
§ Bales of 480 Ibs.
II Based on 480-lb. bales, preliminary price reflects sales as of the 15th; revised price reflects
total quantity purchased and dollars paid for the entire month (revised price includes discounts and premiums).
# Includes data not shown separately.

PageS-32
1. Annual total includes revisions not distributed to the months.
2. Figure represents production; not factory sales.
3. Effective Jan. 1982 (for retail sales) and Aug. 1982 (for retail stocks), U.S.-built MercedesBenz trucks are included; comparable data for earlier periods are not available. See also note 5 for
this page.
4. Monthly data for 1980 as published in earlier issues of the SURVEY, exclude exports for
off-highway trucks; not strictly comparable with data shown for other periods. Such exports
have since been included in the monthly data and are available upon request.
5. Based on unadjusted data.
6. See note "t" for this page.
7. See last sentence of note "t" for this page.
# Total includes backlog for nonrelated products and services and basic research.
§ Domestics comprise all cars assembled in the U.S. and cars assembled in Canada and
imported to the U.S. under the provisions of the Automotive Products Trade Act of 1965.
Imports comprise all other cars.
II Courtesy of R.L. Polk & Co.; republication prohibited. Because data for some states
are not available, month-to-month comparisons are not strictly valid.
$ Excludes railroad-owned private refrigerator cars and private line cars.
t Revisions, affecting some commodities back to 1967 and for those periods mentioned
below, are available upon request. Passenger cars (seas, adj.): Effective July 1983 SURVEY,
data have been revised back to Jan. 1980. Effective July 198'2 SURVEY,data have been revised
back to Jan. 1977. Trucks and buses (seas, adj.): Effective Feb. 1983 SURVEY, data have been
revised back to Jan. 1980.
@ In the 1979 BUSINESS STATISTICS, 4th Qtr. 1977 should read "13,946" mil. $.
ft In the 1979 BUSINESS STATISTICS, annual data for 1977 should read "2,604.8"
mil. $.
## Revisions back to 1977 are available upon request.
ft Includes Volkswagens produced in the U.S.
@@ Includes passenger vans.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-36

July 1983

State Personal Income
Table 1.—Total Personal Income, States and Regions
[Millions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates]

I

United States
New England
Connecticut
Maine
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
Rhode Island
Vermont
Mideast
Delaware
.
District of Columbia
Maryland
New Jersey
New York
Pennsylvania
Great Lakes
Illinois
Indiana
Michigan
Ohio
Wisconsin

.

....

.

Plains
Iowa
Kansas
Minnesota
Missouri
Nebraska
North Dakota ....
South Dakota

....
.. .

Southeast
Alabama
Arkansas
Florida
Georgia
Kentucky
Louisiana
Mississippi
North Carolina
South Carolina
Tennessee
Virginia
West Virginia
Southwest
Arizona
New Mexico
Oklahoma
Texas

..

Rocky Mountain
Colorado
Idaho
Montana
Utah
Wyoming
F a r West .

.

California
Nevada
Oregon . . .
Washington
Alaska
Hawaii

.

.

II

1983

1982

1981

State and region

I

IV

III

II

III

IV

I

Percent change
1982: I1983: I

1982: IV1983: I

2,321,982

2,371,842

2,448,624

2,483,732

2,499,775

2,541,891

2,581,838

2,616,112

2,640,496

5.6

132,349

135,326

140,126

142,524

143,749

146,322

149,099

151,439

152,636

6.2

.8

38,845
9,342
61,558
8,945
9,341
4,318

39,467
9,578
63,202
9,140
9,525
4,414

40,845
9,813
65,492
9,543
9,852
4,580

41,366
9,917
66,725
9,840
9,993
4,683

42,173
10,007
66,927
9,875
10,050
4,717

42,742
10,111
68,354
10,101
10,209
4,805

43,620
10,313
69,571
10,301
10,354
4,939

44,096
10,520
70,801
10,458
10,523
5,040

44,538
10,620
71,068
10,661
10,656
5,093

5.6
6.1
6.2
8.0
6.0
8.0

1.0
1.0
.4
1.9
1.3
1.1

462,226

471,801

486,977

494,006

501,573

508,824

516,721

523,319

527,185

5.1

.7

6,452
8,338
47,229
86,945
194,360
118,903

6,540
8,382
48,008
88,685
198,884
121,303

6,746
8,628
49,639
91,466
205,344
125,153

6,836
8,743
50,412
92,909
208,238
126,868

6,924
8,809
50,561
94,566
213,445
127,267

7,059
8,948
51,512
96,223
215,734
129,349

7,207
9,176
52,527
97,727
219,474
130,610

7,226
9,297
53,441
99,075
222,130
132,150

7,314
9,373
53,679
100,131
224,431
132,257

5.6
6.4
6.2
5.9
5.1
3.9

1.2
.8
.4
1.1
1.0
.1

430,815

439,231

451,019

453,508

452,390

459,855

465,796

468,314

473,635

4.7

1.1

128,564
51,906
96,567
107,958
45,821

130,724
52,519
98,849
110,057
47,082

134,340
54,176
100,649
113,016
48,837

136,924
54,140
100,002
113,714
48,728

136,183
54,773
98,790
113,543
49,102

138,547
55,108
100,987
115,847
49,367

140,635
55,372
101,504
117,811
50,473

141,560
55,960
101,393
118,255
51,146

142,988
56,607
103,878
119,195
50,966

5.0
3.3
5.2
5.0
3.8

1.0
1.2
2.5
.8
-.4

171,308

174,692

180,178

182,075

180,954

183,135

185,965

188,873

189,989

5.0

.6

29,422
24,978
42,482
46,433
15,796
6,365
5,832

30,033
25,501
43,441
47,017
16,111
6,608
5,981

30,903
26,123
44,991
48,377
16,681
6,912
6,191

31,133
26,557
45,325
48,961
16,789
7,079
6,231

29,782
27,311
45,135
49,160
16,267
6,969
6,329

30,458
27,262
45,331
50,093
16,508
7,013
6,469

30,885
27,643
45,851
50,977
16,739
7,288
6,582

31,257
28,038
46,891
51,267
17,014
7,530
6,876

31,324
28,170
46,825
52,088
17,089
7,698
6,796

5.2
3.1
3.7
6.0
5.1
10.5
7.4

.2
.5
-.1
1.6
.4
2.2
-1.2

465,846

475,106

492,166

499,229

501,705

512,470

520,667

531,189

536,946

7.0

1.1

31,384
17,895
98,572
48,128
29,949
39,250
18,153
49,687
24,554
37,728
54,466
16,080

31,698
18,188
102,043
49,199
29,941
40,380
18,542
50,846
25,150
38,574
55,294
15,252

32,746
18,800
105,430
50,660
31,521
41,814
18,997
52,700
25,835
39,647
57,106
16,909

32,927
18,956
107,964
51,225
31,884
42,536
19,315
52,904
26,286
39,927
58,203
17,103

33,008
18,552
108,938
51,990
31,919
43,093
19,304
52,572
26,387
40,119
58,657
17,167

33,756
19,021
111,911
53,301
31,996
43,779
19,842
54,065
26,819
40,932
59,962
17,085

33,895
19,214
114,795
54,041
32,672
44,400
19,908
54,621
27,313
41,545
60,988
17,276

34,675
19,584
117,448
55,259
33,388
44,668
20,450
56,168
27,975
42,028
62,079
17,467

35,126
19,991
118,583
55,999
33,466
45,440
20,555
56,768
28,398
42,445
62,707
17,467

6.4
7.8
8.9
7.7
4.8
5.4
6.5
8.0
7.6
5.8
6.9
1.7

1.3
2.1
1.0
1.3
.2
1.7
.5
1.1
1.5
1.0
1.0

217,983

224,320

233,228

239,660

243,978

247,779

251,070

253,578

255,355

4.7

.7

26,015
10,841
30,258
150,869

26,855
11,129
31,110
155,226

27,836
11,485
32,406
161,500

28,437
11,737
33,238
166,249

28,428
11,923
33,649
169,979

28,956
12,119
34,082
172,622

29,446
12,303
34,502
174,819

29,889
12,573
34,700
176,416

30,293
12,646
34,697
177,719

6.6
6.1
3.1
4.6

1.4
.6

65,073

66,334

69,125

70,243

70,750

71,667

72,392

73,877

74,507

5.3

.9

31,778
8,330
7,210
12,211
5,545

32,533
8,480
7,341
12,319
5,662

33,913
8,777
7,635
12,917
5,884

34,806
8,707
7,653
13,082
5,994

35,245
8,657
7,711
13,185
5,952

35,546
8,830
7,836
13,461
5,994

35,992
8,982
7,758
13,684
5,976

36,628
9,282
7,933
13,935
6,099

37,029
9,238
8,138
14,044
6,058

5.1
6.7
5.5
6.5
1.8

1.1
.5
2.6
.8
7

360,533

368,754

379,133

385,368

387,303

394,111

401,446

406,570

411,047

6.1

1.1

279,149
9,440
26,014
45,931

285,552
9,695
26,363
47,145

293,970
9,956
26,885
48,322

299,667
10,060
26,854
48,788

301,802
10,188
26,986
48,326

307,929
10,260
27,332
48,589

313,534
10,387
27,697
49,828

317,125
10,555
28,075
50,815

320,469
10,727
28,418
51,432

6.2
5.3
5.3
6.4

1.1
1.6
1.2
1.2

5,369
10,479

5,576
10,702

5,744
10,928

5,954
11,165

6,137
11,235

6,260
11,468

6,976
11,707

7,246
11,708

7,230
11,967

17.8
6.5

-.2
2.2

149,099
447,811
465,796
185,965
397,944
128,019
272,934
124,529
409,741

151,439
453,355
468,314
188,873
406,360
130,541
275,368
126,894
414,969

152,636
456,819
473,635
189,989
410,289
131,592
277,847
128,173
419,516

6.2
4.9
4.7
5.0
7.4
5.8
4.7
5.7
6.3

.8
.8
1.1
.6
1.0
.8
.9
1.0
1.1

0.9

.7

Census regions
New England
Middle Atlantic
East North Central
West North Central
South Atlantic
East South Central
West South Central
Mountain
Pacific

*

132,349
400,207
430,815
171,308
353,506
117,214
238,271
111,369
366,941

135,326
408,871
439,231
174,692
360,713
118,755
244,904
114,013
375,336

140,126
421,964
451,019
180,178
373,653
122,911
254,521
118,402
385,849

1. The personal income shown for the United States differs from that in the national income
and product accounts primarily because it omits income received by Federal Government employees overseas.




142,524
428,015
453,508
182,075
379,676
124,052
260,979
120,476
392,427

143,749
435,277
452,390
180,954
382,006
124,350
265,272
121,289
394,487

146,322
441,305
459,855
183,135
390,662
126,527
269,504
123,002
401,579

NOTE.—The quarterly estimates of State personal income were prepared by Francis G. McFaul
with the aid of Thelma E. Harding, under the supervision of Robert L. Brown. Tables were prepared by Eunice P. James and Kathy A. Albetski.
U. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE : 1983 O - 411-122 (QL 3)

INDEX TO CURRENT BUSINESS STATISTICS, Pages S1-S36
SECTIONS
General:
Business indicfltors
Commodity prices
Construction and real estate
Domestic trade ..
Labor force, employment, and earnings....
Finance
Foreign trade of the United States
Transportation and communication
Industry:
Chemicals and allied products
Electric power and gas
Food and kindred products; tobacco
Leather and products
Lumber and products
Metals and manufactures
Petroleum, coal, and products ....
Pulp, paper, and paper products.
Rubber and rubber products
Stone, clay, and glass products....
Textile products
Transportation equipment
Footnotes

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

5,6
7, 8
8,9
9-13
13-16
16-18

..... 18,19

19, 20
20
20-23
23
23,24
24-27
27,28
28,29
29
30

30-32
32
33-35

INDIVIDUAL SERIES
8, 12
32
13
18
Air carrier operations
27
4, 32
19
Alcohol, denatured and ethyl
8, 20
25
Aluminum
•
.. 2, 4-6, 8-12
28
Asphalt
Automobiles, etc
2-4, 6, 8, 9, 14, 15, 17, 32
13, 14
Banking
21
Barley
,
27
Battery shipments
22
Beef and veal
8, 17, 20
Blast furnaces, steel mills
Bonds, issued, prices, sales, yields
15-16
26
Brass and bronze
30
Brick
Building and construction materials
2,4,5
Building costs
,
7
Building permits
5
Business incorporation (new), failures
2, 3
Business sales and inventories
21
Butter
22
Cattle and calves
30
Cement
,
Chain-store sales, firms with 11 or more
stores
9
Cheese
21
Chemicals .Z™
Cigarettes and cigars
23
Clay products
2-4, 30
Clothing (see apparel)
Coal
2, 27
Cocoa
22
Coffee
22
Coke
27
Combustion, atmosphere, heating equipment
26
Communication
15,19
Confectionery, sales
22
Construction:
Contracts
7
Costs
7
Employment, unemployment, hours,
earnings
10—12
Highways and streets
7
Housing starts
7
New construction put in place
7
Consumer credit
14
Consumer goods output, index
1, 2
Consumer Price Index
5, 6
Copper and copper products
25, 26
Corn
21
Cost of living (see Consumer Price Index)
5, 6
Cotton, raw and manufactures
5, 30, 31
Credit, commercial bank, consumer
14
Crops
5, 21, 23, 30
Crude oil
3, 27
Currency in circulation
15
Dairy products
5, 21
Debt, U.S. Government
14
Deflator, PCE
1
stores, sales, inventories
9
DigitizedDepartment
for FRASER
Deposits, bank
13,15

Advertising

http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
3f
Federal Reserve
Bank of St. Louis

Dishwashers
Disposition of personal income
Distilled spirits
Dividend payments
Drugstores, sales
Earnings, weekly and hourly
Eating and drinking places
Eggs and poultry
Electric power
Electrical machinery and equipment

27
1
20
1,15
8, 9
12
8, 9
5, 22
2, 20
2-5,
10-12,15, 27
Employee-hours, aggregate, and indexes
11
Employment
10,11
Explosives
20
Exports (see also individual commodities)
16,17
Failures, industrial and commercial
5
5,6
Farm prices
Farm wages
12
Fats and oils
17
14
Federal Government finance
13
Federal Reserve banks, large commercial....
Federal Reserve member banks
13
Fertilizers
19
Fish
22
24
Flooring, hardwood
Flour, wheat,
22
Food products
2-6, 8,10-12,15,17, 20-23
Foeign trade (see also individual commod.)..— 16-18
Freight cars (equipment)
32
Fruits and vegetables
5
Fuel oil
5, 28
Fuels
2, 6,17, 27, 28
Furnaces
27
Furniture
2, 6, 8-12
Gas, output, prices, sales, revenues
2, 6, 20
Gasoline
28
Glass and products
30
Glycerin
19
Gold
14
Grains and products
5, 6, 21, 22
Grocery stores
9
Gypsum and products
30
Hardware stores ................*...
8
Heating equipment
26
Help-wanted advertising index
12
Hides and skins
6
Highways and streets
7
Hogs
22
Home Loan banks, outstanding advances
8
Home mortgages
8
Hotels and motor-hotels
18
Hours, average weekly
11
Housefurnishings
2, 4, 5, 8, 9
Household appliances, radios, and television sets
27
Housing starts and permits
7
Imports (see also individual commodities)
17,18
Income, personal
2
Income and employment tax receipts
14
Industrial production indexes:
By industry
1, 2
By market grouping
1, 2
Installment credit
14
Instruments and related products
2-4, 10-12
Interest and money rates
14
Inventories, manufacturers* and trade
3, 4, 9
Inventory-sales ratios
3
Iron and steel
2, 15, 24, 25
Labor advertising index
14
Labor force
9,10
Lamb and mutton
22
Lead
26
Leather and products
2, 6, 10-12, 23
Livestock
5, 22
Loans, real estate, agricultural, bank (see
also Consumer credit)
8,13
Lubricants
*
28
Lumber and products
2, 6, 10-12, 23, 24
Machine tools
26
Machinery
2-6,10-12, 15, 17, 26, 27
Manufacturers* sales (or shipments), inventories,
orders
3^5
Manufacturing employment, unemployment,
production workers, hours, earnings
10-12
Manufacturing production indexes
1, 2
Meat animals and meats
5, 22
Medical care
6
Metals
2-6,10-12,15, 24-26
Milk
21
Mining and minerals
2, 6,10-12,15
Monetary statistics
15
Money and interest rates
14
Money supply
15
Mortgage applications, loans, rates
8, 13, 14
Motor carriers
18
Motor vehicles
2-4, 6, 8,9,15,17, 32

National parks, visits
18
Newsprint
29
New York Stock Exchange, selected data
16
Nonferrous metals
2, 4, 5,15, 25, 26
Oats
21
Oils and fats
17
Orders, new and unfilled, manufacturers*
4, 5
Outlays, U.S. Government
14
Paint and paint materials
20
Paper and products and pulp
2-4,
6,10-12, 15, 28, 29
Parity ratio
5
Passenger cars
2-4, 6, 8, 9, 15,17, 32
Passports issued
18
Personal consumption expenditures
1
Personal income
1
Personal outlays
1
Petroleum and products
2-4,
10-12,15,17,27,28
Pig iron
24
Plastics and resin materials
20
Population
9
Pork
22
Poultry and eggs
5, 22
Price deflator, implicit (PCE)
1
Prices (see also individual commodities)
5, 6
Printing and publishing
2,10-12
Private sector employment, hours, earnings
10-12
Producer Price Indexes
6
Profits, corporate
15
Public utilities
1, 2, 7,15,16, 20
Pulp and pulpwood
28
Purchasing power of the dollar
6
Radio and television
8, 27
Railroads
13, 16, 18, 32
Ranges
27
Rayon and acetate
31
Real estate
8,13
Receipts, U.S. Government
14
Refrigerators
27
Registrations (new vehicles)
32
Rent (housing)
6
Retail trade
2, 3, 5, 8-12,14, 32
Rice
»
21
Rubber and products (incl. plastics)
2-4,
6, 10-12, 29
Saving, personal
1
Savings and loan assoc., new mortgage loans .
8
Savings deposits
13
Securities issued
15
Security markets
15,16
Services
6,10-12
Sheep and lambs
22
Shoes and other footwear
23
Siber
14
Spindle activity, cotton
31
Steel (raw) and steel manufactures
25
Steel scrap
24
Stock market customer financing
15
Stock prices, yields, sales, etc
16
Stone, clay, glass products
2-4,10-12,15, 30
Sugar
23
Sulfur
19
Sulfuric acid
19
Superphosphate
19
Tea imports
23
Telephone and telegraph carriers
19
Television and radio
27
Textiles and products
2-4, 10-12, 15, 30, 31
Tin
26
Tires and inner tubes
29
Tobacco and manufactures
2-4, 10-12, 23
Tractors
27
Trade (retail and wholesale)
2, 3, 5, 8-12, 32
Transit lines, urban
18
Transportation
6, 10-12, 15, 16, 18
Transportation equipment
2-6, 10-12, 15, 17, 32
Travel
18
Truck trailers
32
Trucks (industrial and other)
26, 27, 32
Unemployment and insurance
9,10,13
U.S. Government bonds
16
U.S. Government finance
14
Utilities
2, 6, 7,15, 16, 20
Vacuum cleaners
27
Variety stores
9
Vegetables and fruits
5
Veterans* unemployment insurance
13
Wages and salaries
1,12
Washers and dryers
27
Water heaters
27
Wheat and wheat
flour
21, 22
Wholesale trade
2, 3, 5, 8, 10-12
Wood pulp
28
Wool and wool manufactures
31
Zinc
26

UNITED STATES
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
PUBLIC DOCUMENTS DEPARTMENT

WASHINGTON, D.C. 20402

OFFICIAL BUSINESS

In the second quarter
•
•
•
•

Real GNP increased 8 1 2 percent
Real final sales increased 51/2 percent
GNP fixed-weighted price index increased 5 percent
Real disposable personal income increased 3 percent
Real GNP

Real Final Sales

Sit

1979




1980

1981

GNP Fixed-Weighted Price Index

Real Disposable Personal Income