Full text of Survey of Current Business : May 2010
The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.
MAY 2 0 1 0 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS B E A ’s M O N T H L Y J O U R N A L In This Issue . . . Modernizing the International Accounts Comprehensive Revision: Local Area Personal Income Statistics s a iB E A BUREAU OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE ECONOMICS AND STATISTICS ADMINISTRATION U.S. Department of Commerce Gary Locke, Secretary Economics and Statistics Administration Rebecca M. Blank, Under Secretary for Economic Affairs Bureau of Economic Analysis J. Steven Landefeld, Director Brian C. Moyer, Acting Deputy Director Ana M. Aizcorbe, Chief Economist Brian M. Callahan, Chief Information Officer Dennis J. Fixler, Chief Statistician Brent R. Moulton, Associate Director for National Economic Accounts Brian C. Moyer, Associate Director for Industry Accounts Joel D. Platt, Associate Director for Regional Economics Obie G. Whichard, Associate Director for International Economics BEA Advisory Committee The BEA Advisory Committee advises the Director of BEA on matters related to the development and improvement of BEA’s national, regional, industry, and international economic accounts, especially in areas of new and rapidly growing economic activities arising from innovative and advancing technologies, and it provides recommendations from the perspective of business economists, academicians, researchers, and experts in government and international affairs. Dale W. Jorgenson, Chair, Harvard University Alan J. Auerbach, University of California, Berkeley Richard B. Berner, Morgan Stanley Barry P. Bosworth, The Brookings Institution Susan M. Collins, University of Michigan Janice C. Eberly, Northwestern University Jeffrey A. Frankel, Harvard University Robert J. Gordon, Northwestern University Maurine A. Haver, Haver Analytics, Inc. Charles R. Hulten, University of Maryland Ellen R. McGrattan, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Therese J. McGuire, Northwestern University William D. Nordhaus, Yale University Joel L. Prakken, Chairman, Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC Andrew D. Reamer, The Brookings Institution James Kim, Editor-in-Chief M. Gretchen Gibson, Managing Editor Kristina L. Maze, Production Manager Wm. Ronnie Foster, Graphic Designer Colby Johnson, Graphic Designer Danielle M. Wittenberg, Editor Kelly Holliday, Intern The S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t b u s in e s s (ISSN 0 0 3 9 - 6 2 2 2 ) is pub lished monthly by the Bureau of Economic Analysis of the U.S. Department of Commerce. Send editorial correspondence to customerservice@bea.gov. Subscriptions to the S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t b u s in e s s are maintained, and the prices are set, by the U.S. Government Printing Office, an agency of the U.S. Congress. To subscribe call 2 0 2 - 5 1 2 - 1 8 0 0 or go to bookstore.gpo.gov. Subscription and single-copy prices Second-class mail: $ 6 3 .0 0 domestic, $ 8 8 .2 0 foreign First-class mail: $ 1 0 5 .0 0 Single copy: $ 2 5 .0 0 domestic, $ 3 5 .0 0 foreign The information in this journal is in the public domain and maybe re printed without the permission of the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Citation of the S urvey o f C u r r e n t business as thesource is appreciated. The Secretary of Commerce has determined that the publication of this periodical is necessary in the transaction of the public business required by law of the Department. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS May 2010 1 Volume 90 • Number 5 GDP and the Economy: Advance Estimates for the First Quarter of 2010 Real GDP increased 3.2 percent after increasing 5.6 percent in the fourth quarter. Inventory investment and exports slowed, and residential investment turned down. Consumer spending picked up. 6 Modernizing and Enhancing BEA’s International Economic Accounts: Recent Progress and Future Directions BEA is considering changes to better align its international accounts with updated guidelines from the International M onetary Fund and the Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development. 22 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income: New Statistics for 2008 and Revised Statistics for 1969-2007 Personal income growth slowed in more than two-thirds of the 3,112 counties in the nation in 2008. These revised statistics reflect the 2009 comprehensive revisions of the national income and product accounts and the state personal income accounts. www.bea.gov May 2010 D-1 BEA Current and Historical Data iii Director’s Message iv Taking Account BEA’s Web Site and Contacts (inside back cover) Schedule of Upcoming News Releases (back cover) Looking Ahead Alternative Measures of Personal Saving. A look at various measures of personal saving, including the NIPA measure. Improved Estimates of the Annual Industry Accounts. The results of the 2010 compre hensive revision. May 2010 Director’s Message______________ Last year, the International M onetary Fund released its sixth edi tion of the Balance of Payments and International Investment Posi tion Manual, and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development updated its fourth edition of the Benchmark Definition of Foreign Direct Investment. In this issue, we provide an overview of the Bureau of Economic Analysis’ initial plans to implement improvements to its international economic accounts based on these new standards. Some of these improvements have already been introduced, while others will be introduced in the June annual revision and in subsequent years. Elsewhere in this issue, we discuss the 201 0 comprehensive re vision of local area personal income statistics, which reflects the comprehensive revision of the national income and product ac counts, released last year. Comprehensive revisions traditionally occur every 5 years. Such revisions are an im portant aspect of BEA’s ongoing efforts to update its accounts to keep pace with the ever-changing U.S. economy. For this comprehensive revision, local area personal income statistics for 1 9 6 9 -2 0 0 8 were revised. As usual, the “advance” estimates of the national income and product accounts for the first quarter of 2010 are discussed in an easy-to-read format. iv May 2010 Taking Account... BEA releases summary estimates of MNC activity Employment by U.S. m ulti national companies (MNCs) worldwide decreased 0.4 percent in 2008, to 33.4 million workers, resulting from a decrease in em ployment in the United States that was partly offset by an increase in employment abroad. Employment in the United States by majority-owned U.S. affiliates of foreign m ultina tional companies decreased 1.0 percent in 2008 to 5.5 million workers, partly reflecting selloffs of foreign ownership shares in U.S. companies. Summary statistics on MNC operations were released in April by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). For the first time, the sum m ary statistics in this release cover banks as well as nonbanks. The statistics were based on an nual surveys of (1) U.S. MNCs, covering operations of both U.S. parent companies and their for eign affiliates, and (2) the opera tions of U.S. affiliates of foreign MNCs. Before the release of the 200 7 preliminary statistics last year, data on bank parents and affiliates were only available from benchmark surveys, which are conducted once every 5 years. As is customary, MNC statis tics based on more complete source data, including country and industry detail, will be re leased later this year. In 2008, domestic employ m ent by U.S. parent companies decreased 1.3 percent to 22.9 million workers. That compares with a decline of 0.7 percent in total private-industry employ m ent in the United States. Employment by U.S. parents accounted for almost a fifth of total U.S. employment in private industries. Abroad, employ m ent by the majority-owned foreign affiliates of U.S. MNCs increased 1.7 percent to 10.5 million workers. Employment in the United States by U.S. parent companies accounted for 69 percent of the worldwide employment of U.S. MNCs in 2008, which was u n changed from 2007. Worldwide capital expendi tures by U.S. MNCs increased 4.1 percent in 2008, to $708.2 billion. Capital expenditures in the United States by U.S. parent companies increased 2.3 per cent to $519.7 billion. Capital expenditures abroad by their majority-owned foreign affili ates increased 9.1 percent to $188.5 billion. The U.S.-parent share of the worldwide capital expenditures of U.S. MNCs in 2008 was 73 percent, down from 75 percent in 2007. Sales by U.S. parent compa nies increased 3.2 percent in 2008, to $9,509.0 billion. Sales by their majority-owned foreign affiliates increased 10.9 percent to $5,520.2 billion. Employment by U.S. affili ates of foreign MNCs accounted for 4.7 percent of total U.S. em ployment in private industries, the same share as in 2007. Capi tal expenditures by these affili ates increased 0.3 percent in 2008 to $190.7 billion. Sales by U.S. affiliates increased 1.6 per cent to $3,406.5 billion. For more inform ation, see the press release at www.bea.gov/ newsreleases/international/mnc/ 2010/m nc2008.htm . Updated statistics on federal recovery programs BEA has updated its online in form ation portal dedicated to BEA statistics and federal eco nomic recovery programs. The update incorporates (1) newly available information from the Departm ent of Labor regarding its reporting of American Recov ery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funding of unemploy m ent insurance benefit pay ments and (2) the “advance” estimate of the gross domestic product accounts for the first quarter of 2010. The next update is scheduled for May 28, 2010. The portal, available on the BEA Web site, provides inform a tion about federal economic re covery programs, including ARRA, and their effect on BEA statistics. The inform ation com prises tables, charts, FAQs, arti cles, and other material. One featured table shows the estimated effect of ARRA on se lected NIPA estimates of federal receipts and expenditures. An other table and chart detail how ARRA outlays have been allo cated among BEA government statistics. 1 May 2010 GDP and the Economy Advance Estimates for the First Quarter of 2010 R EAL GROSS domestic product (GDP) increased at ^an annual rate of 3.2 percent in the first quarter of 2010, according to the “advance” estimates of the na tional income and product accounts (NIPAs) (chart 1 and table l ) . 1 In the fourth quarter of 2009, real GDP increased 5.6 percent. The deceleration in real GDP in the first quarter pri marily reflected decelerations in inventory investment and exports, a downturn in residential fixed invest m ent, and a larger decrease in state and local govern ment spending. In contrast, consumer spending accelerated, and imports slowed.2 • Prices of goods and services purchased by U.S. resi dents increased 1.7 percent in the first quarter after increasing 2.0 percent in the fourth quarter. Energy prices decelerated in the first quarter, and food prices turned up. Excluding food and energy, gross domes tic purchases prices increased 1.1 percent after increasing 1.5 percent. The federal pay raise for civil ian and military personnel added about 0.2 percent age point to the first-quarter percent change in the gross domestic purchases price index. • Real disposable personal income (DPI) was unchanged in the first quarter after increasing 1.0 percent in the fourth quarter, reflecting a deceleration in current-dollar DPI that was offset by a deceleration in the PCE implicit price deflator that is used to deflate DPI. The deceleration in current-dollar DPI reflected an acceleration in personal income that was more than offset by a sharp upturn in personal cur rent taxes. • The personal saving rate, personal saving as a per centage of current-dollar DPI, was 3.1 percent in the first quarter; in the fourth quarter, it was 3.9 percent. 1. “Real” estimates are in chained (2005) dollars, and price indexes are chain-type measures. Each GDP estimate for a quarter (advance, second, and third) incorporates increasingly comprehensive and improved source data. More information can be found at www.bea.gov/about/infoqual.htm and www.bea.gov/faq/national/gdp_accuracy.htm. Quarterly estimates are expressed at seasonally adjusted annual rates, which assumes that a rate of activity for a quarter is maintained for a year. 2. In this article, “consumer spending” refers to “personal consumption expenditures (PCE),” “inventory investment” refers to “change in private inventories,” and “government spending” refers to “government consump tion expenditures and gross investment.” Christopher Swann prepared this article. ll Chart 1. GDP, Prices, Disposable Personal Income (DPI) Real GDP: Percent change from the preceding quarter S e a s o n a lly a d ju s t e d a n n u a l r a te s i I 2006 I I I 2007 I I I I 2008 I I i I 2009 I 2010 Contributions to the percent change in real GDP in 2010:1 ^ o n s u m e r js p e n d in g ^ R r e s i d e n t i a l fix e d in v e s tm e n t R i d e n t i a l fix e d in v e s tm e n t -1 0 1 Percentage points at an annual rate Prices: Percent change from the preceding quarter 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Real DPI: Percent change from the preceding quarter 1 1 i l l ! _ ■ _i .I . L l^ ' 1j 2006 2007 U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis i i 2008 i 2009 i 2010 GDP and the Econom y 2 May 2010 Real GDP Overview Table 1. Real Gross Domestic Product and Components [Seasonally adjusted at annual rates] Share of currentdollar GDP (percent) 2010 2009 I C ontribution to percent change in real GDP (percentage points) Change from preceding period (percent) II 2010 2009 III IV I II III 5.6 3.2 -0 .7 2.2 G ro s s d o m e s tic p r o d u c t 1 .... 100.0 -0 .7 2.2 P erson al c o n s u m p tio n e x p e n d itu re s .................................. 71.0 -0 .9 2.8 1.6 3.6 -0 .6 2 G o o d s ............................................... 23.3 -3 .1 7.2 2.8 6.2 -0 .71 Durable g o o d s ............................ 7.3 -5 .6 20.4 0.4 Nondurable g o o d s ..................... 16.0 -1 .9 1.5 S e rv ic e s ............................................ 47.7 0.2 0.8 12.1 -2 3 .7 5.0 46.1 Fixed 11.8 in vestm -1 2 .5en t -1 .3 5.0 5.3 G ro ss p riv a te d o m e s tic in v e s tm e n t...................................... ............................ 2010 IV I 5.6 3.2 1.96 1.16 2.55 1.59 0.66 1.40 11.3 -0 .41 1.36 0.03 0.79 4.0 3.9 -0 .2 9 0.23 0.63 0.61 1.0 2.4 0.37 0.49 1.15 14.8 -3 .1 0 0.54 4.39 1.67 0.7 -1 .6 8 -0 .1 5 0.61 0.10 0.09 4.1 -1.01 -0 .5 9 0.51 S tru ctu re s ................................ 2.9 -1 7 .3 -1 8 .4 -1 8 .0 -1 4 .0 -0 .6 9 -0 .6 8 -0 .6 2 -0 .4 4 Equipment and softw are...... 6.5 13.4 -0 .3 2 0.83 N o nreside ntia l............................ R e s id e n tia l.................................. Change in private inventories...... N et e x p o rts o f g o o d s a nd s e r v ic e s ............................................ 9.4 -9 .6 -5 .9 -4 .9 1.5 2.4 -2 3 .3 18.9 19.0 3.8 -1 0 .9 0.2 0.10 1.13 -0 .6 7 0.43 0.10 -0 .2 9 -1 .4 2 0.69 3.79 1.65 -0 .81 -3 .5 0 .3 8 / 1.57 0.27 -0 .61 E xpo rts.............................................. 11.8 -4.1 17.8 22.8 5.8 -0 .4 5 1.78 2.36 0 .6 6 - G oods............................................ 8.0 - 6 .3 24.6 34.1 6.7 -0 .4 5 1.58 2.26 0.53 S e rv ic e s ....................................... 3.8 0.1 5.6 2.6 3.8 0.00 0.20 0.10 0.14 Im p orts.............................................. 15.2 -1 4 .7 21.3 15.8 8.9 2.09 -2 .5 9 -2 .0 9 -1 .2 8 G oods............................................ 12.5 -1 6 .5 25.1 20.3 9.0 1.89 -2.41 -1 .0 5 7.0 -1 .9 8.7 0.21 -0 .1 8 -2 .1 4 0.05 -0 .2 3 S e rv ic e s ....................................... 2.7 G o v e rn m e n t c o n s u m p tio n e x p e n d itu re s a n d g ro s s in v e s tm e n t...................................... 20.4 6.7 2.6 -1 .3 -1 .8 1.33 0.55 -0 .2 6 Federal.............................................. 8.1 11.4 8.0 0.0 1.4 0.85 0.62 0.01 0.11 National d e fe n s e ........................ 5.5 14.0 8.4 -3 .6 1.2 0.70 0.45 -0 .2 0 0.07 N ondefense................................. 2.6 6.1 7.0 8.3 1.7 0.15 0.17 0.04 State and lo c a l................................ 12.3 3.9 -0 .6 -2 .2 -3 .8 - 7 .5 0.21 -0 .3 7 0.48 -0 .0 8 -0 .2 7 -0 .4 8 1. The estimates of GDP under the contribution columns are also percent changes. N o t e . Percent changes are from NIPA table 1 .1 .1 , contributions are from NIPA table NIPA table 1 .1 .1 0 . 1 .1 .2 , and shares are from Table 2. Real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by Type of Product [Seasonally adjusted at annual rates] S hare of currentdollar GDP (percent) 2009 2010 I Contribution to percent change in real GDP (percentage points) Change from preceding period (percent) II III 2010 IV I 2009 II III 2010 IV I G ro s s d o m e s tic p r o d u c t 1............... 100.0 -0 .7 2.2 5.6 3.2 - 0 .7 2.2 5.6 3.2 Final sales of dom estic product 99.8 0.7 1.5 1.7 1.6 0.68 1.54 1.77 1 .6 6 ' 0.2 27.0 65.7 7.4 -3 .2 1.5 -9 .7 C hange in private inventories.... G o o d s .................................................. S e rv ic e s .............................................. S tructures............................................ 1.57 -1 .4 2 0.69 3.79 1.60 5.68 3.33 6.3 23.6 13.0 -0 .8 4 1.1 1.1 1.02 1.5 0.96 0.70 0.76 -0 .8 -1 0 .7 -1 3 .7 -0 .8 6 -0 .0 6 -0 .8 9 -1.11 A dd e nd a: Motor vehicle o u tp u t............................ 2.1 G DP excluding m otor vehicle output 97.9 Final sales of co m p ute rs..................... 0.5 G DP excluding final sales of c o m p u te rs ........................................... 99.5 13.3 131.8 -0 .9 25.2 0.8 5.2 -7 .3 -1 3 .9 0.3 -0 .7 5.6 2.3 0.19 1.45 0.45 0 .5 2 ' 2.8 -0 .9 3 0.78 5.11 2.71 44.2 -0 .0 4 -0 .0 8 0.01 0 .1 9 - 5.55 3.05 28.5 3.1 -0 .6 9 2.32 1. The estimates of GDP under the contribution columns are also percent changes. N o t e . Percent changes are from NIPA table 1.2.1, contributions are from NIPA table 1.2.2, and shares are calculated from NIPA table 1.2.5. Consumer spending accelerated in the first quarter of 2010 and added 2.55 percentage points to real GDP growth. The acceleration reflected accelerations in du rable goods and in services. Nondurable goods in creased about the same as in the fourth quarter. Nonresidential fixed investment slowed somewhat, adding 0.38 percentage point to real GDP growth. The slowdown was due to a deceleration in equipment and software. Investment in structures decreased less than in the fourth quarter. Residential investment turned down, subtracting 0.29 percentage point from real GDP growth. The down turn reflected a downturn in “other” structures, mainly brokers’ commissions on home sales. Inventory investment slowed, contributing 1.57 per centage points to real GDP growth after contributing 3.79 percentage points. Exports decelerated sharply, contributing 0.66 per centage point to real GDP growth after contributing 2.36 percentage points. All major categories of goods exports contributed to the deceleration. Exports of services accelerated somewhat. Imports slowed, subtracting 1.28 percentage points to real GDP growth after subtracting 2.09 percentage points. The slowdown mainly reflected a downturn in automotive vehicles, engines, and parts and slow downs in nonautomotive capital goods and in nonau tomotive consumer goods. Petroleum and products turned up. Imports of services also turned up. Federal government spending picked up somewhat. An upturn in national defense spending was partly offset by a slowdown in nondefense spending. State and local government spending decreased more than in the fourth quarter, reducing first-quarter real GDP growth by 0.48 percentage point. Real final sales of domestic product, real GDP less in ventory investment, increased 1.6 percent in the first quarter after increasing 1.7 percent in the fourth quar ter. Motor vehicle output picked up slightly in the first quarter, increasing 28.5 percent after increasing 25.2 percent. Final sales of computers picked up sharply, increasing 44.2 percent after increasing 0.3 percent. May 2010 S urvey of C urrent B u s in e s s 3 Prices Table 3. Prices for Gross Domestic Purchases Prices paid by U.S. residents, as measured by the gross domestic purchases price index, increased 1.7 percent in the first quarter after increasing 2.0 percent in the fourth quarter. The federal pay raise for civilian and military personnel added about 0.2 percentage point to the first-quarter percent change; the pay raise is treated as an increase in the price of employee services purchased by the federal government. [Percent change at annual rates; based on seasonally adjusted index num bers (2005=100)] Contribution to percent change in gross dom estic purchases prices (percentage points) Change from preceding period (percent) 2010 2009 III 2010 2009 IV III IV Gross dom estic purchases1................. 0.5 1.3 2.0 1.7 0.5 1.3 2.0 Personal consum ption expe nditures...... 1.4 2.6 2.5 1.5 0.93 1.77 1.72 Goods......................................................... Durable goods....................................... Nondurable goods................................. Services..................................................... 2.7 5.4 2.6 2.0 0.58 1.17 0.59 0.3 -3.1 0.1 -3 .6 0.02 3.8 9.6 3.9 4.7 0.56 0.7 1.3 2.4 1.3 0.34 Gross private dom estic in vestm ent........ Fixed investment....................................... -4 .5 -5 .7 -0 .7 -1 .3 -0.51 -4 .4 -4 .4 -0 .5 - Nonresidential....................................... -4 .2 -4 .9 -1 .4 -1 .7 Structures.......................................... Equipment and software................... - 10.2 10.1 -1 .5 0.9 0.6 -1 .9 -1 .3 -2 .9 Residential.............................................. -5 .2 -2 .7 2.7 1.3 - - - 1.1 2.0 - Energy goods and services...................... 39.8 20.3 0.3 1.5 2.1 1.4 0.1 0.1 1.9 40.6 19.9 16.1 1.2 1.8 0.6 - - 2.8 2.2 1.4 1.2 1.3 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.9 Prices paid for nonresidential fixed investment de creased somewhat more than in the fourth quarter. The larger first-quarter decrease reflected a larger de crease in equipment and software prices that was partly offset by a small upturn in structures prices. - 0.07 - 0.01 0.19 0.37 0.11 0.16 0.10 0.01 0.14 0.08 0.21 0.11 0.00 1.16 0.69 0.28 1.33 0.20 16.0 -0 .0 5 1.1 0.12 0.04 0.05 - - 0.09 0.02 0.02 Excluding food and energy....................... Gross domestic product................................ 1.13 0.04 -0 .0 9 Nondefense........................................... State and lo ca l.......................................... “Market-based” P C E ................................. Excluding food and energy................... 0.60 -0 .6 3 -0 .0 7 -0.13 -0 .0 7 National defense.................................... Excluding food and energy....................... 0.59 -0.38 -0 .3 5 -0 .0 5 -0.04 - 0.12 -0 .0 8 ............ Personal consumption expenditures (PCE): Food........................................................... Energy goods and services...................... 0.00 1.39 -0.42 -0 .4 7 G overnment consum ption expenditures and gross in vestm ent............................ Addenda: Gross domestic purchases: Food........................................................... 0.22 -0.55 -0 .5 4 -0 .0 6 Change in private inventories................... Federal.................................... - Consumer prices slowed, increasing 1.5 percent after increasing 2.5 percent. The slowdown mainly reflected a slowdown in prices paid for household consumption expenditures for services and a larger decrease in prices paid for durable goods. 0.75 - Prices paid for residential investment slowed, increas ing 1.3 percent after increasing 2.7 percent. 0.02 Prices paid by government accelerated, reflecting ac celerations in prices paid by state and local govern ments and by the federal government, including the federal pay raise. Consumer prices excluding food and energy, a mea sure of the “core” rate of inflation, slowed, increasing 0.6 percent after increasing 1.8 percent. 1. T h e e stim ates under th e contribution colum ns are also percent changes N o te . M ost perce nt ch an ge s are from NIPA table 1.6.7; percent changes for PCE for food and energy goods and s e rvices and fo r PCE excluding food and energy are calculated from index num bers in NIPA table 2.3.4. C on tributions are from NIPA table 1.6.8. The GDP price index increased 0.9 percent, 0.8 per centage point less than the percent increase in the price index for gross domestic purchases, reflecting a larger increase in import prices than in export prices. Note on Prices BEA’s gross domestic purchases price index is the most comprehensive index of prices paid by U.S. residents for all goods and services. It is derived from the prices of personal consumption expenditures (PCE), private investment, and government consumption and investment. BEA also produces price indexes for all components of GDP. The PCE price index is a measure of the total cost of consumer goods and services, including durable goods, nondurable goods, and services. PCE prices for food, energy goods and services, and for all items except food and energy are also estimated and reported. Because prices for food and energy can be volatile, the price measure that excludes food and energy is often used as a measure of underlying, or “core,” inflation (the redefined core PCE price index now includes purchased meals and beverages, such as restaurant meals, and pet food). BEA also prepares a supplemental PCE price index, the “market-based” PCE price index, that is based on market transactions for which there are corresponding price mea sures. This index excludes many imputed expenditures, such as financial services furnished without payment, that are included in PCE and the PCE price index. BEA also prepares a market-based measure that excludes food and energy. 4 GDP and the Econom y May 2010 Personal Income Table 4. Personal Income and Its Disposition [Billions of dollars; quarterly estim ates are seasonally adjusted at annual rates] Level Change from preceding period 2010 I P erson al in c o m e ..................................................................... Com pensation of employees, re ce ive d .......................... 2009 II III 2010 IV I 12,212.8 96.1 -4 3 .6 92.5 115.1 7,841.2 10.1 -6 4 .5 21.7 68.1 W age and salary d isbu rse m e n ts................................. 6,315.5 5.3 -6 3 .9 17.1 49.2 Private in du strie s......................................................... 5,116.4 -7 .2 -6 4 .5 13.5 38.6 Goods-producing indu strie s................................. 1,039.5 -3 9 .5 -2 5 .7 -6 .8 4.2 M a n ufa ctu rin g ..................................................... 649.3 -1 9 .0 -17.1 -0 .2 4.6 Services-producing in d u s trie s ............................ 4,076.9 32.2 -3 8 .8 20.3 34.4 Trade, transportation, and u tilitie s.................. 984.9 -1 3 .0 -1 2 .3 0.4 7.5 O ther services-producing in d u s trie s............. 3,092.0 45.2 -2 6 .5 19.9 26.9 G ove rn m e nt.................................................................. 1,199.1 12.6 0.4 3.8 10.5 Supplem ents to wages and s a la rie s .......................... 1,525.8 4.8 -0 .5 4.5 19.0 Proprietors' income with IVA and C C A d j....................... 1,064.8 -9 .8 9.9 22.4 Fa rm .................................................................................... 30.7 1.6 -3 .1 9.4 N o n fa rm ............................................................................. 1,034.1 -1 1 .4 12.9 13.1 4.5 -4 .5 9.0 Rental incom e of persons with C C A d j........................... 292.0 16.1 15.9 8.8 5.3 Personal incom e receipts on a s s e ts ............................... 1,784.1 -72.1 -1 0 .3 25.4 -4 .4 Personal interest in com e ............................................... 1,238.9 -2 .3 -6 .2 -0 .5 4.5 Personal dividend in c o m e ............................................. 545.2 -6 9 .8 -4.1 25.9 -8 .9 - Personal current transfer re c e ip ts .................................... 2,215.4 153.0 -2 .8 16.4 61.5 984.7 1.2 -8 .4 2.2 20.0 1,142.4 -1 0 4 .7 -1 1 .6 -1 .9 73.3 Less: Contributions for government social insurance Less: Personal current taxes.................................................. Equals: Disposable personal incom e.................................. 11,070.4 200.8 -3 1 .9 94.4 41.7 Less: Personal o u tla ys ............................................................ 10,729.7 8.2 132.3 96.5 130.4 Equals: Personal s a v in g ......................................................... 340.8 192.6 -1 6 4.2 -2 .2 —88.5 j A d d e n d a : S pe cia l fa c to rs in p e rs o n a l in c o m e In governm ent wages and salaries: Federal pay ra ise .............................................................. 17.5 0.2 0.0 0.0 7.2 R eservists’ p a y ................................................................. 10.0 0.9 0.5 -0 .3 0.4 13.6 0.0 0.0 0.0 10.2 40.5 0.0 0.0 -0 .6 0.0 Social security retroactive paym ents.......................... 0.0 0.0 0.0 2.8 -2 .8 Emergency unemployment co m p en satio n ............... 75.3 6.2 10.3 10.1 19.2 One-tim e A R R A p aym en ts............................................ 0.2 54.4 -5 3 .9 -0 .3 0.0 O ther ARRA-related social benefit paym ents........... 50.8 27.0 16.8 -7 .0 5.2 “Making W ork Pay” tax cre d its ...................................... 19.8 0.0 0.0 0.0 19.8 Increase in taxable wage base ..................................... 16.6 0.0 0.0 0.0 10.5 Changes in premiums for supplem entary medical in surance....................................................................... 4.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 2.2 Federal tax law changes (“Making W ork Pay”) ........ -4 0 .8 -46 .1 0.0 0.0 8.9 Refunds, settlem ents, and o th e r................................. 32.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 156.1 In supplem ents to w ages and salaries: Employer contributions for social in suran ce............. In personal current transfer receipts: Cost-of-living adju stm e nts............................................. Personal income, which is only measured in current dollars, increased $115.1 billion in the first quarter af ter increasing $92.5 billion in the fourth quarter. The acceleration primarily reflected accelerations in per sonal current transfer receipts and in wage and salary disbursements that were partly offset by downturns in personal dividend income and in farm proprietors’ in come. The acceleration in wage and salary disbursements re flected accelerations in wages and salaries of private industries and of government. The acceleration in wages and salaries of government mainly reflected the federal pay raise. The downturn in farm proprietors’ income reflected decelerations in the prices received by farmers and in farm output. Personal dividend income turned down, decreasing $8.9 billion after increasing $25.9 billion. The acceleration in personal current transfer receipts primarily reflected an acceleration in “other” govern ment social benefits, many of which were authorized by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009, including expanded unemployment compensation and outlays related to the “Making Work Pay” tax credit. The upturn in personal current taxes reflected a sharp upturn in federal income taxes that was slightly offset by a small downturn in state and local income taxes. The upturn in federal taxes was in both nonwithheld taxes and withheld taxes. In contributions for government social insurance: In personal current taxes: Personal saving decreased $88.5 billion after decreas ing $2.2 billion. The larger decrease in the first quarter reflected a deceleration in disposable personal income and an acceleration in personal outlays. Chart 2. Personal Saving Rate P e rce n t Saving Personal saving—disposable personal income less personal outlays—was $340.8 billion in the first quarter of 2010, $88.5 billion less than in the fourth quarter. The decrease in first-quarter saving reflected an increase of $41.7 billion in disposable personal income that was more than offset by an increase of $130.4 billion in personal outlays. ■Jlllllll S e a s o n a lly a d ju s te d a n n u a l ra te s I I I I I 2006 2007 U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis I I I I 2008 I I I I 2009 I 2010 May 2010 S urvey of C urrent 5 B u s in e s s Source Data for the Advance Estimates Table 5. Source Data and Key Assumptions for the Advance Estimates of GDP for the First Quarter of 2010 [Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates] 2010 2009 Oct. Private fixed investment: Nonresidential structures: Value of new nonresidential construction put in place................................................. Equipment and software: Manufacturers’ shipments of complete aircraft........................................................... Residential structures: Value of new residential construction put in place: Single family.......................................................................................................... Multifamily.............................................................................................................. Change in private inventories: Change in inventories for nondurable manufacturing...................................................... Change in inventories for merchant wholesale and retail industries other than motor vehicles and equipment............................................................................................. Net exports:2 Exports of goods: U.S. exports of goods, international-transactions-accounts basis............................... Excluding gold....................................................................................................... Imports of goods: U.S. imports of goods, international-transactions-accounts basis................................ Excluding gold....................................................................................................... Net exports of goods..................................................................................................... Excluding gold.......................................................................................................... State and local government structures: Value of new construction put in place........................................................................... 1. Assum ption. 2. N onm onetary gold is included in balance-of-paym ents exports and Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. March1 334.8 325.6 315.9 303.8 302.7 303.3 34.0 37.0 48.3 30.2 31.5 29.4 111.3 23.2 113.0 21.4 114.7 19.6 115.5 17.6 115.4 17.6 118.7 18.2 34.5 19.2 -3.0 14.2 30.2 15.4 9.3 38.4 -8.7 3.0 24.3 30.2 1,120.6 1,103.8 1,133.5 1,189.0 1,181.1 1,182.1 1,201.5 1,121.7 1,171.7 1,162.2 1,167.2 1,186.5 1,662.6 1,651.7 -542.0 -547.9 1,714.6 1,811.9 1,773.6 1,797.5 1,847.6 1,703.4 1,801.6 1,763.7 1,788.8 1,838.1 -581.0 -622.9 -592.5 -615.4 -646.1 -581.7 -629.9 -601.5 -621.6 -651.6 287.7 280.5 274.3 269.6 264.7 267.2 im ports, but it is not used directly in estim ating exports and im ports in the national incom e and product accounts. Source Data and Key Assumptions for the Advance Estimates of GDP While the advance estimates of many components of GDP are based on 3 months of source data, some estimates are based on only 2 months of data. For the following items, the number of months for which data are available is shown in parentheses. Personal consumption expenditures: sales of retail stores (3), unit auto and truck sales (3), and consumers’ shares of auto and truck sales (2); Nonresidential fixed investment: unit auto and truck sales (3), construction spending (value put in place) (2), manu facturers’ shipments of machinery and equipment exclud ing aircraft (3), shipments of civilian aircraft (2), and exports and imports of machinery and equipment (2); Residential investment: construction spending (value put in place) (2), single-family housing starts (3), sales of new homes (3), and sales of existing houses (3); Change in private inventories: trade and nondurablegoods manufacturing inventories (2), durable-goods man ufacturing inventories (3), and unit auto and truck invento ries (3); Net exports of goods and services: exports and imports of goods (2); Government consumption expenditures and gross invest ment: federal outlays (3), state and local government con struction spending (value put in place) (2), and state and local government employment (3); Compensation: employment, average hourly earnings, and average weekly hours (3); and GDP prices: consumer price indexes (3), producer price indexes (3), and values and quantities of petroleum imports (2 ). Unavailable source data When source data were unavailable, BEA made various assumptions for March, including the following (table 5): • A small increase in nonresidential structures, • A decrease in aircraft shipments, • Increases in single-family and in multifamily residential structures, • Increases in inventories of nondurable-goods manufac turing industries and of nonmotor vehicle merchant wholesale and retail trade industries, • An increase in exports of goods (excluding gold) and a larger increase in imports of goods (excluding gold), and • An increase in state and local government structures. A more comprehensive list is available on BEA’s Web site. 6 May 2010 ■BEA Modernizing and Enhancing BEA’s International Economic Accounts Recent Progress and Future Directions By Kristy L. Howell and Robert E. Yuskavage HE RECENT global economic crisis has high lighted the critical importance of economic statis tics that clearly depict, in a timely manner, major developments in both the real and the financial sectors of economies around the world. In some respects, the responses of policymakers to the unfolding crisis were hampered by a lack of detailed, timely, and interna tionally comparable information about financial asset and liability flows and their impact on production, employment, and income. The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) is addressing this lack of information on several fronts. For example, it recently proposed some new measures to supplement the national in come and product accounts (NIPAs), also known as the GDP accounts. These new measures would give economists additional tools to analyze the distribution of income across households, sectors, and regions as well as the sustainability of trends in saving, invest ment, and asset prices and other variables im portant to the analysis of business cycles and economic grow th.1 In addition, BEA continues to work with the Federal Reserve Board (FRB) to integrate data from BEA’s ac counts, including the international accounts, with data from the FRB’s flow of funds accounts. The release of recently updated international statis tical standards provides another opportunity for BEA to consider changes that will bring its international economic accounts into closer alignment with those of other nations and that will increase the overall quality and usefulness of the accounts for BEA’s customers. BEA produces the U.S. international transactions ac counts (ITAs) and the U.S international investment position (IIP) accounts along with related statistics on direct investment and the operations of multinational companies. In compiling these statistics, BEA aims to align their structure, content, and presentation with the guidelines issued by international organizations. Last year, the International M onetary Fund (IMF) reT 1. See J. Steven Landefeld, Brent R. Moulton, Joel D. Platt, and Shaunda M. Villones, “ GDP and Beyond: Measuring Economic Progress and Sus tainability,” S urvey o f C urrent B usiness 90 (April 2010): 12-25. Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual (BPM 6).2 leased the sixth edition of the This update, the first since 1993, was coordinated with an update in 2008 of the System of National Accounts (2008 SNA) in order to maximize the overall consis tency between these two key sets of international 2. Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual, 6th ed. (Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund, 2009). IMF Recommendations The International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently announced that it plans to start presenting balance of payments statistics based on the sixth edition of its Balance of Payments and International Investment Posi tion Manual (BPM6) in its own publications in the summer of 2012 with data for year 2011.1 Submissions to the IMF prepared on a BPM6 basis before that date will be converted to a BPM5 (the previous version) basis by the IMF for publication purposes. Afterwards, submissions remaining on a BPM5 basis will be con verted by the IMF to the BPM6 basis. During the next several years, the IMF plans to provide guidance and technical assistance to countries that need help con verting to BPM6, including guidance related to devel oping historical time series and statistical overlap periods. A survey conducted by the IMF in 2009 about BPM6 implementation plans found that while many countries are moving forward with plans to imple ment the new standards, most countries do not expect to achieve full implementation for several years, in some cases even later than the IMF’s 2012 target date. For example, the European Union has decided that its members will be required to convert their presenta tions for reference year 2013 to a BPM6 basis in 2014. 1. International Monetary Fund, “Strategy for Implementing the Sixth Edition of the Balance of Payments and International Invest ment Position ManuaF (paper presented at the 22nd Meeting of the IMF Committee on Balance of Payments Statistics in Shanghai, November 2-4, 2009). See www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/bop/2009/ 09-08.pdf. May 2010 Survey of C urrent guidelines for economic accounts.3 In addition, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Devel opm ent (OECD) recently updated its Benchmark Defi nition of Foreign Direct Investment (BD4), and updated manuals related to statistics of merchandise trade and services trade are also nearing completion.4 Periodic updates to international guidelines serve several pur poses, including making countries’ economic accounts more informative, improving the validity of cross country economic comparisons, and promoting statis tical integration efforts within countries. This article provides an overview of BEA’s initial plans for introducing the new international standards 3. European Commission, International Monetary Fund, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, United Nations, and World Bank, System of National Accounts 2008 (New York: United Nations, 2009). 4. Benchmark Definition of Foreign Direct Investment, 4th ed. (Paris: OECD, 2008). In February 2010, the United Nations Statistical Commis sion approved updated versions of the Manual on Statistics of International Trade in Services and the Manual of International Merchandise Trade Statis tics. Final versions of these updated manuals will be available in the near future. 7 and other improvements, reports on the progress that has taken place so far, previews the changes that will be made in the June 2010 annual revisions of the ITAs and the IIP accounts, and briefly describes other improve ments that are being considered for implementation in later years, including changes in presentation. The article also discusses the known statistical im pact of the changes proposed at this time. Some of the changes to specific line items in the ITAs are offsetting. For example, because of a reclassification of some items from services to goods, goods exports would be $30.4 billion higher in 2008, and services exports would be $30.4 billion lower. Total goods and services exports are thus unchanged. Not all of the changes, however, are offsetting. For example, a new treatm ent of certain capital-account transactions results in a $2.6 billion increase in the capital-account surplus and a corresponding reduction in the statistical discrepancy (or net errors and omissions). For some of the proposed changes to the accounts, the statistical impact cannot yet be quantified. Additional Improvements to BEA Cross-Border Trade Statistics In addition to developing plans to better align its statis tics with internationally recognized standards, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) has recently imple mented several other improvements to the international accounts, notably to trade in services statistics. Many of these improvements were undertaken in response to recommendations made by studies issued by the National Academy of Public Administration, the Ser vices Offshoring Working Group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Industrial Performance Center, and the Government Accountability Office. Recent improvements include the following: Sample frames. BEA has moved to ensure that all com panies that are legally required to report on BEA’s surveys are identified and notified. In particular, BEA has used information from the Census Bureau’s Company Organi zation Survey to expand its mailing lists. As a result, more than 450 firms were recently added to the mailing list for BEA’s quarterly survey of trade in selected services. BEA has also proposed sharing data with the Census Bureau to identify more firms to be included on mailing lists. Survey design. As it has done for the last two decades, BEA continues to improve its surveys. Quarterly surveys, for example, in 2004 replaced annual surveys of selected services, insurance, and financial services, improving the accuracy of the quarterly statistics. More recently, BEA redesigned its surveys of trade in services to collect trans actions between both affiliated and unaffiliated parties on the same forms and at the same level of detail. The B u s in e s s result was a significant improvement in the data for affili ated transactions. Capturing the same information for both affiliated and unaffiliated transactions allows for a more complete picture of cross-border trade in services. In addition, the redesigned surveys included a new openended “other services” category, which captured transac tions that were previously unreported. Insurance data. BEA has introduced a new benchmark survey of insurance transactions by U.S. insurance com panies with foreign persons. This quinquennial survey is designed to capture information from firms that fall below the quarterly reporting thresholds. Travel data. BEA has instituted a survey that collects data on travel expenditures made using credit, debit, and charge cards and that will provide improved data on spending by travelers abroad and in the United States. BEA will use the data from this survey to improve its sta tistics on cross-border travel. Industry accounts. The 2010 comprehensive revision of the industry accounts, to be released in June, will incorporate new information collected from the improved surveys of selected services transactions described above. These improvements will allow the industry accounts to record affiliated imports of services at the same level of detail as unaffiliated imports of ser vices. The result will be a more accurate picture of imported services across the economy, which will enhance the ability of users to measure outsourcing in the U.S. economy. 8 M odernizing and Enhancing B EA’s International Econom ic A ccounts Overview of major changes Changes to the international economic accounts that affect definitions, classifications, methodology, and presentation are typically made by BEA as part of the June annual revision, primarily to allow the changes to be made for as many time periods as possible in order to ensure time series consistency. Nearly all of the new international standards and other improvements being considered fall into one of those categories, and as a re sult, current and future annual revisions are the most appropriate time for making these changes. BEA’s implementation strategy places a priority on first making changes that do not require extensive re search or resources and that do not require changes in presentation. More extensive and more complex changes will be introduced in later annual revisions. Two significant changes have already been introduced. Last year, BEA introduced a new treatm ent of disasterrelated insurance settlements in both the ITAs and the NIPAs that recognizes distinctions between current and capital transfers. In December, BEA introduced a new treatm ent in the ITAs of allocations of special drawing rights by the IMF. For the 2010 annual revision, BEA plans to intro duce several additional changes, which are described in more detail in a later section. Some changes aim to improve the classifications of goods and services: • Record a portion of exports under the U.S. Foreign Military Sales program as goods rather than as ser vices • Record a portion of direct defense expenditures as goods imports rather than recording all such expen ditures as services imports • Record certain goods procured in ports by carriers as goods rather than recording all such expenditures as transportation services Some changes aim to improve the treatm ent of cap ital and financial flows: • Exclude migrants’ personal effects from the capital account • Reclassify perm anent debt between affiliated domestic and foreign banks from direct investment to other investment The first three changes reflect efforts by BEA (1) to comply more fully with the definitions of general m er chandise trade and trade in services set forth in the in ternational standards and (2) to separate goods from services to the extent possible in order to improve the overall comparability of trade statistics with statistics May 2010 for domestic production and consum ption.5 The last two changes reflect efforts to adopt new treatments of certain transactions recommended by the new interna tional standards. The remainder of this article is presented in three sections: • The first section discusses issues associated with implementing new international standards, includ ing an overview of the new standards and their rela tionship to the 2008 SNA, and BEA’s initial plans, focusing on the overall approach and strategy. • The second section discusses changes that have already been made or that will be made in the June 2010 annual revision. This section also identifies changes that BEA is considering for future years. • The final section provides prototypes of some of the new presentations that BEA would like to feature and discusses the likely statistical impacts of the changes based on existing data. To facilitate the transition for users, BEA plans to m aintain pro posed alternative tables as a work-in-progress on the BEA Web site. New International Standards Overview The new international standards were developed partly in response to im portant economic developments that arose after the last set of updates in 1993. Some of the developments include the increased globalization of economic activities, rising innovation and complexity in financial markets, and an increased emphasis on the balance sheet as a tool for understanding economic ac tivity. Implementing new standards and other im provements that respond to these developments allows BEA’s economic accounts to retain their relevance as economic conditions change. While a wide variety of recommendations were made in both BPM6 and BD4, some of the changes are particularly noteworthy for their potential impact on the U.S. international eco nomic accounts. These include the following: • Trade in goods and services should be more strictly defined on a change-of-ownership basis to increase consistency with the treatm ent of the related finan cial flows and with the treatm ent of domestic trans actions and to more clearly identify global 5. BPM6 chapter 10, section 10.8 acknowledges that the value of some service items includes the values of some goods in the cases of travel, con struction, and government goods and services that are not included else where (BPM6, 149-150). May 2010 Survey of C u rrent outsourcing associated with manufactured goods. • Direct investment should be presented on an asset/ liability (gross) basis, and the related income flows should be defined on a receipts/payments basis instead of both being presented on a directional (net) basis. This change would facilitate compari sons with related balance sheet and financial flow statistics. • Financial intermediation services that are indirectly measured— that is, services for which there are no explicit charges— should be recognized in order to account more completely for the different ways that financial services are priced and delivered. • Research and development results should be treated as produced assets and included in the current account with other produced assets rather than as nonproduced assets recorded in the capital account. This change would better reflect their role as assets that contribute to current production. B u s in e s s 9 amples include the new treatm ent of certain disasterrelated insurance settlements and the inclusion in BPM6 of financial intermediation services that are im plicitly priced and delivered. BEA’s approach BEA has reviewed the recommendations in both BPM6 and BD4 with the goal of identifying not only the feasibility of implementation but also the most ap propriate timeframe, taking into account practical matters such as source data availability, resource re quirements, and consistency with BEA’s national, in dustry, and regional accounts. BEA is considering not only the economic and statistical significance of changes but also factors such as data processing re quirements, estimation needs, and implications for publication tables and data dissemination. Some of the recommendations in the new international standards are relatively straightforward and, in principle, should not be difficult to implement, although practical prob Consistency between BPM and SNA lems could arise. However, other changes are more Strong linkages exist between BPM6 and the 2008 SNA complex and will require new source data, new m eth because of concerted efforts to maximize consistency odologies and presentations, and new data processing in the definitions, concepts, principles, and recom applications. mended practices. In an increasingly globalized econ As a result of these differences in the difficulty of omy characterized by large trade, investment, and implementation, BEA has grouped the recommenda financial flows, national statistical offices and interna tions into three categories: (1) changes that can be im tional organizations have recognized that meaningful plemented in the June 2010 annual revision (or that cross-country economic comparisons and coordinated have already been implem ented), (2) changes that are economic policy require highly integrated sets of eco planned for implementation after the June 2010 revi nomic accounts. This emphasis on harm onization and sion but most likely by the June 2012 revision, roughly consistency was maintained throughout the develop consistent with the IMF’s implementation timetable, m ent of the most recent versions of both m anuals.6 and (3) changes for which implementation either does Several steps were taken in the updated manuals to not appear feasible or cannot be determined at this further integrate these international standards. One time. This article describes changes in the first and sec prom inent example was the recommendation for a ond categories and new presentations that could be new treatm ent of goods that cross borders for further featured when BPM6 implementation has been com processing without changing ownership, an economic pleted. phenom enon of growing importance and a clear ex BEA plans to introduce changes in its standard pre ample of the trend towards outsourcing the produc sentations and related data dissemination vehicles be tion of both goods and services. Although this new ginning in June 2012, when it anticipates that most of standard poses considerable practical problems for sta the feasible changes will be ready for release. The pri tistical agencies, both standards ultimately agreed on mary reason for this scheduling approach is to avoid the need to recognize this im portant economic devel confusion about the interpretation of the statistics u n opm ent in a consistent, integrated manner. Other ex til most of the major changes can be implemented on a consistent time series basis. However, to assist its cus 6. Chapter 26 of the 2008 SNA discusses the rest-of-the-world accounts tomers with the transition to the new presentation, and the links to the balance of payments. The introduction to the chapter BEA has developed a set of alternative tables based on notes that both BPM6 and the 2008 SNA use the same macroeconomic framework, but that the balance of payments guidelines provide additional BPM6; these tables will be m aintained as a work-indetail on measurement issues that are especially relevant to international progress until essentially complete implementation transactions or positions (2008 SNA, 541-542). Likewise, Appendix 7 of BPM6 describes the relationship of the SNA to the international accounts can be achieved. Customers will be able to view (BPM6, 289-291). progress on these tables on the BEA Web site. Modernizing and Enhancing B EA’s International Econom ic A ccounts 10 Implementation Plans Changes completed or scheduled for June 2010 This section describes the changes in definitions, clas sifications, and methodology that have recently been introduced into the international economic accounts or that are scheduled to be introduced in the upcom ing June 201 0 annual revision. Changes that primarily affect the current account and the capital account are described first, followed by changes that primarily af fect the financial account and the IIP. Some changes af fect more than one of the accounts. Current and capital accounts Reclassify certain disaster-related insurance settle ments from the current account to the capital ac count. This change was introduced in the June 2009 annual revision of the ITAs, and in July, a parallel change was introduced in the 2009 comprehensive re vision of the NIPAs. Insurance settlements received in connection with major disasters, which are treated as transfers, were removed from the “private remittances and other transfers” line item in the current account and placed in the capital account. This new treatm ent, which corresponds with recommendations in BPM6 and the 2008 SNA, acknowledges the capital nature of disaster-related losses and removes volatility not re lated to current production and income from the cur rent account. Periods with major disasters affected by this change include the third quarters of 1992, 2001, 2004, 2005, and 2008. Reclassify transactions in goods and services. In ternational guidelines recommend separating goods and services transactions to the extent possible given the nature of the source data used to compile the ac counts. Currently, a num ber of accounts in the ITAs commingle goods and services. A clearer separation of goods and services will more closely align BEA’s goods and services statistics with international economic ac counting concepts and definitions and will improve the comparability of statistics for trade and domestic production. W ith the June 2010 annual revision, BEA plans to implement the following: • Reclassify certain exports and imports of militaryrelated goods from services to goods. Currently, these military-related exports and imports of goods and services are recorded on a transactor basis and are combined in the services account. Exports of goods under the U.S. Foreign Military Sales (FMS) program are included in services as “transfers under May 2010 U.S. military agency sales contracts,” and military imports of goods are included in services as “direct defense expenditures.” Beginning with statistics for 1999, exports of goods related to the FMS program will be moved from “transfers under U.S. military agency sales contracts” to goods under “exports, n.e.c.” (not elsewhere classified), which includes commercial sales of military-type goods. Also beginning with statistics for 1999, petroleum p u r chases abroad by the U.S. military will be moved from “direct defense expenditures” to goods under “petroleum and products.” Other goods transac tions will remain in “transfers under U.S. military agency sales contracts” and “direct defense expendi tures” because they are commingled in BEA’s source data. BEA will continue research to develop a m eth odology to separately identify the remaining goodsrelated transactions.7 • Reclassify goods procured by air and ocean carriers in foreign ports from services to goods. Currently, expenditures on goods and services by foreign air and ocean carriers in U.S. ports (exports) and by U.S. carriers in foreign ports (im ports) are included in “other” transportation services. Beginning with statistics for 1999, fuel expenditures by U.S. and for eign air and ocean carriers will be moved from “other” transportation services to goods under “petroleum and products.” Other goods transac tions will remain in “other” transportation services because they are commingled in BEA’s source data. However, BEA will continue research to develop a m ethodology for separately identifying the rem ain ing goods-related transactions. Exclude m igrants’ transfers from the capital ac count. M igrants’ transfers, a measure of the net worth of individuals who immigrate or emigrate during the period, do not involve a change of ownership, and in ternational guidelines no longer call for them to be re corded as international transactions. Beginning with statistics for 1982, m igrants’ transfers will be removed from the capital account. This change more clearly fo cuses the ITAs on transactions involving a change of ownership. M igrants’ investments in their country of origin will continue to be recorded in the IIP accounts when m igration changes the status of these invest ments from domestic to international, but they will enter the position as “other changes” in value rather than as financial flows. 7. BEA plans to maintain these series as they are currently defined in a supplemental presentation in order to assist customers who use these series to obtain a complete picture of the role of the U.S. military in trade. May 2010 S urvey of C urrent Financial account and IIP accounts Treat allocations of special drawing rights (SDRs) as transactions. BEA implemented the new treatm ent of allocations of SDRs recommended by BPM6 with the December 2009 release of the ITAs for the third quarter of 2009. The $47.6 billion in SDRs allocated to the United States in the third quarter by the IMF were in cluded in “U.S. official reserve assets,” and the related increases in the liabilities of the U.S. Treasury were in cluded in “other” U.S. government liabilities. Prior to this change, BEA followed the recom mendation of BPM5 and excluded SDR allocations from interna tional transactions. In order to treat all SDR allocations consistently, BEA departed from its usual practice of making histor ical revisions only in the June release of the ITAs.8 In stead, it revised the ITAs to include the six earlier allocations of SDRs in the same way that the thirdquarter allocations were included. Revisions to ac count for these allocations were made for the first quarters of 1970, 1971, 1972, 1979, 1980, and 1981. To complete the implementation of BPM6 recom mendations on the treatm ent of SDR allocations, BEA will revise the IIP through yearend 2008 by adding the U.S. reserve-related liabilities resulting from the alloca tions to the “other” U.S. government liabilities compo nent. Allocations of SDRs have been included in the SDR component of U.S. reserve assets in the IIP since the first allocation in 1970; however, no corresponding liability was recognized. In addition, the allocations will now enter the position as financial flows, following the BPM6 recommendations; previously, they entered the position as “other changes” in value. This m ethod ology also will be reflected in the treatm ent of the SDR allocations in 2009 in the presentation of the year-toyear changes shown in IIP table 1. Record perm anent debt between selected affiliated financial intermediaries as “other investment” rather than as direct investment. In general, debt between af filiated entities (intercompany debt) has been classified as direct investment. However, international standards also recognized that debt transactions between selected affiliated financial intermediaries are more strongly re lated to their role as intermediaries than to a direct investment relationship. In this vein, BPM5 recom mended that only perm anent debt between these enti ties be classified as direct investment; perm anent debt was defined as debt that represents a lasting interest. Nonperm anent debt between these entities was classi fied as other investment. Perhaps in recognition of the B u s in e s s 11 practical difficulties in assessing “permanence,” BPM6 removes the exception and excludes from direct invest m ent all debt transactions (perm anent and nonperm a nent) between affiliated financial intermediaries. BEA currently classifies perm anent debt between af filiated banks, bank holding companies, and financial holding companies as direct investment, following BPM5. Beginning with statistics for the first quarter of 2007, perm anent debt between these affiliated finan cial intermediaries will be excluded from direct invest m ent and will be recorded as “other investment.”9 Changes planned for later years This section briefly describes major changes that can not be implemented in lune 2010 but are being consid ered for implementation in a later annual revision. These changes generally are more complex than those that have already been made or are planned for this year’s annual revision and involve changes in defini tions, classifications, methodology, or presentations. Some of them require new source data or other re sources. In a few cases, it is not clear that implem enta tion will prove feasible even within the next 2 years. Current and capital accounts Introduce manufacturing services on physical inputs owned by others (goods for processing). This recom m endation changes the treatm ent of goods that are sent abroad for further processing and subsequently returned without any change in ownership. Under BEA’s current treatm ent, which follows BPM5, a change in ownership is imputed, and as a result, these goods are included in merchandise exports and im ports along with other merchandise that crosses the border. Under the new BPM6 standard, no change in ownership is imputed, the goods are excluded from merchandise trade, and the difference between the two gross flows is recorded as a service, measured by the processing fee charged by the manufacturing service provider. At this time, source data are not available that would allow this change to be implemented, pri marily because these goods cannot be separately iden tified in the merchandise trade statistics. BEA is conducting research aimed at identifying realistic op tions for implementing this change. Anticipating the need to begin to develop inform a tion on the relative size and importance of U.S. trade in processing services, BEA has added a question to its 9. “Other investment” is a new category that will be included in a new presentation of the accounts. Although this new category is included in the prototype tables presented later in this article, the reclassification of perma 8. See the box “Allocations of Special Drawing Rights in the ITAs” in Dou nent debt between affiliated financial intermediaries is not incorporated in glas B. Weinberg, “International Transactions: Third Quarter of 2009,” S ur those tables at this time. However, this change in treatment will be incorpo vey 90 (January 2010): 17. rated into the standard presentation of the accounts in June 2010. 12 M odernizing and Enhancing B E A ’s International Econom ic A ccounts 2009 Benchmark Survey of U.S. Direct Investment Abroad to identify U.S. parent companies that meet the BPM6 criteria for engaging in contract m anufac turing, either as purchasers or sellers of manufacturing services. BEA and the Census Bureau are also explor ing options for collecting similar information in cer tain Census Bureau surveys. Because this change in treatm ent also has im portant implications for the na tional and industry accounts, BEA is taking a coordi nated approach to ensure that changes are made as consistently as possible throughout all of BEA’s pro gram areas. Reclassify merchanting from services to goods. BEA currently classifies merchanting— which is the purchase and subsequent resale of goods abroad with out substantial transform ation and without the goods entering or exiting the United States— as a service transaction. Under this treatm ent, which follows BPM5, BEA obtains information on the difference be tween the sales proceeds and the acquisition cost of the goods and includes these net receipts as a component of “other” private services. BPM6 recommends classi fying merchanting as a com ponent of trade in goods under the new category “net exports of goods under merchanting.” Like the change to goods for processing, discussed above, this change eliminates an exception to the change-in-ownership principle. BPM6 recom mends presenting the gross flows associated with m er chanting transactions— goods acquired under merchanting and goods sold under merchanting. BEA’s source data on goods do not cover these flows, because the goods do not cross the U.S. customs frontier. Ab sent new source data covering the gross flows, BEA would consider simply reclassifying the net values that it currently collects from services to the new m erchant ing category under goods. Reclassify transactions related to intellectual property. BPM6 recommends a num ber of changes to the treatm ent of transactions related to the use and sale of intellectual property. Currently, transactions for the use of intellectual property and some transactions for the sale of intellectual property are commingled in BEA’s source data and are recorded indistinguishably under the services category “royalties and license fees.” To conform to the BPM6 recommendations, transac tions for the use of intellectual property will need to be separated from those for the outright sale of intellec tual property. In addition, transactions related to the outright sale of intellectual property, and certain trans actions related to its use, will need to be reclassified to newly defined categories related to research and devel opm ent services, computer services, and audiovisual May 2010 and related services.10 Finally, changes in nomenclature will be necessary. At this time, BEA is evaluating its data collection procedures to determine if transactions related to use and to sale can be collected separately. Introduce financial intermediation services indi rectly measured (FISIM). Financial services include intermediation services provided by banks and other financial firms. These services may be charged either explicitly (as in commissions and fees) or implicitly. FISIM captures implicit fees obtained by financial in stitutions for lending and deposit-taking services through the margin between interest payable for loans and deposits and the cost of funds. The cost of funds is estimated using a reference interest rate. The implicit service fees charged for lending and deposit-taking ser vices need to be separated from interest income. The use of a reference rate, which reflects the cost to finan cial institutions of funds obtained in the market, sepa rates interest into pure interest income and FISIM. The concept of FISIM was introduced in the SNA in 1968 as im puted bank service charges, but it was not extended to the international accounts until BPM6. BEA has included FISIM in exports of services (but not imports of services) since the comprehensive revision of the NIPAs that was released in 1985. BEA expanded the allocation of FISIM to include borrowers as well as depositors, as recommended in the 1993 SNA, as part of the 2003 comprehensive NIPA revision. Before FISIM can be introduced in the international accounts, certain issues need to be resolved. These issues include determining the most appropriate reference interest rate representing the “pure” cost of money, defining how FISIM on banks’ loans and deposits would be ap plied to existing source data, and reconciling the ap proaches taken for the ITAs and the NIPAs. Restructure the investment income account. The investment income account will be restructured to classify transactions according to m ajor functional cat egories and to present direct investment income flows according to the asset/liability basis. These changes are described in the next section. Financial account and IIP Restructure the financial account. BEA plans to make significant changes to the presentation of the financial account in order to adopt a classification by functional category that was first introduced in BPM5. Five m a jor functional y categories— direct investment, portfo lio investment, other investment, reserve assets, and 10. These and other new categories are part of a broader set of changes in presentation that are described later in this article and that will be described in more detail in future articles in the Survey o f C u rre n t Business. May 2010 S urvey of C urrent financial derivatives—will replace the current financial-account structure, which is a mix of classification by U.S. sector, by sector of the foreign counterparty, by reporter, and by instrum ent. W ithin each of the func tional categories, transactions will be classified accord ing to the type of instrum ent. “U.S.-owned assets abroad” will be referred to as “net acquisition of finan cial assets,” and “foreign-owned assets in the United States” will be referred to as “net incurrence of liabili ties” (both will exclude financial derivatives). Financial derivatives will continue to be shown on a net basis, because of the absence of information in the source data on gross flows.11 Investment income will be classified according to the same functional categories introduced in the finan cial account. This detail on investment income, to gether with an IIP account that is classified by functional category (which BEA plans to develop), will give users the information needed to calculate rates of return by major type of investment. Present direct investment on an asset/liability ba sis. BPM6 and BD4 recommend that direct investment be presented in international economic accounts on an asset/liability basis rather than the directional basis that had been recommended in earlier international guidance. On a directional basis, which is the current BEA m ethod, direct investment statistics in both the current and financial account of the ITAs and in the IIP are organized according to the direction of the di rect investment relationship, that is, according to whether the direct investor is domestic or foreign. On an asset/liability basis, direct investment statistics are organized according to whether the investment relates to an asset or liability. The difference between the two approaches can be seen in the treatm ent of outward direct investment transactions in the financial account of the ITAs. On a directional basis, the financial account includes a di rect investment abroad account within “U.S.-owned assets abroad” that covers transactions related to U.S. parent companies’ investments in their foreign affili ates as well as transactions related to foreign affiliates’ investments in their U.S. parents. Because investments by affiliates in their parents represent financial obliga tions (liabilities) of the parents, transactions related to these “reverse investments” are netted against those re lated to the parent companies’ investments in foreign B u s in e s s 13 affiliates, which represent financial claims (assets) of the parents.12 In contrast, on an asset/liability basis, the financialaccount category “net acquisition of financial assets” contains, as described in BPM6, a direct investment as set account that includes only transactions related to assets. Consequently, this account covers transactions related to U.S. parent companies’ investments in their foreign affiliates but not those related to the affiliates’ investments in their parents. The latter are recorded in a direct investment liabilities account along with trans actions related to foreign residents’ direct investments in domestic companies. (However, any changes in the claims of these foreign-owned domestic companies on their foreign parent companies are recorded in the di rect investment assets account described above.) The new standards also recommend breaking direct investment down into three categories— investment by a direct investor in its direct investment enterprise, in vestment by a direct investment enterprise in its direct investor (reverse investment), and investment between “fellow enterprises.”13 BEA’s direct investment data col lection system is not designed to capture reverse equity investment.14 It captures some, but not all, investments between fellow enterprises.15 Because this information is needed to present the direct investment accounts on a true asset/liability basis, BEA will not be able to adopt this recommendation completely. However, some data on intercompany debt are available at this level of detail and will be used to move towards an ap proximation of the asset/liability basis. The new standards recommend organizing direct investment statistics in the main presentation of the ITAs and IIP on an asset/liability basis. However, the 12. Under the standards’ recommendation for the presentation of direct investment statistics on the directional basis, transactions related to a for eign affiliate’s investment in its U.S. parent are included in the direct invest ment abroad account provided that the affiliate’s equity investment in the parent is less than 10 percent. If the affiliate’s equity investment is 10 per cent or more, the affiliate has a direct investment in its parent and its equity and debt investment in the parent is included in the inward direct invest ment account. 13. Fellow enterprises are defined in BPM6, chapter 6, section 6.17(c), as “enterprises that are under the control or influence of the same immediate or indirect investor, but neither fellow enterprise controls or influences the other fellow enterprise”(BPM6, 6). 14. Reverse equity investment transactions are included in source data on portfolio investment collected by the U.S. Department of the Treasury and cannot be separately identified. Although reverse equity investment is believed to be small, BEA has added questions to the 2009 Benchmark Sur vey of U.S. Direct Investment Abroad to gauge its size. Similar questions maybe added to the 2012 Benchmark Survey of Foreign Direct Investment 11. International standards recommend presenting financial derivatives in the United States. on a gross (asset/liability) basis; however, net settlements are acceptable 15. While the U.S. accounts capture investments among fellow enter where gross reporting is not feasible. Given current source data limitations, prises, some investments among these enterprises are included in portfolio BEA cannot currently present derivatives on a gross basis. There are no investment and cannot be separately identified. Other transactions are plans to expand source data collection to capture gross transactions at this included in direct investment but cannot be distinguished from other direct time. investment transactions. 14 M odernizing and Enhancing B EA’s International Econom ic A ccounts directional basis is recommended for geographical and industry breakdowns. BEA expects to be able to imple m ent both of these recommendations in a future an nual revision. Introduce new financial assets. BPM6 introduces a new class of instrum ents under other invest m ent— “insurance, pension, and standardized guaran tee schemes”— which includes insurance technical reserves (prepayments of premiums and reserves against outstanding insurance claims), pension entitle ments (the claims of pensioners on their employers or pension funds), and provisions for calls under stan dardized guarantees (prepayments of net fees and pro visions to meet outstanding calls under standardized loan guarantees). BPM6 also introduces employee stock options, which are recommended to be recorded in the financial account with a corresponding offset entry in the current account. BEA currently does not have source data or methodologies in place to include m ost of these financial instruments in the interna tional accounts.16 More research is needed to identify new data sources or develop new estimation m ethod ologies. Changes in Presentation One of BEA’s principal objectives in adopting the new international standards and other improvements is to bring its standard presentations into better alignment with the presentation recommended by BPM6. BEA’s current presentation of the international economic ac counts differs in several significant ways from the IMF standard presentation, particularly for the financial ac count and the IIP. Adopting the BPM6 standard pre sentation will also improve the alignment of BEA’s presentation with those of several major partner coun tries. Changes to BEA’s standard presentation should ensure that U.S. balance of payments statistics are more clearly identified, better understood by key cus tomers, and easier to compare with similar statistics from other countries. Currently, BEA’s presentation of the ITAs includes a summ ary table of highly aggregated statistics that facil itate discussion of broad trends for recent periods, la beled table A in previous articles; a table showing additional detail for the current account, the capital May 2010 account, and the financial account that is used for more in-depth analysis of recent quarterly changes, la beled table 1; and a set of supplementary tables that provide more detailed analytical information for many of the components of table 1, labeled tables 2 - 1 1.17 Country and area detail for the table 1 series are pro vided in table 12. As described above, BEA does not plan to introduce major changes to its standard presentations until most of the changes in definitions, classifications, and m eth odology that prove feasible have been developed. For the purpose of this article, however, prototypes are presented for new versions of table A (see page 17) and table 1 (see page 20 ), which include annual time series statistics for 2 0 0 6 -2 0 0 8 . These statistics largely reflect changes in presentation, although an attem pt has been made to incorporate definition changes that involve relatively simple reclassifications of transactions from one component of the ITAs to another. This prototype presentation will be expanded to include other changes in definitions and methodology as they are developed and will be available on the BEA Web site for review and comment. Future articles will discuss changes to the presentation of the more detailed supplementary and geographic tables. Major differences The prototypes for alternative table A and table 1 at tem pt to present the accounts essentially as they will appear in a new presentation that is planned for 2012. W hen possible, adjustments based on current data have been made to existing statistics to match the defi nitions and classifications recommended by the new standards. For example, in table 1, statistics for non m onetary gold are removed from general merchandise and included as a separate category under total goods. Several characteristics of the alternative presenta tion represent major changes from BEA’s standard pre sentation. First, in the new tables, the uniform use of negative signs for debit entries is eliminated. Previ ously, credits (exports, income receivable, transfers re ceived, reductions in assets, and increases in liabilities) were presented as positive numbers, and debits (im ports, income payable, transfers made, increases in as sets, and reductions in liabilities) were presented as negative numbers. Although this convention facilitated 16. Insurance technical reserves are currently recorded in the U.S. accounts but are not separately identified. Insurance companies’ unearned some types of aggregation across accounts, it has premiums and unpaid claims are captured as advanced receipts/advanced proved to be a source of confusion for a significant payments and trade receivables/trade payables on the Treasury Department num ber of data users. Under the new presentation, survey of commercial claims and liabilities (for unrelated party transac tions) and on BEA’s direct investment surveys (for transactions between parents and affiliates). However, the insurance-related transactions cannot be distinguished from other changes in claims and liabilities reported on these surveys. 17. For comparison, see table A and tables 1-12 in Douglas B . Weinberg and Erin M. Whitaker, “International Transactions: Fourth Quarter 2009 and Year 2009,” S u r v ey o f C u r r e n t B u sin ess 90 (April 2010): 26-61. May 2010 Survey of C urrent positive signs are used to show exports and imports, income receipts and payments, transfers made and re ceived, and increases in assets and liabilities. Negative signs are used only to indicate negative investment in come (losses) and decreases in assets or in liabilities (as occur, for example, if investments are sold o ff).18 Current-account and capital-account balances are calcu lated as the difference between the underlying gross flows (exports minus imports, for example). For the fi nancial account, net investment is calculated as the dif ference between the acquisition of assets and the incurrence of liabilities. These new conventions should not only make the ITAs easier to understand and inter pret but should also make them easier to relate to the corresponding changes in asset and liability positions in the IIP. The new tables also adopt the nomenclature of pri mary and secondary income introduced into the cur rent account in BPM6. Primary income is income generated from current production and is largely equivalent to income receipts and income payments that are shown in BEA’s current ITA table 1. Secondary income is largely equivalent to current transfers.19 However, BPM6 introduces some definition changes to these accounts that affect the components included in each series. Not all of these definition changes are re flected in the alternative presentation tables. The alternative presentation reflects significant changes to the presentation of the financial account to adopt the classification by functional category dis cussed earlier. Transactions are classified according to functional category and then according to the type of instrum ent. Investment income is classified by func tional category as well. Direct investment is presented on an asset/liability basis rather than on a directional basis to the extent possible, given the data that are available. As described above, BEA’s current data collection system for direct investment does not collect reverse equity investment nor equity and debt investment between fellow enter prises according to the definitions in BPM6; therefore, the asset/liability basis of presentation can only be ap proximated. BEA does collect information on reverse intercompany debt investment, which allows this type 18. Exceptions may arise in a few highly specialized types of transactions. However, these are likely to be manifested only rarely in published totals. For example, merchanting transactions (goods bought and resold abroad by U.S. residents without the goods ever physically entering or leaving the United States) may in certain circumstances result in negative entries under exports. 19. Current transfers include government grants and institutional and personal remittances. B u s in e s s 15 of investment to be shown in the new presentation on a full asset/liability basis. Therefore, instead of netting U.S. parents’ liabilities to their foreign affiliates against their claims on these affiliates, as is done currently, the former are recorded in the prototype tables as liabili ties and the latter as assets. Similarly, U.S. affiliates’ in tercompany claims on their foreign parent groups are recorded as assets, and their liabilities to their foreign parent groups are recorded as liabilities. Correspond ing adjustments are made to the interest income on di rect investment in the current account. While these changes go a long way in moving BEA towards the BPM6-recommended presentation, some accounts will require additional methodological work or more detailed source data to fully implement BPM6 definitions and concepts. For some accounts, the re quired source data are not currently available, or trans actions are included in existing accounts but are not separately identifiable. These are denoted “n.a.” (not available) and include items such as goods for process ing and insurance technical reserves, pension entitle ments, and standardized guarantee schemes in the financial account. Other items are shown in the alternative presenta tion using current statistics based on BPM5 definitions when it was not possible to adjust the accounts to match the BPM6 definitions with current data. These items are discussed in more detail below. Insurance services. Although BPM6 introduces a category called “insurance and pension services,” only the currently published category “insurance services” is shown in the new presentation at this time. The name change is not reflected in the new presentation because pension services are not separately measured in the international accounts. Explicit service charges associated with pensions are currently included indistinguishably in financial services. BPM6 also calls for identification of implicitly charged pension services. Research will be required to determine whether source data and a methodology can be developed that would provide a basis for estimating such charges separately from the pension flows in which they are now em bod ied. Royalty and license fees. The new presentation also maintains the current services category “royalties and license fees.” BPM6 introduces a category called “charges for the use of intellectual property, n.i.e” (not included elsewhere). As discussed earlier, BEA’s source data currently commingle transactions for the use and sale of intellectual property within royalties and license fees. Changes in data collection likely will be necessary 16 M odernizing and Enhancing BEA ’s International Econom ic A ccounts to provide a basis for separating these transactions into categories for the “use” and the “sale” of intellectual property. Merchanting. According to the new standards, goods under merchanting are to be shown as net ex ports in the goods account. The gross flows associated with merchanting should also be reported. BEA cur rently collects only net receipts for merchanting and classifies these receipts in “other” private services. This am ount has been moved to the goods account in the alternative presentation; however, information on the gross flows of the underlying goods is not currently available. Employee stock options. BPM6 introduces em ployee stock options (ESOs) in the financial account. The granting and exercising of ESOs should be in cluded with financial derivatives in a functional cate gory referred to as “financial derivatives (other than reserves) and employee stock options.” The corre sponding offset should be recorded in the current ac count as compensation of employees. These changes are not reflected in the new presentation, because cur rently, no source data or methodologies are available for cross-border ESOs. More research is needed to identify new data sources or develop new estimation methodologies. Loans. These are defined by BPM6 as extensions of credit that are not negotiable and are not considered debt securities. In the prototype financial account, loans are shown as a category under other investment. For these prototype tables, estimates of “loans” include Feedback on Proposed Changes BEA plans to communicate with its major customers as part of its efforts to ensure that the changes being considered are well understood before they are imple mented and to obtain feedback that could help improve the overall process and the ultimate results. As a step in that direction, BEA plans to maintain pro posed alternative presentations for both its standard and supplemental tables as a work-in-progress on the BEA Web site. We also plan to provide periodic progress reports that will describe updates to our plans and other developments. BEA encourages its customers to look closely at the proposed changes and to provide comments and suggestions to help guide its efforts. Comments can be directed to internationalaccounts@bea.gov. May 2010 two main items: (1) transactions for repurchase agree ments (which are classified as loans according to BPM6) and (2) a portion of transactions currently in cluded in “other claims” and “other liabilities.” The amounts in “other claims” and “other liabilities” not classified as loans are included in the line items “other accounts receivable” and “other accounts payable” in the prototype table 1. BEA is looking into better esti mation procedures or possible new data collection to improve these estimates. Prototype tables Prototype tables for the alternative presentation in cluding illustrative estimates are presented in table A and table 1. These illustrative estimates, while largely based on published statistics, are intended to give users a preliminary indication of the magnitude of the changes to the accounts and should not be viewed as official statistics from the international accounts. The prototype table A retains the same focus on transactions at a high level of aggregation, but the em phasis shifts from the components of gross flows for exports, imports, income, and financial transactions to balances and other net flows. For example, in the cur rent table A, the top line provides statistics for exports of goods and services and income receipts; in contrast, the prototype table A features the current-account bal ance on the top line. Balances on goods, services, pri mary income, and secondary income are highlighted, with the corresponding gross flows shown directly be low the balances. In the current table A, these balances are presented in m em oranda at the bottom of the ta ble. In addition, the prototype table A shows the gross flows (receipts and payments) underlying the balance on secondary income (current transfers), whereas in the current presentation, only net unilateral current transfers are shown. The financial account features net flows (acquisition of assets less incurrence of liabilities) by functional category. Transactions in assets and lia bilities are shown directly below the net flows except in the case of financial derivatives and reserve assets. Fi nancial derivatives continue to be shown on a net basis because of the absence of gross flows in the source data. The functional category reserve assets is where the official reserve assets of the United States are re corded; however, any reserve-related liabilities are commingled with all liabilities under the other functional categories. Following BPM6 terminology, “net errors and omissions” replaces the “statistical discrepancy.” May 2010 S urvey of C urrent In the prototype table 1, the structure of the current account is similar to that of the current table 1, but several differences are noteworthy. The major aggre gate under the current account includes exports (im ports) of goods and services and receipts (payments) of both prim ary and secondary income. In BEA’s cur rent standard presentation, secondary income, which is called current transfers, is shown as a separate com ponent of the current account. In addition, exports and imports of goods on a balance of payments basis are shown in the prototype table 1 with detail for the major end-use categories. In the current presentation, this breakdown is only provided in the supplemental table 2. Additional services detail and other items are provided in order to conform more closely to BPM6Table A. U.S. International Transactions (Prototype) [Billions of dollars] Line 2006 1 C u rre n t-a c c o u n t b a la n c e .................................................... 2007 2008 -8 0 3 .5 -7 2 6 .6 -706.1 Exports of goods and services and incom e receipts 2,207.5 2,535.1 2,666.8 3 Im ports of goods and services and incom e payments 3,011.0 3,261.6 3,372.9 4 G o o d s a nd s e rv ic e s b a la n c e ........................................ -7 6 0 .4 -7 0 1 .4 -6 9 5 .9 5 E x p o rts .............................................................................. 1,451.7 1,643.2 1,826.6 6 Im ports............................................................................... 2,212.0 2,344.6 2,522.5 7 G o o d s b a la n c e .............................................................. -8 3 7 .9 -8 2 0.6 -8 3 3 .2 8 E xports.......................................................................... 1,040.2 1,164.5 1,307.4 2,140.6 2 9 Im p orts.......................................................................... 1,878.1 1,985.1 10 S erv ic e s b a la n c e .......................................................... 77.5 119.1 137.2 11 E xports.......................................................................... 411.5 478.6 519.2 12 Im p orts.......................................................................... 334.0 359.5 381.9 13 P rim a ry in com e b a la n c e ................................................ 48.1 90.8 118.2 14 R eceipts............................................................................. 690.6 829.5 774.9 15 P aym ents.......................................................................... 642.6 738.6 656.7 16 S e c o n d a ry in c o m e (tra n s fe rs ) b a la n c e .................... -9 1 .3 -1 1 6 .0 -1 2 8 .4 17 R eceipts............................................................................. 65.1 62.4 65.3 18 P aym ents.......................................................................... 156.4 178.4 193.7 19 C a p ita l-a c c o u n t b a la n c e ..................................................... -1 .8 0.4 3.6 0.0 0.5 3.8 20 C re d its .................................................................................... 21 D e b its ..................................................................................... 1.8 0.1 0.2 ?? F in a n c ia l a c c o u n t, n e t ........................................................ -8 0 9 .2 -6 6 3.6 -505.1 ?3 F in a n c ia l d e riv a tiv e s , n e t............................................... -2 9 .7 -6 .2 28.9 24 -7 7 9 .4 -6 5 7.3 -5 3 4 .0 25 F in a n c ia l a c c o u n t, net, e x c lu d in g fin a n c ia l d e r iv a tiv e s ...................................................................... A s s e ts ................................................................................ 1,336.9 1,586.0 13.6 26 L iabilities........................................................................... 2,116.3 2,243.4 547.6 27 D ire c t in ve s tm e n t, n e t ................................................ 1.8 122.8 12.3 28 A s s e ts ............................................................................ 296.1 512.5 345.5 29 L iab ilities....................................................................... 294.3 389.7 333.3 30 P o rtfo lio in v e s tm e n t, n e t............................................ -6 2 7 .8 -7 5 8 .7 -645.1 31 A s s e ts ............................................................................ 498.9 396.0 -1 1 7 .4 32 L iab ilitie s....................................................................... 1,126.7 1,154.7 527.7 33 O th e r in vestm en t, n e t.................................................. -1 5 1 .0 -2 1 .6 94.0 34 A s s e ts ............................................................................ 544.3 677.4 -2 1 9 .4 L iab ilitie s....................................................................... -3 1 3 .4 695.3 699.0 R eserve a s s e ts ............................................................. -2 .4 0.1 4.8 37 Net e rro rs a nd o m is s io n s 1 ................................................ -3 .8 62.6 197.4 35 36 1. N et financial account less the sum o f the current-account and capital-a cco u n t balances (line 22 line 1 - line 19). 17 B u s in e s s recommended standard components. Some of this de tail recognizes new treatments in BPM6, such as “m an ufacturing services on physical inputs owned by others” (goods for processing). Other services catego ries have names similar to those in the current presen tation but reflect new content based on the classifications recommended in BPM6. For example, travel in table 1 reflects the BPM6 definition of travel, which includes receipts from education and medical services provided to nonresidents while in the host economy and payments abroad for those services ac quired by residents while in a foreign country. These services were previously classified elsewhere. The capital and financial accounts are also pre sented differently in the prototype tables. Gross flows are now shown in the capital account, which previ ously showed only net flows. The financial account is significantly affected by the new presentation. Assets and liabilities are classified according to functional cat egory and then by type of financial instrum ent. “Net financial flows” is also introduced in the prototype ta ble 1. “Net acquisition of financial assets” replaces “U.S.-owned assets abroad,” and “net incurrence of lia bilities” replaces “foreign-owned assets in the United States.” Both aggregates exclude financial derivatives, which continue to be shown on a net basis in the bal ance of payments as a separate functional category. Acknowledgments BEA’s International Economic Accounts Moderniza tion and Enhancement Steering Committee made sig nificant contributions to this article. Steering committee members include Obie G. Whichard, Asso ciate Director for International Economics, Robert E. Yuskavage, Chief of the Balance of Payments Division (BPD), David H. Galler, Chief of the Direct Invest ment Division, Ned A. Howenstine (chair), Assistant BPD Chief for Research and Analysis, Paul W. Farello, Assistant BPD Chief for Goods and Services Trade, Christopher A. Gohrband, Chief of BPD’s Private Capital Branch, and Kristy L. Howell, Special Assistant to the Associate Director. Other BPD staff who con tributed to the article include Lori K. Chang, Anne E. Flatness, and Douglas B. Weinberg. 18 M odernizing and Enhancing BEA ’s International Econom ic A ccounts Table B compares the current and proposed struc tures for the financial account, using statistics for 2007. The left panel shows the financial account according to the current financial-account structure, which classi fies transactions in U.S.-owned assets abroad first by U.S. sector (official, government, or private) and then according to instrum ent or reporter-type, and transac tions in foreign-owned assets in the United States ac cording to the sector of the foreign counterparty (official or private foreigners) and then by instrum ent or reporter-type. The new structure for the financial May 2010 account (right panel) arranges asset and liability trans actions first according to the functional category and then according to instrum ent, with additional detail on original m aturity for debt securities. Statistical impacts The statistical impacts of changes to selected series that are known at this time are shown in table C. The larg est impact on the current account results from record ing secondary income (transfer) receipts and payments on a gross basis. Both receipts and payments increase Table B. Current and Proposed BPM6-Based Structures for the Financial Account, 2007 L in e 1 Billions of dollars Current structure by U.S. sector Share of assets Line 2 Proposed B PM 6-based structure by functional category Billions of dollars Share of assets 40 U .S .-ow ne d a s s e ts a b ro a d , e x c lu d in g fin a n c ia l d e r iv a tiv e s ............................ 1,472.1 100.0 73 N et a c q u is itio n o f fin a n c ia l a s s e ts , e x c lu d in g fin a n c ia l d e r iv a tiv e s ... 1,586.0 100.0 41 U.S. official reserve a s s e ts ............................................................................................... 0.1 0.0 93 Reserve a s s e ts ......................................................................................................... 0.1 0.0 42 G o ld ................................................................................................................................... 0.0 0.0 94 M onetary g o ld ....................................................................................................... 0.0 0.0 43 Special drawing rig h ts................................................................................................... 0.2 0.0 95 Special drawing rig h ts ......................................................................................... 0.2 0.0 44 Reserve position in the International M onetary F u n d .......................................... -1 .0 -0.1 96 Reserve position in the International M onetary F u n d ................................ -1 .0 -0.1 45 Foreign c u rre n c ie s ......................................................................................................... 1.0 0.1 97 O ther reserve a sse ts........................................................................................... 1.0 0.1 46 U.S. governm ent assets, other than official reserve a ss e ts .................................... 22.3 1.5 74 Direct in vestm en t...................................................................................................... 512.5 32.3 47 U.S. credits and other long-term a ssets................................................................... 2.5 0.2 75 Equity and investment fund s h a re s ................................................................. 413.9 26.1 48 Repayments of U.S. credits and other long-term a ssets...................................... -4.1 -0 .3 76 Equity other than reinvestment of e arnin g s.............................................. 174.9 11.0 49 U.S. foreign currency holdings and other short-term a ssets............................... 23.9 1.6 77 Reinvestment of earnin g s.............................................................................. 239.0 15.1 50 U.S. private a ss e ts .............................................................................................................. 1,449.7 98.5 78 Debt instrum ents.................................................................................................. 98.6 6.2 51 Direct investment (o u tw ard )......................................................................................... 398.6 27.1 79 U.S. parents’ claims on foreign affiliates.................................................... 23.3 1.5 52 Foreign securities............................................................................................................ 366.5 24.9 80 U.S. affiliates' claim s on foreign parent g ro u p s ....................................... 75.3 4.7 53 U.S. claim s on unaffiliated foreigners reported by U.S. nonbanking concerns 40.5 2.8 81 Portfolio investm ent.................................................................................................. 396.0 25.0 54 U.S. claim s reported by U.S. banks and securities b ro k e rs ................................ 644.1 43.8 82 Equity and investment fund s h a re s ................................................................. 147.8 9.3 83 Debt s e c u ritie s ...................................................................................................... 248.2 15.7 L in e 1 Billions Share of of dollars liabilities Current structure by foreign counterparty 55 F o re ig n -o w n e d a s s e ts in th e U n ited S ta tes, e x c lu d in g fin a n c ia l d e riv a tiv e s 2,129.5 56 Foreign official assets in the United S ta te s ................................................................. 57 U.S. governm ent s e c u ritie s ........................................................................................ 84 S hort t e r m ......................................................................................................... 29.5 1.9 85 Long te rm .......................................................................................................... 218.7 13.8 86 O ther investm ent....................................................................................................... 677.4 42.7 88 Currency and d e p o s its ........................................................................................ 356.9 22.5 89 L o a n s ...................................................................................................................... 408.6 25.8 91 92 Trade credits and a d v a n c e s .............................................................................. 8.7 0.5 O ther accounts re c e iv a b le ................................................................................ -9 6 .9 -6.1 Billions of Share of liabilities L ine 2 Proposed BPM 6-based structure by functional category dollars 100.0 102 Net in c u rre n c e o f lia b ilitie s , e x c lu d in g fin a n c ia l d e r iv a tiv e s ................. 2,243.4 100.0 480.9 22.6 103 Direct in vestm en t...................................................................................................... 389.7 17.4 269.9 12.7 104 Equity and investment fund s h a re s ................................................................. 204.8 9.1 58 U.S. Treasury securities........................................................................................... 98.4 4.6 105 Equity other than reinvestment of e arnin g s.............................................. 155.4 6.9 59 O th e r............................................................................................................................ 171.5 8.1 106 Reinvestment of e arnin g s.............................................................................. 49.4 2.2 Debt instrum ents.................................................................................................. 184.9 8.2 146.3 60 O ther U.S. governm ent lia b ilitie s............................................................................... 5.3 0.3 107 61 U.S. liabilities reported by U.S. banks and securities b ro k e rs ........................... 109.0 5.1 108 62 O ther foreign official a sse ts......................................................................................... 96.7 4.5 109 38.6 6.5 1.7 63 O ther foreign assets in the United S ta te s ................................................................... 1,648.5 77.4 110 Portfolio investm ent.................................................................................................. 1,154.7 51.5 U.S. affiliates' liabilities to foreign parent groups U.S. parents’ liabilities to foreign affiliates 64 Direct investm ent (inw a rd )........................................................................................... 275.8 12.9 111 Equity and investm ent fund s h a re s ................................................................. 275.6 12.3 65 U.S. Treasury s e c u ritie s ............................................................................................... 66.8 3.1 112 Debt s e c u ritie s ...................................................................................................... 879.1 39.2 66 U.S. securities other than U.S. Treasury s e c u ritie s .............................................. 605.7 28.4 113 Short te r m ......................................................................................................... 165.0 7.4 67 U.S. cu rre n cy................................................................................................................... -1 0 .7 -0 .5 114 Long te r m .......................................................................................................... 714.0 31.8 68 U.S. liabilities to unaffiliated foreigners reported by U.S. nonbanking concerns 201.7 9.5 115 O ther investm ent....................................................................................................... 699.0 31.2 69 U.S. liabilities reported by U.S. banks and securities b ro k e rs ........................... 509.3 23.9 117 Currency and d e p o sits........................................................................................ 231.6 10.3 118 L o a n s ...................................................................................................................... 241.9 10.8 120 Trade credits and a d v a n c e s .............................................................................. 2.0 0.1 121 O ther accounts p a y a b le ..................................................................................... 223.5 10.0 122 Special drawing rig h ts ......................................................................................... 0.0 0.0 Billions L in e 1 of Share Billions of dollars L ine 2 dollars 70 F in a n c ia l d e riv a tiv e s , n e t ............................................................................................. -6 .2 n.a. 123 F in a n c ia l d e riv a tiv e s , n e t .................................................................................... n.a. Not applicable BPM6 Balance o f Payments and International Investment Position Manual, 6th ed. (Washington, DC: International Monetary Fund, 2009). 1. The line numbers are from the current “Table 1. U.S. International Transactions,” but the data for 2007 are presented on the new basis, without the uniform use of negative signs to indicate debits. 2. The line numbers are from the prototype table 1. -6 .2 Share n.a. May 2010 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin ess $43.5 billion. There is also a large impact on currentaccount components due to reclassifying a num ber of transactions from services to goods. These changes in- Table C. Summary of Changes to Selected Series in the ITAs, 2008 [Billions of dollars] Current basis BPM6 basis C u rre n t a c c o u n t Exports of goods and services and incom e re ce ip ts1................ 2,613.0 2,666.8 E xports of goods and s e rv ic e s ..................................................... 1,826.6 1,826.6 0.0 Goods, balance of paym ents b a s is ......................................... 1,277.0 1,307.4 30.4 -3 0 .4 Difference 53.8 S e rv ic e s ......................................................................................... 549.6 519.2 Receipts of prim ary incom e2 ......................................................... 764.6 774.9 10.3 Receipts of secondary income (transfers)3................................ 21.8 65.3 43.5 Im ports of goods and services and income paym ents1 ............. 3,319.1 3,372.9 53.8 Im ports of goods and s e rv ic e s ..................................................... 2,522.5 2,522.5 0.0 Goods, balance of paym ents b a s is ......................................... 2,117.2 2,140.6 23.4 -2 3 .4 S e rv ic e s ......................................................................................... 405.3 381.9 Payments of prim ary incom e2....................................................... 646.4 656.7 10.3 Payments of secondary income (transfers)3............................. 150.2 193.7 43.5 C a p ita l a c c o u n t Credits4.................................................................................................... 5.0 3.8 -1 .2 Debits4 ...................................................................................................... 4.0 0.2 -3 .9 F in a n c ia l a c c o u n t Financial derivatives, n e t.................................................................... 28.9 28.9 0.0 Financial account, net, excluding financial d e riva tive s ............... -5 3 4 .0 -5 3 4 .0 0.0 Acquisition of a s s e ts ........................................................................ 0.1 13.6 13.5 Incurrence of lia b ilitie s .................................................................... 534.1 547.6 13.5 Direct investment, n e t................................................................. 12.3 12.3 0.0 Acquisition of assets2............................................................. 332.0 345.5 13.5 Incurrence of liabilities2.......................................................... 319.7 333.3 13.5 Net errors and o m is s io n s ................................................................... 200.1 197.4 -2 .6 19 crease goods exports by $30.4 billion in 2008 and de crease services exports by the same amount. The changes increase goods imports by $23.4 billion in 2008 and decrease services imports by the same amount. While the current-account balance is un changed, the deficit on goods is reduced by $7.1 bil lion, and the surplus on services is reduced by the same amount. Moving towards an asset/liability basis for direct in vestment affects gross direct investment assets and lia bilities but has no impact on net direct investment. In 2008, gross direct investment asset and liability trans actions are each $13.5 billion more than transactions recorded on a directional basis. Receipts and payments of income on direct investment are affected in the same way, with both total receipts and total payments of primary income increasing by $10.3 billion. The removal of migrants’ transfers from the capital account lowers both capital-account credits and debits, resulting in a $2.6 billion increase in the capital-account surplus in 2008. This change also reduces net er rors and omissions by the same amount. The statistical impact of other major changes, such as goods for processing and FISIM, cannot be deter mined at this time; therefore, these changes are not re flected in table C. B alan ces: Current accou nt..................................................................................... -706.1 -706.1 0.0 Goods and se rvice s......................................................................... -6 9 5 .9 -6 9 5 .9 0.0 G o o d s ............................................................................................. -8 4 0 .3 -8 3 3 .2 7.1 S e rv ic e s .......................................................................................... 144.3 137.2 -7.1 Prim ary incom e................................................................................. 118.2 118.2 0.0 Secondary income (transfers)....................................................... -1 2 8 .4 -1 2 8 .4 0.0 Capital a ccount...................................................................................... 1.0 3.6 2.6 Net financial flow s................................................................................. -505.1 -505.1 0.0 BPM6 Balance o f Payments and International Investment Position Manual, 6th ed. ITAs International transactions accounts N o te . These estimates are intended to give users a preliminary indication of the magnitude o f changes to selected series. This table uses the signage conventions described in this article. 1. These aggregates include both primary and secondary income (current transfers). The amount shown on the current basis is the summation of exports or imports of goods and services and income receipts or payments and gross unilateral transfer receipts or payments (not currently published sepa rately). 2. Direct investment flows on the BPM6 basis in the financial account are on the asset/liability basis. The current basis flows are on the directional basis, where the changes in the U.S. entity’s liabilities are netted against the changes in its assets. The difference between the current basis and BPM6 basis is due to the grossing up of these asset and liability transactions. BPM6-basis primary income receipts and payments differ from the current basis for the same reason. 3. Secondary income (current transfers) flows are currently published on a net basis. The gross transactions on the current basis represent underlying detail that is not currently published separately in the standard accounts. Although receipts and payments are shown on the current basis, some underlying transfers related to insurance are netted against one another according to the current meth odology. On the BPM6 basis, these insurance-related transfers have been recorded on a gross basis. The difference between the current basis and BPM6 basis is due to the grossing up of these insur ance-related transfers. 4. Capital-account transactions are currently published on a net basis. The gross transactions on the current basis represent underlying detail that is not currently published separately in the standard accounts. Supplemental tables Supplemental tables that will provide additional infor mation on each main component of table 1 are also be ing developed. These tables will be presented in a future article in the S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u s i n e s s . Addi tional detail on goods by end-use category, on services by type of service, and on financial assets and liabilities by sector will be considered for inclusion in the sup plemental tables. A table with geographic detail (simi lar to the current table 12) will also be developed. Additional detail that is not specifically recom mended in BPM6, but that is of interest to BEA’s cus tomers will also be included in supplemental tables. Certain series that are discontinued in the new table 1, for example, may be maintained in supplemental ta bles to meet user needs and to provide continuity be tween the current presentation and the new presentation. 20 M odernizing and Enhancing B EA’s International Econom ic A ccounts May 2010 Table 1. U.S. International Transactions (Prototype) [Billions of dollars] Line 2006 2007 2008 Line C u rre n t a c c o u n t 1 E x p o rts o f g o o d s a n d s e rv ic e s a nd in c o m e re c e ip ts .................. 2,207.5 2,535.1 2,666.8 2 3 4 5 Exports of goods and se rvice s............................................................ G oods, balance of paym ents b a s is ............................................... 1,643.2 1,164.5 1,147.0 84.3 1,826.6 1,307.4 1,283.6 108.3 6 7 Industrial supplies and m a te ria ls.......................................... Capital g o o d s.............................................................................. 316.8 433.0 387.3 457.7 8 9 IU 11 12 Autom otive vehicles, parts, and eng in es............................. Consum er g o o d s ....................................................................... O ther g o o d s ................................................................................ Net exports of goods under m e rch an tin g ................................ N onm onetary g o ld ......................................................................... 1,451.7 1,040.2 1,028.6 66.0 280.6 404.0 107.3 129.1 41.6 2.8 8.8 121.3 146.0 45.7 4.3 13.3 121.5 161.3 47.5 5.2 18.7 13 14 S e rv ic e s ................................................................................................ 519.2 n.a. 1b 16 17 18 19 20 21 Maintenance and repair services, n.i.e..................................... Transport........................................................................................... 3.7 54.9 478.6 n.a. 4.1 63.4 Tra ve l................................................................................................. C o n stru ctio n .................................................................................... Insurance s e rv ic e s ........................................................................ Financial se rvice s.......................................................................... 107.3 0.7 9.4 47.9 120.2 1.0 10.2 61.4 135.4 1.7 10.8 60.2 83.8 19.7 76.7 16.5 21.7 91.6 General m e rch an d ise .................................................................... Foods, feeds, and beverages.................................................. M anufacturing services on physical inputs owned by others 411.5 n.a. 4.0 72.5 Royalties and license fe e s ........................................................... 70.7 22 23 24 25 Telecommunications, computer, and information services O ther business s e rv ic e s ............................................................... Personal, cultural, and recreational se rvice s.......................... Government goods and services, n.i.e..................................... 17.2 65.1 14.7 19.8 26 27 28 Prim ary incom e re c e ip ts ....................................................................... Com pensation of em ployees........................................................... Investment in c o m e ............................................................................. 829.5 3.0 826.5 774.9 3.0 771.9 3f| 31 32 33 34 O ther in vestm en t............................................................................ Reserve a ssets............................................................................... O ther prim ary incom e........................................................................ Secondary incom e (transfer) re c e ip ts ............................................... 690.6 2.9 687.8 333.2 165 7 188.1 0.7 n.a. 65.1 373.8 221 5 230.2 381.0 251 2 138.4 1.0 n.a. 62.4 1.3 n.a. 65.3 3b Im p o rts o f g o o d s a n d s e rv ic e s a n d in c o m e p a y m e n ts .............. 3,011.0 3,261.6 3,372.9 36 37 38 39 Im ports of goods and se rvice s............................................................ 2,212.0 Goods, balance of payments b a s is ............................................... General m e rch an d ise ................................................................... Foods, feeds, and beverages.................................................. Industrial supplies and m a te ria ls .......................................... Capital g oo ds.............................................................................. Automotive vehicles, parts, and engines............................. C onsum er g o o d s ....................................................................... 1,878.1 1,872.4 74.9 611.9 420.0 256.6 446.1 62.9 5.6 334.0 2,344.6 1,985.1 1,976.3 81.7 2,522.5 2,140.6 2,128.2 89.0 646.2 446.0 259.2 478.2 797.3 455.2 233.8 484.7 68.2 12.5 381.9 Direct investm ent............................................................................ 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 5? 53 54 55 56 57 58 O ther g o o d s ................................................................................ N onm onetary g o ld ......................................................................... S e rv ic e s ................................................................................................ M anufacturing services on physical inputs owned by others Maintenance and repair services, n.i.e..................................... Transport........................................................................................... T ra ve l................................................................................................. C o n s tru c tio n .................................................................................... Insurance s e rv ic e s ........................................................................ Financial se rvice s.......................................................................... Royalties and license fe e s ........................................................... Telecommunications, computer, and information services O ther business s e rv ic e s ............................................................... Personal, cultural, and recreational s e rv ic e s .......................... Government goods and services, n.i.e..................................... 21.8 85.4 16.0 19.9 n.a. 64.9 8.8 359.5 n.a. (*) 81.3 78.4 0.5 37.0 14.7 23.5 19.8 45.2 2.8 30.7 (*) 84.5 83.0 0.6 41.7 19.8 24.7 21.9 49.1 2.8 31.5 (*) 89.4 86.8 0.8 42.9 19.1 26.6 23.3 57.4 3.2 32.2 642.6 9.5 633.1 159.2 304.5 169.4 n.a. 738.6 10.1 728.6 137.1 63 64 6b Prim ary incom e p a y m e n ts ................................................................... Compensation of em ployees........................................................... Investment in c o m e ............................................................................. Direct investm ent............................................................................ Portfolio in vestm en t....................................................................... O ther in vestm en t............................................................................ Other prim ary incom e........................................................................ 381.5 210.0 n.a. 656.7 10.4 646.3 131.1 399.6 115.6 n.a. 66 Secondary income (transfer) p aym en ts............................................ 156.4 178.4 193.7 b9 60 61 62 n.a. (*) Transactions are less than $50,000,000 (±). n.a. Transactions are possible, but data are not available, n.i.e. Not included elsewhere 1. Net financial flows less the sum of the current-account and capital-account balances (line 132 - line 125 - line 131). 2. Net acquisition of financial assets less net incurrence of liabilities plus financial derivatives (line 73 - line 102 + line 123). 2006 2007 2008 C a p ita l a c c o u n t C r e d it s .......................................................................................................... Gross acquisitions of nonproduced nonfinancial a s s e ts .............. Capital transfers...................................................................................... D e b its ............................................................................................................. Gross disposals of nonproduced nonfinancial a sse ts ................... Capital tra n sfe rs...................................................................................... F in a n c ia l a c c o u n t N et a c q u is itio n o f fin a n c ia l a s s e ts , e x c lu d in g fin a n c ia l d e r iv a tiv e s ............................................................................................... Direct in ve stm e n t.................................................................................... Equity and investment fund s h a re s ............................................... Equity other than reinvestment of e a rn in g s ............................ Reinvestm ent of e arnin g s ............................................................ Debt in strum ents................................................................................ U.S. parents’ claim s on foreign a ffiliates.................................. U.S. a ffiliates’ claim s on the ir foreign parent g ro u p s ............ Portfolio investm ent................................................................................. Equity and investm ent fund s h a re s ............................................... Debt s e c u ritie s .................................................................................... S hort te r m ........................................................................................ Long te r m ......................................................................................... O ther investm ent..................................................................................... O ther equity.......................................................................................... C urrency and d e p o s its ...................................................................... L o a n s ..................................................................................................... Insurance, pension, and standardized guarantee schem es.... Trade credits and a d v a n c e s ............................................................ O ther accounts receivable................................................................ Reserve a s s e ts ....................................................................................... M onetary g o ld ..................................................................................... Special drawing rig h ts ....................................................................... Reserve position in the International Monetary F u n d .............. O ther reserve a ss e ts ......................................................................... C urrency and d e p o s its ................................................................. S ecurities.......................................................................................... Financial d erivative s...................................................................... O ther c la im s .................................................................................... N et in c u rre n c e o f lia b ilitie s , e x c lu d in g fin a n c ia l d e riv a tiv e s .... Direct in vestm en t.................................................................................... Equity and investment fund s h a re s ............................................... Equity other than reinvestment of e arn in g s ............................ Reinvestment of e arnin g s............................................................ Debt instrum ents................................................................................ U.S. affiliates’ liabilities to the ir foreign parent g ro u p s ......... U.S. parents’ liabilities to their foreign a ffilia te s ..................... Portfolio investm ent................................................................................ Equity and investment fund s h a re s ............................................... Debt s e c u ritie s .................................................................................... Short te r m ........................................................................................ Long te r m ........................................................................................ O ther investm ent..................................................................................... O ther equity.......................................................................................... Currency and d e p o s its ...................................................................... Loans .................................................................................................... Insurance, pension, and standardized guarantee schem es.... Trade credits and a d v a n c e s ............................................................ O ther accounts p aya ble .................................................................... Special drawing rig h ts ....................................................................... F in a n c ia l d e riv a tiv e s , n e t ....................................................................... N et e rro rs a nd o m is s io n s 1..................................................................... 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.8 0.1 1.7 0.5 0.5 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.1 3.8 0.0 3.8 0.2 0.0 0.2 1,336.9 296.1 266.3 49.0 217.3 29.7 11.7 18.0 498.9 137.3 361.6 133.8 227.8 544.3 n.a. 276.3 152.1 n.a. 3.3 112.6 -2 .4 0.0 0.2 - 3 .3 0.7 0.3 0.3 0.0 0.1 2,116.3 294.3 184.1 115.0 69.1 110.1 77.1 33.1 1,126.7 145.5 981.3 27.6 953.7 695.3 n.a. 261.7 186.0 n.a. 2.5 245.1 0.0 -2 9 .7 - 3 .8 1,586.0 512.5 413.9 174.9 239.0 98.6 23.3 75.3 396.0 147.8 248.2 29.5 218.7 677.4 n.a. 356.9 408.6 n.a. 8.7 -9 6 .9 0.1 0.0 0.2 -1 .0 1.0 0.5 0.3 0.0 0.2 2,243.4 389.7 204.8 155.4 49.4 184.9 146.3 38.6 1,154.7 275.6 879.1 165.0 714.0 699.0 n.a. 231.6 241.9 n.a. 2.0 223.5 0.0 -6 .2 62.6 13.6 345.5 341.8 90.2 251.5 3.8 1.5 2.3 -1 1 7 .4 1.3 -1 1 8 .7 -5 6 .6 -62.1 -2 1 9 .4 n.a. 264.3 -4 4 0 .8 n.a. -6 .7 -36.1 4.8 0.0 0.1 3.5 1.3 0.6 0.4 0.0 0.2 547.6 333.3 304.8 250.2 54.6 28.5 17.3 11.2 527.7 110.4 417.2 282.0 135.3 -3 1 3 .4 n.a. 184.3 -4 6 4 .7 n.a. -7 .6 -2 5 .3 0.0 28.9 197.4 125 Current a c c o u n t........................................................................................... 126 G oods and s e rv ic e s ............................................................................... 127 G oods..................................................................................................... 128 S e rv ic e s ................................................................................................ Prim ary incom e........................................................................................ 129 S econdary in c o m e ................................................................................. 130 131 Capital a ccou nt............................................................................................ 132 Net financial flo w s2..................................................................................... -8 0 3 .5 -7 6 0 .4 -8 3 7 .9 77.5 48.1 -9 1 .3 -1 .8 -8 0 9 .2 -7 2 6 .6 -7 0 1 .4 -8 2 0 .6 119.1 90.8 -1 1 6 .0 0.4 -706.1 -6 9 5 .9 -8 3 3 .2 137.2 118.2 -1 2 8 .4 3.6 -505.1 67 68 b9 70 /1 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 8/ 88 89 90 91 92 93 y4 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 10/ 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 11b 116 11/ 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 -6 6 3 .6 Available on a free DVD... R e g io n a l E c o n o m i c I n f o r m a t io n Sy s t e m 1969-2008 The REIS DVD contains estimates for 1969-2008 for 3,112 counties, 366 metropolitan statistical areas, 576 micropolitan statistical areas, 125 combined statistical areas, 29 metropolitan divisions, and 179 BEA economic areas. The following tables are on the DVD: • Personal income by major source • Earnings by industry • Compensation of employees by industry • Full-time and part-time employment by industry • County income and employment summary • Regional economic profiles • Personal current transfer receipts • Farm income and expenses To receive your free copy, call the Regional Economic Information System at 202- 606- 5360, fax 202- 606- 5322, or e-mail reis@bea.gov. Specify product number RCN-0955. 22 May 2010 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income New Statistics for 2008 Revised Statistics for 1969-2007 By David G. Lenze OUNTY personal income growth in 2008 ranged from - 4 8 percent in Slope County, ND, to 54 per cent in Faulk County, SD. For the nation, personal in come grew 2.9 percent. In 2007, county personal income growth ranged from - 1 5 percent in McPher son, NE, to 81 percent in Sully, SD; nationally, personal income grew 5.5 percent. Inflation, as measured by the national price index for personal consumption expen ditures, was 3.3 percent in 2008 and 2.7 percent in 2007. The county personal income estimates presented here complete the successively more detailed series of data releases depicting the geographic distribution of the nation’s personal income for 2008. A national esti mate was released on February 2, 2009, state estimates were released in March 2009, and estimates for m etro politan statistical areas (MSAs) were released in August 2009. The county estimates provide the first glimpse of property income and transfer receipts in nonm etro politan counties in 2008 and a more detailed look at the distribution of economic activity and sources of in come within m ulticounty MSAs.1 The estimates discussed in this article are the result of the most recent comprehensive revision of the local area personal income accounts, which was released in April 2010. In comprehensive revisions, various im provements in methodologies, classifications, defini tions, and concepts are introduced into BEA’s economic accounts to ensure that the accounts con tinue to reflect the evolving American economy. This comprehensive revision incorporated changes that were adopted as part of the comprehensive revisions of the national income and product accounts and state personal income accounts, which were released in July and October 2009, respectively. This article discusses the patterns and sources of growth in 2008 in nonm etropolitan counties, the newly organized counties in Alaska, the source data used to prepare the estimates, and details of the com prehensive revision of local area personal income and employment statistics. A separate box discusses al C ternative measures of county employment and wages (see page 30). Growth in Nonmetropolitan Counties Nonm etropolitan counties tend to be sparsely popu lated areas with a strong presence of industries that specialize in the acquisition and use of natural re sources— activities such as mining and farming. For statistical purposes, nonm etropolitan counties are those counties that are not part of an MSA. As de fined by the Office of Management and Budget (OM B), an MSA has at least one urbanized area of 50,000 or more residents plus adjacent territory that has a high degree of social and economic integration with the core as measured by commuting ties. MSAs are defined in terms of whole counties. By these crite ria, there are 2,031 nonm etropolitan counties and 1,081 metropolitan counties in the United States. Nonm etropolitan counties are often rural and dis tant from large urban areas, but not always. In addi tion, not all counties with small populations and large agricultural sectors are nonm etropolitan counties. W ith only 973 residents and 66 percent of personal in come arising in the farm sector, Hayes County, NE, fits the comm on notion of a rural county. It is also n o n metropolitan according to the OMB definition. On the other hand, Delta County, TX, with just 5,455 resi dents, is metropolitan, one of the constituent counties in the Dallas-Fort W orth-Arlington, TX, MSA. Its strong commuting ties with the urban core is reflected in the fact that gross commuters’ earnings inflows amounted to 66 percent of net earnings by place of res idence in 2008. Stark County, IL, is also a m etropolitan county, one of the five counties constituting the Peoria, IL, MSA, despite its small population (6,074 residents) and strong farm presence. Farming accounted for 45 percent of earnings in 2009 in Stark County. Overall, the nonm etropolitan share of the nation’s earnings in natural resources in 2008 was much larger than its share of the nation’s earnings in other industries. Nonm etropolitan counties accounted for 11 percent of U.S. earnings, but they accounted for 39 percent of national earnings in the natural re 1. Estimates of county compensation for 2008 were released in December 2009. sources sector (table A). The nonm etropolitan share of May 2010 23 S u r v ey o f C u r r e n t B u sin ess manufacturing earnings (15 percent), government earnings (14 percent), and transportation earnings (13 percent) are also relatively high. In contrast, relatively little, about 4 percent, of earnings in the information, finance, and professional services industries comes from nonm etropolitan counties. Those activities were concentrated in metropolitan counties. In 2008, personal income growth slowed less in the nonm etropolitan portion of the United States than it did in the m etropolitan portion. On average, personal income growth slowed from 5.8 percent in 2007 to 4.5 percent in 2008 in nonm etropolitan counties, while growth in m etropolitan counties slowed from 5.5 per cent to 2.7 percent. Personal income growth slowed in 61 percent of the nation’s nonm etropolitan counties and fell in 90 non m etropolitan counties. In most of the 90 counties where personal income declined, the farm sector in come accounted for the entire drop. Coincidentally, the farm sector also accounted for the bulk of the per sonal income growth in the fastest growing nonm etro politan counties. The different industrial compositions of m etropoli tan and nonm etropolitan areas provide insights into the faster earnings growth in the nonm etropolitan portion of the country, where earnings grew 3.7 per cent in 2008, compared with the metropolitan portion, where earnings grew 1.9 percent. Not only did farm earnings grow at a faster pace in nonm etropolitan counties than in m etropolitan counties (22 percent, compared with 4 percent), farming’s greater im por tance in nonm etropolitan economies m eant that it contributed 1.1 percentage points to nonm etropolitan earnings growth and a negligible am ount to metropolTable A. Industrial Structure of Metropolitan and Nonmetropolitan Portions of the United States for 2008 Non metropolitan area’s share of national earnings Non Non Metropolitan Metropolitan (percent) metropolitan metropolitan Earnings by place of work (billions of dollars) Industry’s share of area's total earnings (percent) itan earnings growth (table B). Mining and govern ment grew at roughly the same rates in both metropolitan and nonm etropolitan counties, but those industries’ greater importance in nonmetropolitan counties translated into slightly larger contributions to earnings growth. Per capita personal income Personal income per person in nonm etropolitan coun ties in 2008 ranged from $140,275 in Loving County, TX, to $12,558 in Buffalo County, SD. Dividends, in terest, and rent (property income) was the source of most of Loving’s income and amounted to $77,000 per person. Buffalo’s per capita income was held down by several factors, including a small num ber of jobs rela tive to the county’s population and a relatively large proportion of those jobs being held by nonresident commuters. Property income was less than $1,500 per person. Economic Stimulus Act of 2008 rebates In BEA’s personal income statistics, the income tax re bates authorized by the Economic Stimulus Act of 2008 for individuals who pay no income taxes (or for whom the rebate exceeded the amount of the income Table B. Percent Change and Contribution to Growth in Earnings by Place of Work for Metropolitan and Nonmetropolitan Portions of the United States for 2008 Percent change from preceding year Metro politan Nonm etro -politan Contribution to growth in total earnings (percentage p o in ts )1 Metro politan Nonm etro -politan Farm, forestry, fishing, and related a c tiv itie s ....................... 4.0 22.2 0.02 1.06 M inin g ............................................................................................. 17.1 17.2 0.15 0.45 Oil and gas e xtractio n ............................................................ 20.7 18.2 0.11 0.11 Mining (except oil and g a s )................................................... Support activities for m in in g ................................................ 2.9 0.00 0.03 0.12 15.0 11.3 22.7 U tilities............................................................................................ 4.5 6.2 0.03 0.07 C o nstructio n ................................................................................. -7 .9 -7 .2 -0 .5 3 -0.51 M anufacturing............................................................................... -0 .4 -0 .7 -0 .0 5 -0.11 Durable-goods m a n ufa ctu rin g ............................................. -1 .2 -1 .4 -0 .0 8 -0 .1 4 Nondurable-goods m a n ufa ctu rin g ...................................... 1.0 0.4 0.04 0.03 W holesale tra d e .......................................................................... 2.3 0.12 0.21 -0 .0 6 0.08 0.13 0.22 Retail tra d e .................................................................................... -0 .9 6.1 1.0 8.6 38.8 Transportation and w a re ho u sing ............................................. 1.6 3.2 6.1 6.3 10.8 Info rm a tio n .................................................................................... 1.0 0.4 0.05 0.04 10.3 15.7 15.1 Finance and in surance............................................................... -0 .5 4.0 -0 .0 4 0.12 11.6 11.2 10.1 Real estate and rental and leasing......................................... -6.1 -1 .5 -0 .1 2 -0 .0 2 51.1 4.0 5.3 13.4 10.9 3.6 1.1 3.5 657.1 29.3 8.0 3.1 4.3 Real estate and rental and le a sin g ....... 147.2 11.4 1.8 1.2 7.2 Professional and business s e rv ic e s 2 ... 1,394.7 63.6 17.1 6.6 4.4 Education, health care, and social a ssistan ce ............................................... 952.2 102.2 11.6 10.7 9.7 82.4 Natural re so u rce s1 ................................... 129.8 C o n stru ctio n ............................................... 498.1 60.5 M anufacturing............................................. 842.0 150.1 W holesale and retail tra d e ...................... 950.0 107.2 Transportation, warehousing, and u tilitie s...................................................... 330.8 Inform ation................................................... 296.0 Finance and in suran ce ............................ 1.6 Leisure, hospitality, and o th e r3.............. 640.2 81.9 7.8 8,5 11.3 G ove rn m e nt................................................ 1,337.8 208.4 16.4 21.7 13.5 Local gove rn m e nt................................. 680.7 119.2 8.3 12.4 14.9 T o ta l............................................................. 8,175.9 959.0 100.0 100.0 10.5 1. Consists of farm; forestry, fishing, and related activities; and mining. 2. Consists of professional and technical services; management of companies and enterprises; and adminis trative and waste services. 3. Consists of arts, entertainment and recreation; accommodation and food services; and other services, except public administration. 0.00 Professional and business s e rv ic e s ....................................... 3.4 4.4 0.57 0.29 Waste managem ent and remediation s e rv ic e s ................... 4.8 7.6 0.01 0.02 Educational s e rv ic e s .................................................................. 6.6 5.0 0.10 0.04 Health care and social assistance.......................................... 6.1 5.7 0.59 0.55 Arts, entertainm ent, and recreation........................................ 5.1 4.9 0.06 0.03 Accom m odation............................................................................ 1.7 3.5 0.01 0.04 Food services and drinking p lace s......................................... 2.3 2.6 0.05 0.06 O ther services, except public adm inistration........................ 4.0 4.4 0.14 0.20 G overnm ent................................................................................... 5.0 4.6 0.79 0.99 Federal, c ivilian ........................................................................ 3.6 3.8 0.11 0.11 M ilita ry ....................................................................................... 7.8 8.3 0.13 0.15 State gove rn m e nt................................................................... 5.3 4.7 0.16 0.21 Local g overnm ent................................................................... 4.9 4.2 0.39 0.52 Total e a r n in g s ............................................................................. 1.9 3.7 1.95 3.69 1. An industry’s contribution to growth in total earnings equals the dollar change in that industry’s earnings divided by earnings for all industries in the previous year times 100. Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income 24 taxes they did pay) are treated as personal current transfer receipts.2 These rebates am ounted to $5.7 bil lion for the nonm etropolitan portion of the United States in 2008, compared with $24.1 billion for the m etropolitan portion. In some nonm etropolitan counties, these rebates were a large contributor to growth. In Starr County, TX, for example, such rebates contributed 2.5 percentage points to personal income growth of 8.8 percent. Because the eligibility criterion for the rebate was similar to that for the earned income tax credit, the state estimates of the rebate were allo cated to counties using BEA’s estimates of the earned income tax credit. May 2010 Table C. Homeowner Assistance Payments for Selected Areas Hom eow ner assis tance payments (millions of dollars) 2007 2008 Contribution to personal incom e growth (percentage points) 2007 2008 L o u is ia n a p a ris h e s A lle n .............................................................................. 8 7 1.5 A s c e n s io n ................................................................... 34 3 1.1 B ea u reg a rd ................................................................. 15 15 1.7 0.1 C a lc a s ie u ..................................................................... 300 153 5.1 -2 .3 C a m e ro n ...................................................................... 39 40 19.0 0.6 East Baton R ouge..................................................... 146 3 0.9 -0 .9 -0 .5 (*) -0 .9 Ib e ria ............................................................................. 30 18 1.3 J e ffe rs o n ...................................................................... 1,372 319 8.1 -5 .7 Jefferson D a v is .......................................................... 14 13 1.7 -0.1 O rle a n s ........................................................................ 1,734 938 13.6 -5 .4 P la qu em in es............................................................... 76 71 9.8 -0 .6 1.0 -0 .8 Pointe C o u p e e ........................................................... 6 Homeowner assistance payments St. B erna rd .................................................................. 352 (*) 244 36.6 -7 .9 St. C h a rle s .................................................................. 41 16 2.4 -1 .4 The 2007 and 2008 local area personal income esti mates for Louisiana and Mississippi reflect the receipt of federal payments to rebuild residences destroyed or damaged by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005. These payments, arising from homeowner assistance programs initiated at the end of 2006, are counted as part of the property income component (dividends, interest, and rent) of personal income. The bulk of the payments were received by persons living in counties on or near the coast.3 In 2008, the amounts distributed declined in most Louisiana and Mississippi counties. This reduced per sonal income growth by as m uch as 16 percentage points in Hancock County, MS, and 8 percentage points in St. Bernard Parish, LA, (table C). While these counties were among the 20 fastest growing counties in 2007 because of the federal payments, in 2008, H an cock County was among the 20 slowest growing coun ties, and St. Bernard Parish was among the 100 slowest growing counties. St. H e le n a ................................................................... 8 6 2.9 -0 .5 St. J a m e s .................................................................... 9 8 1.6 -0 .2 St. John the B ap tist................................................... 43 15 3.1 -1 .9 St. T am m any.............................................................. 738 153 8.4 -5 .9 -1 .0 Data for Newly Organized Areas Skagway Borough was incorporated on June 30, 2007, as Alaska’s 17th organized borough. Unlike most of the lower 48 states, Alaska is subdivided politically into boroughs that cover the entire state. Seventeen of these 2. BEA does not publish separate estimates of economic stimulus rebates by county; they are combined with several other transfer receipts on line 290 “other transfer receipts of individuals from governments” in “Table CA35 Personal Current Transfers Detail” on BEA’s Web site. 3. Louisiana’s Road Home Program and Mississippi’s Homeowner Assis tance Program are special housing programs financed through Community Development Block Grants from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. In personal income, this assistance is treated as a housing subsidy, a component of the rental income of persons, rather than as a transfer receipt, because owner-occupied housing is regarded as a household enterprise. A profit (net rental income) is imputed to these enterprises and defined as space rent plus subsidies less various expenses such as net interest and taxes. County estimates of the homeowner assis tance payments were based on data obtained from the state agencies administering the programs. For a detailed derivation of rental income of persons, see lines 133-140 in table 7.12 in the national income and product accounts on BEA’s Web site. Tangipahoa.................................................................. 69 36 2.3 Terrebonne.................................................................. 61 64 1.8 0.1 V erm ilion ...................................................................... 55 32 3.9 -1 .5 W a sh ing ton ................................................................. 32 15 3.0 -1 .4 M is s is s ip p i c o u n tie s H a n c o c k ....................................................................... 401 122 32.7 -1 6 .2 H a rris o n ....................................................................... 492 154 8.7 -5 .2 J a ckson ........................................................................ 503 122 13.1 -8 .3 * Less than $500,000 or 0.05 percent in absolute value N o te . The contribution of homeowner assistance payments to county personal income growth equals the annual change in the payments divided by personal income in the previous year times 100. boroughs are organized, and one is unorganized (chart 1). For statistical purposes, BEA and other federal agencies subdivide the unorganized borough into 11 census areas. Skagway Borough had been part of the Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Census Area. The rem ain der of that census area was renamed the Hoonah-Angoon Census Area (chart 2). Starting with data for 2008, BEA will publish separate estimates for Skagway Borough and the Hoonah-Angoon Census Area. For earlier years, data only for the old census area are avail able. Although the new borough is small— only 905 per sons lived there in 2008— it is not the smallest county; there are 28 counties in the U.S. with smaller popula tions. There were also 756 wage and salary jobs in Sk agway, for a jobs to population ratio of 0.84. The Port of Skagway is a popular cruise destination during the summer, and much of the borough’s eco nomic activity is related to tourism. It has a relatively large “arts, entertainment, and recreation” industry, accounting for nearly 14 percent of earnings (table D). Only eight counties in the United States have a larger arts, entertainment, and recreation industry (as a share of total earnings). Similarly only eight counties have a larger retail trade industry. In short, almost half of Skagway’s earnings comes from four industries: retail trade (17 percent), arts (14 percent), transportation May 2010 Survey of (10 percent), and accommodations (7 percent). These four industries account for only 16 percent of earnings in the nonm etropolitan portion of the United States. However, Skagway has no farming. In fact, Skagway lacks earnings in seven industries that account for 14 percent of earnings in the nonm etropolitan portion of the United States, and its health care sector accounts Table D. Select Economic and Demographic Statistics for Two New Alaskan Areas for 2008 Skagway Borough HoonahAngoon Census Area Personal incom e (millions of d o lla rs)................................... 56.7 83.1 Population (p e rs o n s )............................................................... 905 2,182 U.S. non m etropolitan portion Per capita personal income (d o lla rs)................................... 62,685 38,066 W age and salary employm ent (jo b s )................................... 756 792 Average wages per job (d o lla rs)........................................... 38,702 31,448 33,417 E arn in g s b y in d u s try (p e rc e n t o f to ta l) F a rm ............................................................................................. 0.0 0.0 4.6 Forestry, fishing, and related activities................................. 0.0 (D) 1.0 M inin g ........................................................................................... 1.3 (L) 3.0 31,098 U tilities......................................................................................... 0.0 (D) 1.2 C o nstructio n ............................................................................... 14.1 (D) 6.3 M anufacturing............................................................................ 3.3 1.8 15.7 W holesale trade......................................................................... 0.0 (D) 3.5 Retail tra d e ................................................................................. 17.2 10.7 7.7 Transportation and w a re ho u sing .......................................... 10.1 2.7 4.1 Info rm a tio n ................................................................................. (D) (D) 1.1 Finance and insuran ce ............................................................ (D) (D) 3.1 Real estate and rental and le asing ....................................... (D) (D) 1.2 Professional, scientific, and technical services.................. (D) (D) 3.5 0.9 Managem ent of companies and e nte rp rise s..................... 0.0 0.0 Adm inistrative and waste s e rv ic e s ....................................... (D) (D) 2.3 Educational s e rv ic e s ................................................................ 0.0 0.6 09 9.8 Health care and social a ssistan ce ........................................ 0.4 2.4 Arts, entertainment, and recreation...................................... 13.7 (D) 0.7 Accom m odation and food s e rv ic e s ...................................... 7.4 (D) 3.2 Other services, except public a dm inistration..................... 3.3 (D) 4.6 G overnm ent and governm ent e n te rp rise s.......................... 21.7 43.6 21.7 29 Federal, c iv ilia n ..................................................................... 9.4 21.0 M ilita ry ..................................................................................... 0.0 1.8 1.9 State and lo c a l....................................................................... 12.3 20.8 16.9 (D) Data are suppressed to avoid the disclosure of confidential inform ation but are included in total earnings. (L) Less than $50,000 but included in total earnings. Chart 1. Alaska Boroughs and Census Areas [ ) B o ro u g h s I I U n o rg a n iz e d b o ro u g h s u b d iv id e d in to c e n s u s a re a s 25 C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Acknowledgements The annual estimates of local area personal income were prepared by the Regional Income Division under the direction of Sharon C. Carnevale, Chief. Robert L. Brown and James M. Zavrel were major contributors. Joel D. Platt, Associate Director for Regional Econom ics, provided general guidance. The preparation of the estimates was a divisionwide effort. The estimates of nonfarm wages and salaries and supplements to wages and salaries were prepared by the Regional Compensation Branch under the super vision of Sharon C. Carnevale, Chief. Major responsi bilities were assigned to Elizabeth R Cologer, John D. Laffman, Michael G. Pilot, John A. Rusinko, and James M. Scott. Contributing staff members were Peter Battikha, Michael L. Berry, Susan P. Den Herder, Terence J. Fallon, Tina C. Highfill, Russell C. Lusher, Paul K. Medzerian, Nathan D. Patterson, Ross A. Stepp, and Melanie N. Vejdani. The estimates of farm wages and salaries, farm sup plements to wages and salaries, proprietors’ income, property income, personal current transfer receipts, contributions for government social insurance, and the adjustment for residence were prepared by the Regional Income Branch under the supervision of Mauricio Ortiz, Acting Chief. Major responsibilities were assigned to Carrie L. Litkowski, Toan A. Ly, Brian J. Maisano, and James P. Stehle. Contributing staff members were, Daniel R. Corrin, Michelle A. Harder, Carla R. Jenkins, Andy K. Kim, W. Tim McKeel, Linda M. Morey, and Troy P. Watson. The public use tabulations and data files were assembled and the tables were prepared by the Regional Economic Information System Branch under the supervision of Kathy A. Albetski, Chief. Contrib uting staff members were Alison M. Adam, H Steven Dolan, Michael J. Paris, Callan S. Swenson, Monique B. Tyes, and Jonas D. Wilson. Chart 2. Skagway, Hoonah-Angoon, and Neighboring Areas Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income 26 for only 0.4 percent of earnings, compared with 10 percent average in the nonm etropolitan portion. In one respect Skagway is similar to other nonm et ropolitan counties. It has a relatively large government sector, which accounted for nearly 22 percent of earn ings in 2008. Per capita income in Skagway, at $62,685, is double the U.S. nonm etropolitan average. This partly reflects a higher average wage per job, $38,702, in Skagway, compared with $33,417 in the typical nonm etropolitan county. It also reflects a relatively high price level.4 But it also reflects a very high jobs to population ratio (em ployment rate) of 0.84 vs. a 0.39 nonm etropolitan av erage. Not only does Skagway have a high employment rate, the seasonal pattern of employment in Skagway is striking (chart 3). During the peak June to August sea son, there are three times as many jobs as during the trough season of November to March. This contrasts sharply with the Anchorage Borough, where the num ber of jobs has very little seasonal variation. In 2008, wage and salary employment in Skagway peaked at 1,229 jobs, enough for every resident of Skagway to be employed and for many of them to hold two jobs. More likely, many of these jobs were held by seasonal residents. To the extent that this happened, the bor ough’s per capita income overstates the average for 4. Regional price parities are available for states, metropolitan areas, and the nonmetropolitan portions o f states for 2005 and 2006 in Bettina H. Aten and Roger J. D ’Souza, “ Regional Price Parities: Comparing Price Level Differences Across Geographic Areas,” Survey o f C urrent B usiness 8 8 (November 2008): 64-74. Chart 3. Employment by Month Relative to Annual Average Employment, Skagway and Anchorage Boroughs, 2008 1 .8 s 1 .6 / \ / \ / / 1 .4 1 .2 v \ / i \ ' May 2010 year-round residents.5 The remainder of the census area from which Skag way was detached is quite different. It has more than twice the population (2,182) than Skagway. Its per cap ita income of $38,066 and its jobs to population ratio of 0 .36 are much closer to the national nonm etropoli tan average than Skagway’s. The Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve is located in the Hoonah-Angoon Census Area. About half of the census area’s employ m ent is governmental, including the National Park Service and the state’s D epartm ent of Fish and Game. The civilian federal government accounts for 21 per cent of earnings in Hoonah-Angoon, compared with 3 percent for nonm etropolitan United States. The retail ing industry, which accounts for 11 percent of earnings is also relatively large. S o u rc e D ata The prim ary 2008 county-level data used by BEA to prepare the estimates of local area personal income presented in this article were wage and salary data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, benefits paid by the Social Security Administration, Medicaid pay ments from state departments of social services, popu lation data from the Census Bureau, and farm crop production, cash receipts, government payments, and livestock data from the Departm ent of Agriculture.6 State-level price data for 2008 were also used to pre pare the estimates of local area farm income. Because 2008 county-level Medicare enrollment data (used to estimate Medicare benefits) were not available, the 2008 county Medicare enrollment shares were assumed to be the same as the 2007 shares. New 2008 county-level data for various transfer re ceipts from the Consolidated Federal Funds Report and Federal Assistance Award Data System were used to prepare estimates of some components of personal current transfer receipts. New county-level estimates of income reported on 2007 federal income tax returns from the Internal Revenue Service were used to pre pare the estimates of property income and the resi dence adjustment. Those data are ordinarily used to estimate nonfarm proprietors’ income, but they were not used for the 2007 estimates. A nchoraae 1 .0 7 0 .8 T " ; \ j 0 .6 ^ \_ _ — 0 .4 i 0 .2 Jan. i Fe b. i M a r. A p ril i i M ay June i i J u ly i Note. Based on data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics i A ug . S ep t. O ct. i i N o v. D ec. 5. BEA adjusts the wage and salary disbursements paid by establishments within a county to reflect the place of residence of workers. The adjustment is based primarily on journey-to-work data from the Census of Population. The journey to work data reflect commuting patterns in March and works well so long as there is no strong seasonal variation in commuting. 6. For details about the estimation methodology and data sources, see Local Area Personal Income and Employment Methodology on BEA’s Web May 2010 S urvey of C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Com prehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Incom e On April 22, 2010, the Bureau of Economic Analysis released the results of the comprehensive revision of the local area personal income accounts; the results of the previous comprehensive revision were released in May 2 0 0 4 .7 Local area personal income statistics were revised back to 1969. In a comprehensive revision various improvements in methodologies, classifications, definitions, and con cepts are introduced into BEA’s economic accounts so that they continue to reflect the evolving American economy. The comprehensive revision of the local area ac counts incorporates changes that were adopted as part of the comprehensive revision of the national income and product accounts released in July 2009 and the comprehensive revision of state personal income re- 27 leased in October 2 0 0 9 .8 The rest of this section will first discuss the magni tude of revisions and then describe the improvements in methodologies, classifications, and definitions as well as the statistical improvements. Magnitude of revisions For many counties, the picture of personal income that is shown by the revised estimates is similar to the pic ture shown by the previous estimates, but for many other counties, the picture is substantially different, particularly in the last 10 -1 5 years (table E). For exam ple, in 1969, almost all of the revisions to county per sonal income were less than 1 percent in absolute value. In 1984, the vast bulk of the revisions were still less than 1 percent, but several hundred revisions were 8. See Eugene P. Seskin and Shelly Smith, “Improved Estimates of the National Income and Product Accounts: Results of the 2009 Comprehen sive Revision,” S u r v e y 89 (September 2009): 15-35 and Robert L. Brown, 7. See Jeffrey L. Newman, “Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Per “Regional Quarterly Report: Comprehensive Revision,” S u r v e y 89 (Novem sonal Income,” S u r v e y 84 (June 2004): 67-96. ber 2009): 71-78. Data Availability This article presents summary estimates of personal income and per capita personal income for 2006-2008. More detailed estimates for 1969-2008 are also available. The following annual estimates for counties, met ropolitan statistical areas, micropolitan statistical areas, metropolitan divisions, combined statistical areas, and BEA economic areas are available at www.bea.gov/regional/reis: • Personal income, per capita personal income, and pop ulation for 1969-2008 • County income and employment summary (featuring the derivation of personal income, including nonfarm personal income, and employment totals for a contin uous time series), for 1969-2008 • Compensation of employees by industry by North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) subsectors for 2001-2008 and by Standard Industrial Classification System (SIC) two-digit industries for 1998-2000 • Personal income by major source and earnings by NAICS subsectors for 2001-2008 and by SIC two-digit industries for 1969-2000 • Full-time and part-time employment by NAICS sec tors for 2001-2008 and by SIC division-level industries for 1969-2000 • Regional economic profiles (featuring a selection of personal income and employment data) for 1969-2008 • Personal current transfer receipts by major pro gram for 1969-2008 • Farm income and expenses (including the major cate gories of gross receipts and expenses for all farms and for measures of farm income) for 1969-2008 • The counties with the highest and lowest per capita personal incomes in 2008 • Total wage and salary disbursements, total wage and salary employment, and average wage per job for 1969-2008 • Gross commuters’ earnings flows for 1990-2008 • BEARFACTS, a narrative about an area’s personal income that uses current estimates, growth rates, and a breakdown of the sources of personal income In addition, the entire set of estimates for all areas will be available in May 2010 on a DVD-ROM. To order the DVD-ROM Regional Economic Informa tion System, 1969-2008 (product number RCN-0955), call BEA’s Regional Economic Information System at 202-606-5360, fax 202-606-5322, or e-mail reis@bea.gov. The local area personal income estimates are also avail able through the members of the BEA User Group, which consists of state agencies and universities that help BEA to disseminate the estimates in their states. For a list of the members of the group on BEA’s Web site, go to www.bea.gov/regional/docs/usergrp.cfm For more information, call BEA’s Regional Economic Information System at 202-606-5360, fax 202-606-5322, or e-mail reis.remd@bea.gov. 28 Com prehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income between 1 percent and 5 percent. In 1997, most of the revisions were in the 1 percent to 5 percent range, but in 84 counties, the revisions 5 percent or more. In 2007, m ost of the revisions were again in the 1 percent to 5 percent range; however, more than a third were 5 percent or more, and the personal income of 259 counties was revised by 10 percent or more. There were two changes in classifications and defi nitions, one involving a new treatm ent of disasters, and the other involving a new treatm ent of the wages of U.S. workers in international organizations. Table E. Revisions to County Personal Income for Selected Years Revision (absolute value) Number of counties 1969 1984 1997 2007 0.0—0.9 p e rc e n t....................................................... 3,088 2,432 1,156 287 1.0-4.9 p e rc e n t....................................................... 21 669 1,870 1,712 5.0—9.9 p e rce n t....................................................... 0 4 65 853 10.0 percent or m ore.............................................. 0 0 19 259 New treatment of disasters The treatm ent of disasters was changed to better reflect the distinctions between current transactions and cap ital transactions. Under the new treatm ent, disaster-re lated damages to fixed assets, which were previously treated as depreciation and thus an expense to propri etors’ income and rent, are now recorded as “other changes in the volume of assets.” Disaster-related in surance payouts are removed from personal current transfer receipts and are now recorded as capital trans fers. The effect of this change is most obvious in the per sonal income estimates of the counties devastated by Hurricane Katrina and other storms in 2005 (table F). May 2010 Personal income now grows more smoothly in the af fected counties. For instance, the personal income of Orleans Parish was revised up 185 percent in 2005, changing its 2 0 0 4 -2 0 0 5 growth rate from - 6 3 percent to 2 percent and changing its 2 0 0 5 -2 0 0 6 growth rate from 140 percent to - 1 4 percent. New treatment of wages of U.S. workers in international organizations The treatm ent of wages earned by U.S. residents from employment at international organizations, foreign embassies, and foreign consulates located in the United States was changed in the local area personal income accounts to improve consistency with the treatm ent of other border workers and with the national income and product accounts. These wages are now classified as outside of the domestic economy. Therefore, they have been removed from domestic wages and added as an adjustment for residence from outside the United States into the county where the employees live. The change reduces county wages and salaries, but the ad justm ent for residence is increased by the same am ount. Total personal income for the county is not affected. The District of Columbia accounted for $1 billion, or nearly half, of this reclassification. Twelve other counties were affected to a lesser extent (table G). Other statistical improvements There were also several statistical improvements to the local area personal income accounts. Some of these improvements (such as for m isreported income and for rental income of persons) involve source data that are not available for individual counties. However, these improvements are implicitly incorporated into the county estimates through the use of the state Table F. Effect of the Change in Treatment of Disasters on Personal Income of Selected Parishes in Louisiana for 2005 and 2006 Millions of dollars Percent change Millions of dollars Revised, 2005 Previously published, 2005 Percent revision, 2005 2005 revision due to Change in treatm ent of disasters O ther changes Revised, 2005 Previously published, 2005 Revised, 2006 Previously published, 2006 A lle n ................................................................................................................................................. 507.6 438.9 15.6 42.2 26.4 5.3 -3 .4 0.5 B e a u re g a rd .................................................................................................................................... 812.7 695.5 16.8 91.3 25.8 6.5 -6.1 3.7 18.2 C a lc a s ie u ........................................................................................................................................ 5,409.7 4,385.2 23.4 962.6 61.8 9.3 -1 0 .7 8.3 33.0 C a m e ro n ......................................................................................................................................... 204.2 38.2 434.0 158.2 7.7 5.3 -7 8 .9 0.2 383.5 Ibe rville ............................................................................................................................................. 824.6 710.9 16.0 125.6 -1 1 .8 11.2 -5 .7 4.4 23.2 Jeffe rso n .......................................................................................................................................... 15,689.1 10,841.5 44.7 4,372.2 475.4 3.8 -2 5 .5 7.6 50.2 10.6 Jefferson D avis.............................................................................................................................. 741.9 612.5 21.1 91.6 37.8 8.8 -4 .4 7.1 23.7 O rle a ns............................................................................................................................................. 14,902.4 5,234.0 184.7 9,645.6 22.8 2.4 -6 3 .4 -1 4 .4 140.0 P la q u e m in e s.................................................................................................................................. 787.9 240.6 227.5 532.6 14.8 7.1 -6 6 .4 -1 .6 213.2 St. B e rn a rd ..................................................................................................................................... 1,420.3 29.3 4,753.6 1,386.1 4.9 -1 7 .2 -9 8 .2 -3 2 .4 3,031.3 St. C h a rle s ..................................................................................................................................... 1,531.6 1,360.5 12.6 134.0 37.0 10.5 -0.1 11.0 23.0 St. T a m m a n y.................................................................................................................................. 7,879.2 6,045.3 30.3 1,622.8 211.1 8.9 -1 3 .6 10.9 40.5 Tangipahoa..................................................................................................................................... 2,688.7 2,365.1 13.7 230.1 93.5 9.4 -0 .5 12.7 24.4 T e rre b on ne ..................................................................................................................................... 2,976.6 2,702.4 10.1 226.2 48.0 12.1 3.3 16.9 26.3 V e rm ilio n ......................................................................................................................................... 1,289.0 1,040.6 23.9 180.6 67.8 8.4 -7 .8 11.0 30.9 W a sh in g to n .................................................................................................................................... 1,007.0 805.8 25.0 178.8 22.4 7.5 -1 1 .6 5.1 28.3 May 2010 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin ess Table G. Revisions to Wage and Salary Disbursements, for Selected Counties for 2007 Millions of dollars C ounty or county equivalent M illions of dollars Percent Previously revision Revised published Cafeteria plans Revision due to Rest of M is world reporting w a g e s1 adjustm ents All other Los Angeles, C A ...................... 227,515 224,832 1.2 4,335 -2 1 -1 ,8 4 8 San Francisco, C A ................... 44,460 44,401 0.1 577 -4 3 -5 2 9 55 M iami-Dade, F L ....................... 50,552 49,630 1.9 1,416 -9 -4 7 9 -6 Cook, I L ...................................... 149,631 147,887 1.2 2,922 -3 1 -1 ,3 9 2 246 O rleans, L A ................................ 8,894 8,759 1.5 212 -21 -91 35 Bronx, N Y .................................. 10,094 10,225 -1 .3 0 -4 3 -1 0 3 14 Kings, N Y .................................... 19,448 19,786 -1 .7 0 -9 4 -2 7 9 34 218 New York, N Y ............................ 246,708 250,233 -1 .4 0 -6 0 4 -3 ,6 2 9 708 Q ueens, N Y ............................... 23,761 23,972 -0 .9 0 -1 0 2 -1 6 5 56 Richmond, N Y .......................... 3,929 3,971 -1 .0 0 -9 ^0 P hiladelphia, PA........................ 35,302 35,637 -0 .9 0 -9 -4 2 2 95 Harris, T X .................................. 118,598 119,598 -0 .8 0 -2 1 -1 ,0 0 7 28 District of C o lu m b ia ................. 52,451 53,820 -2 .5 0 -9 5 8 -5 1 0 99 7 1. W ages of U.S. residents who w ork for international organizations, foreign embassies, and foreign consulates. 29 the industry distribution of employer contributions to OASDI to account for the annual limit of taxable wages set by law, which was $ 1 02,000 in 2008. Wages above this limit are not taxed. This change lowered compensation in high-wage industries and raised compensation in low-wage industries for 1998 forward. This change, however, did not affect personal income as contributions to government social insurance are subtracted in the calculation of personal income. Improved estimates of nonfarm proprietors’ income and wages and salaries. Nonfarm proprietors’ income and wage and salary disbursements now incorporate updated “misreporting adjustments”— adjustments for underreporting and nonreporting of income— us ing recent national data from the Internal Revenue Service and the Census Bureau. Updated source data for farm proprietors’ income. Estimates of farm proprietors’ income now incorpo estimates as control totals for the county estimates. Improved estimates of wages and salaries that in rate national and state data prepared by the Economic corporate new inform ation on employee “cafeteria Research Service of the U.S. Departm ent of Agriculture plans.” Under cafeteria plans, employees may use a (USDA). In addition, 2002 and 200 7 Census of Agri portion of their salaries on a pretax basis to pay for culture data, including a tabulation of data by legal health insurance and to contribute to “flexible spend form of ownership that is used to remove corporate ing arrangements,” which reimburse them for medical farm income, are now used in the estimation of farm care and dependent care expenses. Estimates for 1985 proprietors’ income. forward were developed for the 28 states that do not Improved estimates of farm self-employment. report employees’ contributions to these plans as Farm self-employment is defined as the num ber of wages in the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Quarterly noncorporate farm operators, consisting of sole pro Census of Employment and Wages.9 The prim ary prietors and partners. In 1974, the USDA set the defi source data used for the estimates are from the Agency nition of a farm as an establishment that produces, or for Healthcare Research and Quality’s Medical Expen normally would be expected to produce, at least $1,000 diture Panel Survey-Insurance Com ponent. worth of farm products— crops and livestock— in a Improved estimates of the industry distribution of typical year. Starting with estimates for 2002, BEA ad private employer contributions for old age, survi justs this $1,000 threshold for inflation using the “All vors, and disability insurance (OASDI). The im Farm Index: Prices Received and Prices Paid” from the proved estimates of employer contributions now National Agricultural Statistics Service. BEA then ob incorporate state- and industry-level data on the dis tained from USDA special tabulations of Census of Ag tribution of employment by hourly wage rate intervals riculture data on the num ber of farms, by type of from the BLS Occupational Employment Survey and organization, having sales above the inflation-adjusted data on the distribution of employment by hours thresholds. worked per week by industry from the Current Updated national source data for im puted rental Population Survey. A m ethod was developed to adjust income of persons with the capital consumption ad justm ent. The estimates of im puted rent for 1992 for 9. The states are Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, ward now incorporate newly available data from the Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Mis 2001 Residential Finance Survey, which were extrapo sissippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Okla homa, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Utah, Virginia, Wisconsin, lated using the data from the BLS Consumer Expendi and Wyoming. ture Survey. 30 Com prehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income May 2010 A ltern ative M easures o f C ounty Em ploym ent and W ages Three widely used measures of county employment and wages by place of work are (1) employment and payroll in the County Business Patterns (CBP) series from the Census Bureau, (2) employment and wages from the Quarterly Census of Employ ment and Wages (QCEW) program from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), and (3) wage and salary disbursements and employment from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). These measures differ in source data and coverage. The CBP data are derived from Census Bureau business establishment surveys and federal administrative records. The QCEW data are tabulations of monthly employment and quar terly wages of workers who are covered by state unemployment insurance programs or by the unemployment insurance pro gram for federal employees.1 The BEA estimates of employ ment and wages are primarily derived from the BLS data; the estimates for industries that are either not covered or not fully covered in the QCEW are also based on supplemental data from other agencies, such as the Department of Defense, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the Railroad Retirement Board. The coverage of the Census Bureau data differs from that of the BLS data primarily because the Census Bureau data exclude most government employees and because the BLS data cover civilian government employees.2 The CBP data also exclude several private industries that are partly covered by the QCEW: crop and animal production; rail transportation; insurance and employee benefit funds; trusts, estates, and agency accounts; and private households. However, the CBP data cover the employees of educational institutions, membership organiza tions, and small nonprofit organizations in other industries more completely than the BLS data.3 In addition, the Census Bureau reports employment only for the month of March; the BLS employment data are quarterly and annual averages of monthly data. In 2001, both BLS and BEA began to include employees of Indian tribal councils in local government. These employees were previously included in the relevant private industries.4 In the Census Bureau data, these employees are still classified in private industries. BEA estimates of employment and wages differ from the BLS data because BEA adjusts the estimates to account for employ 1. The QCEW data account for 94 percent of BEA’s wages and salaries. 2. The Census Bureau data cover only those government employees who work in government hospitals, federally chartered savings institutions and credit unions, liquor stores, and wholesale liquor establishments, and univer sity publishers. The BLS data in most states exclude state and local elected offi cials, members of the judiciary, state national and air national guardsmen, temporary emergency employees, and employees in policy and advisory posi tions. 3. The BLS data do not cover certain religious elementary and secondary schools, because a Supreme Court decision exempts some of these schools from unemployment compensation taxes. The BLS data also exclude college students (and their spouses) who are employed by the school in which they are enrolled and student nurses and interns who are employed by hospitals as part of their training. In half of the states, the BLS data only include nonprofit organizations with four or more employees during 20 weeks in a calendar year. 4. For example, employees of casinos owned by tribal councils were included in “Amusement, Gambling, and Recreation Industries.” ment and wages that are not covered or that are not fully cov ered by the unemployment insurance programs. BEA adds estimates of employment and wages to the BLS data to bridge small gaps in coverage for nonprofit organizations that do not participate in the unemployment insurance program (in sev eral industries), for students and their spouses employed by colleges or universities, for elected officials and members of the judiciary, for interns employed by hospitals and by social ser vice agencies, and for insurance agents classified as statutory employees. In addition, BEA uses supplemental source data to estimate most, or all, of the employment and wages for the fol lowing: farms, farm labor contractors and crew leaders, private households, private elementary and secondary schools, reli gious membership organizations, rail transportation, and mili tary. BEA also adjusts for employment and wages subject to unemployment insurance, but not reported by employers. Other adjustments to wages include estimates for unreported tips, judicial fees paid to jurors and witnesses, compensation of prison inmates, and marriage and license fees paid to justices of the peace.5 The Census Bureau released 2007 data for total employ ment and payrolls for counties on its Web site on luly 30, 2009. BLS released county data on total employment and aver age weekly pay for 2008 on its Web site on luly 21, 2009. BEA released preliminary estimates for 2008 and revised estimates for 2006-2007 of total wage employment and total wage and salary disbursements for counties on its Web site on December 21, 2009. 5. For a detailed description of the sources and methods used to prepare the estimates, go to www.bea.gov/regional/methods.cfm. National Estimates of Wages and Salaries in the BEA County Estimates and Payrolls and Wages From the Census Bureau and the BLS [Billions of dollars] 2006 2007 4,792.0 5,027.0 Civilian government wages, BLS 1.............................. 903.3 951.2 n.a. Other differences, n e t2................................................. -2 .7 39.9 n.a. Equals: Total wages, BLS..................................................... 5,692.6 6,018.1 6,142.2 81.3 87.7 91.1 Total payroll, Census B u rea u .............................................. 2008 n.a. Plus: Differences in coverage: Plus: Adjustments by BEA: For unreported wages and unreported tips on employment tax returns............................................. For wages and salaries not covered or not fully covered by unemployment insurance: Private.......................................................................... 179.6 183.7 187.8 G overnm ent................................................................ 108.5 113.2 119.5 Other adjustm ents3....................................................... -1 .7 -1 .9 -2 .6 Equals: Wage and salary disbursements, B E A 4 ............. 6,060.3 6,400.7 6,538.0 1. BLS wages were adjusted to remove the wages of Indian tribal councils because these data were already included in the Census Bureau's total payroll data. 2. Includes differences of coverage in private education, membership organizations, and government. 3. Consists of adjustments to the wage and salary estimates to remove employees of U.S. companies stationed overseas and to reflect updates to QCEW data. 4. The national total of county estimates of wage and salary disbursements consists of the earnings of persons who live in the United States and of foreign residents working in the United States. The BEA regional total differs from the national estimate; see the box “Personal income in the NIPAs and State Personal Income,” Survey 89 (November 2009): 72. n.a. Not available John D. Laffman Tables 1 through 3 follow. May 2010 31 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Table 1. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by Metropolitan Area, 2006-2008—Continues Per capita personal income 1 Personal income Area Percent change from preceding period 2 Millions of dollars 2006 2007 2008 United S ta te s 3 ........................................................ 11,256,516 11,879,836 12,225,589 M etropolitan p o r tio n .................................................................... 9,862,997 10,404,973 10,684,318 Nonm etropolitan p o rtio n ............................................................ 1,393,519 1,474,863 1,541,271 4,732 24,995 4,322 32,545 27,377 4,774 28,507 3,672 7,454 2,773 15,159 3,836 5,090 13,255 3,268 7,825 12,897 5,185 192,460 10,024 3,349 16,052 56,106 21,371 118,882 4,530 10,496 25,136 4,001 3,134 11,945 6,163 5,284 5,368 7,419 41,850 3,536 4,123 5,108 5,832 20,308 230,353 14,268 3,340 9,528 67,982 7,299 3,427 38,135 4,271 7,948 12,520 23,942 2,731 2,240 3,493 8,827 6,848 10,258 20,745 62,572 7,728 16,814 3,550 402,541 6,479 79,456 8,234 3,109 80,109 3,989 5,190 21,480 5,382 23,834 9,568 2,647 64,307 13,096 2,864 7,144 2,707 5,116 26,005 4,533 34,883 28,883 4,988 30,270 3,872 8,012 2,926 16,068 3,891 5,314 13,614 3,515 8,194 13,722 5,477 203,961 10,407 3,594 16,872 59,758 23,023 124,418 4,711 11,081 26,749 4,150 3,218 12,696 6,750 5,566 5,742 8,066 43,734 3,787 4,351 5,342 6,105 21,200 243,740 14,886 3,531 10,001 70,748 7,846 3,595 40,778 4,502 8,258 13,053 24,617 2,895 2,365 3,557 9,425 7,360 10,703 22,102 66,218 8,226 17,653 3,739 423,953 6,856 82,568 8,666 3,293 82,646 4,282 5,568 22,729 5,690 24,932 10,150 2,742 67,204 13,982 3,013 7,321 2,848 2007 2006 2008 Rank in United States Dollars 2007 2008 2008 Percent change from preceding period 2008 2007 2.0 5.5 2.9 37,698 39,392 40,166 4.5 5.5 2.7 39,548 41,260 41,930 4.3 1.6 5.8 4.5 28,324 29,856 31,098 5.4 4.2 8.1 4.0 4.9 7.2 5.5 4.5 6.2 5.5 7.5 5.5 6.0 1.4 4.4 2.7 7.6 4.7 6.4 5.6 6.0 3.8 7.3 5.1 6.5 7.7 4.7 4.0 5.6 6.4 3.7 2.7 6.3 9.5 5.3 7.0 8.7 4.5 7.1 5.5 4.6 4.7 4.4 5.8 4.3 5.7 5.0 4.1 7.5 4.9 6.9 5.4 3.9 4.3 2.8 6.0 5.6 1.8 6.8 7.5 4.3 6.5 5.8 6.4 5.0 5.3 5.3 5.8 3.9 5.2 5.9 3.2 7.4 7.3 5.8 5.7 4.6 6.1 3.6 4.5 6.8 5.2 2.5 5.2 4.4 2.0 4.7 4.1 3.8 4.6 2.5 3.1 5.6 4.3 7.5 3.5 4.1 -1 .0 3.9 2.7 2.3 4.1 1.2 3.6 2.8 4.7 3.4 4.0 3.1 5.0 2.3 5.9 4.0 3.6 5.6 3.9 1.2 2.8 4.3 2.4 4.2 2.7 4.2 5.4 0.6 2.9 1.0 4.7 3.1 0.0 6.1 3.4 3.8 3.5 3.1 2.6 -2.2 2.9 0.4 7.2 5.0 5.7 5.2 3.8 2.1 2.8 2.5 4.7 1.8 3.6 2.1 7.4 2.7 1.6 3.3 4.8 3.8 3.9 3.8 4.9 4.8 2.6 5.3 2.5 0.7 5.5 29,816 35,706 26,517 38,264 33,469 31,375 35,791 29,138 31,075 33,217 42,186 29,305 28,718 38,305 29,063 36,181 32,412 28,317 37,593 37,194 26,123 30,691 36,695 27,820 44,658 30,571 46,991 32,867 29,113 29,023 32,019 32,639 35,544 36,277 30,137 37,922 34,946 26,419 28,089 36,044 35,827 51,493 48,954 29,157 39,778 76,511 19,366 34,293 33,721 30,192 38,674 30,688 42,303 29,474 40,638 49,714 35,422 30,981 33,798 33,589 39,506 40,575 32,933 41,288 42,829 29,867 37,431 32,568 28,368 38,033 30,602 25,892 35,732 33,702 33,792 32,985 35,778 37,018 31,796 35,732 39,154 27,287 32,176 37,120 27,699 40,941 34,604 32,661 37,586 30,736 33,129 34,329 44,521 29,723 29,496 39,142 31,163 37,585 33,935 29,333 38,721 38,553 27,476 31,892 37,477 29,341 46,604 31,705 49,858 34,647 30,361 29,968 33,791 35,004 36,282 38,332 32,870 39,299 36,760 27,602 29,198 37,228 36,160 54,117 50,344 30,327 42,004 79,576 20,502 35,371 36,216 31,083 40,059 31,946 42,062 31,140 42,998 49,526 37,367 32,932 35,277 34,973 40,108 42,731 34,225 43,175 44,854 31,486 38,434 33,053 29,606 39,370 31,976 27,436 37,428 35,097 34,646 35,377 36,714 38,198 33,975 36,937 40,465 28,601 33,589 37,893 28,854 42,523 35,415 34,005 38,208 31,709 34,729 35,400 47,205 30,674 30,252 39,107 32,199 38,298 34,323 30,010 38,336 39,835 27,749 33,056 37,362 30,047 47,881 33,149 51,194 36,346 31,652 30,971 35,507 35,592 35,728 38,737 34,367 39,886 37,728 28,196 30,231 38,865 35,615 55,187 50,058 31,180 42,992 79,108 21,387 36,088 37,647 31,501 41,139 32,763 40,898 31,926 42,955 52,185 38,811 34,723 37,111 35,447 39,621 43,344 34,784 44,613 45,377 32,349 39,066 35,545 30,092 40,118 32,279 28,176 38,221 35,998 35,328 37,063 38,068 38,741 35,636 37,755 41,050 30,101 7.9 4.0 4.5 7.0 3.4 4.1 5.0 5.5 6.6 3.3 5.5 1.4 2.7 2.2 7.2 3.9 4.7 3.6 3.0 3.7 5.2 3.9 2.1 5.5 4.4 3.7 6.1 5.4 4.3 3.3 5.5 7.2 2.1 5.7 9.1 3.6 5.2 4.5 3.9 3.3 0.9 5.1 2.8 4.0 5.6 4.0 5.9 3.1 7.4 3.0 3.6 4.1 -0 .6 5.7 5.8 -0 .4 5.5 6.3 4.4 4.1 1.5 5.3 3.9 4.6 4.7 5.4 2.7 1.5 4.4 3.5 4.5 6.0 4.7 4.1 2.5 7.3 2.6 3.2 6.9 3.4 3.3 4.8 4.4 2.1 4.2 3.9 2.3 4.1 1.7 3.2 4.8 3.1 6.0 3.2 2.6 -0.1 3.3 1.9 1.1 2.3 -1 .0 3.3 1.0 3.6 -0 .3 2.4 2.7 4.6 2.7 4.9 4.3 3.3 5.1 1.7 -1.5 1.1 4.6 1.5 2.6 2.2 3.5 4.4 -1.5 2.0 -0.6 2.8 2.4 -0 .6 4.3 2.0 4.0 1.3 2.7 2.6 -2.8 2.5 -0.1 5.4 3.9 5.4 5.2 1.4 -1 .2 1.4 1.6 3.3 1.2 2.7 1.6 7.5 1.6 1.9 0.9 2.7 2.1 2.6 2.0 4.8 3.7 1.4 4.9 2.2 1.4 5.2 Metropolitan statistica l a re a s 4 Abilene, T X ...................................................................................... Akron, O H ........................... Albany, G A ...................................................................................... Albany-Schenectady-Troy, N Y ....................................................... Albuquerque, N M ............... Alexandria, L A ..................... Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, PA-NJ........................................... Altoona, PA.......................... Amarillo, T X ..................................................................................... Ames, IA........................................................................................... Anchorage, A K ................................................................................ Anderson, IN ................................................................................... Anderson, SC Ann Arbor, M l.................................................................................. Anniston-Oxford, A L ....................................................................... Appleton, Wl Asheville, N C ................................................................................... Athens-Clarke County, G A ............. Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, G A ............................................ Atlantic City-Hammonton, NJ Auburn-Opelika, A L ......................... Augusta-Richmond County, G A -S C ............................................. Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos, TX Bakersfield-Delano, C A .................. Baltimore-Towson, M D ................................................................... Bangor, M E ..................................................................................... Barnstable Town, M A ..................................................................... Baton Rouge, LA.... Battle Creek, Ml Bay City, M l..................................................................................... Beaumont-Port Arthur, T X ............................................................. Bellingham, W A..... Bend, O R ........................................................................................ Billings, MT............. Binghamton, NY Birmingham-Hoover, A L ................................................................ Bismarck, N D ........ Blacksburg-Christiansburg-Radford, VA...................................... Bloomington, IN ........................................................................ Bloomington-Normal, IL ................................................................ Boise City-Nampa, ID ........................................................... Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, M A-N H............................................. Boulder, CO......................... Bowling Green, K Y ............. Bremerton-Silverdale, W A............................................................. Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, C T ................................................ Brownsville-Harlingen, TX.. Brunswick, G A..................... Buffalo-Niagara Falls, N Y .............................................................. Burlington, N C ................................................................................. Burlington-South Burlington, V T .................................................. Canton-Massillon, OH Cape Coral-Fort Myers, FL. Cape Girardeau-Jackson, M O -IL................................................. Carson City, N V .................. Casper, W Y ......................... Cedar Rapids, IA ................ Champaign-Urbana, IL Charleston, W V ............................................................................... Charleston-North Charleston-Summerville, S C ......................... Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock Hill, N C -SC .......................................... Charlottesville, V A ........................... Chattanooga, T N -G A ...................... Cheyenne, W Y ................................. Chicago-Joliet-Naperville, IL-IN-WI Chico, C A ......................................... Cincinnati-Middletown, OH-KY-IN.. Clarksville, TN-KY........................................................................... Cleveland, TN Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, O H......................................................... Coeur d’Alene, ID... College Station-Bryan, TX............................................................. Colorado Springs, C O .................................................................... Columbia, M O ....... Columbia, SC Columbus, G A -A L.......................................................................... Columbus, IN Columbus, OH................................................................................. Corpus Christi, TX.......................................................................... Corvallis, O R ................................................................................... Crestview-Fort Walton Beach-Destin, F L .................................... Cumberland, MD-WV..................................................................... See the footnotes at the end of the table. 5,343 26,523 4,746 36,327 29,982 5,218 31,012 3,993 8,463 3,052 17,267 4,026 5,534 13,483 3,652 8,417 14,038 5,700 206,463 10,780 3,693 17,672 61,800 23,952 128,213 4,948 11,341 28,326 4,317 3,332 13,403 7,010 5,635 5,900 8,415 44,798 3,947 4,470 5,568 6,435 21,323 250,811 15,040 3,698 10,312 70,754 8,323 3,718 42,317 4,659 8,517 13,393 24,077 2,978 2,374 3,812 9,893 7,778 11,257 22,941 67,612 8,453 18,091 3,915 431,795 7,101 84,330 9,304 3,383 84,009 4,422 5,836 23,581 5,910 25,880 10,646 2,874 68,952 14,725 3,087 7,370 3,003 225 122 341 49 178 209 117 277 193 180 24 305 317 92 267 112 202 327 111 77 353 240 129 325 21 238 13 146 279 298 175 171 163 106 200 76 124 347 318 101 170 7 17 295 44 1 365 152 126 284 58 247 63 272 45 11 103 194 131 177 84 40 192 37 34 260 94 173 324 70 264 348 116 156 183 133 118 105 168 123 60 323 32 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income May 2010 Table 1. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by Metropolitan Area, 2006-2008— Personal income Area Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, T X .................................................... Dalton, G A ........................................................................................ Danville, IL........................................................................................ Danville, V A ...................................................................................... Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, IA -IL ........................................... Dayton, O H............................... Decatur, AL............................... Decatur, IL ................................ Deltona-Daytona Beach-Ormond Beach, FL............................... Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, CO Des Moines-West Des Moines, IA................................................ Detroit-Warren-Livonia, M l............................................................ Dothan, A L ....................................................................................... Dover, D E ......................................................................................... Dubuque, IA Duluth, MN-WI................................................................................. Durham-Chapel Hill, NC................................................................. Eau Claire, W l................................................................................. El Centro, C A .................................................................................. Elizabethtown, K Y ........................................................................... Elkhart-Goshen, IN......................................................................... Elmira, NY El Paso, TX Erie, PA............................................................................................. Eugene-Springfield, O R ................................................................. Evansville, IN-KY............................................................................. Fairbanks, AK.. Fargo, N D -M N ................................................................................. Farmington, NM............................................................................... Fayetteville, NC................................................................................ Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers, AR-MO...................................... Flagstaff, A Z ..................................................................................... Flint, M l............................................................................................. Florence, S C ................................................................................... Florence-Muscle Shoals, A L ......................................................... Fond du Lac, W l.............................................................................. Fort Collins-Loveland, C O .............................................................. Fort Smith, A R -O K .......................................................................... Fort Wayne, IN Fresno, CA Gadsden, A L ... Gainesville, FL. Gainesville, GA Glens Falls, NY................................................................................ Goldsboro, NC. Grand Forks, ND-MN...................................................................... Grand Junction, CO Grand Rapids-Wyoming, M l.......................................................... Great Falls, M T................................................................................ Greeley, C O .... Green Bay, W l. Greensboro-Hign Point, NC........................................................... Greenville, N C ................................................................................. Greenville-Mauldin-Easley, S C ...................................................... Gulfport-Biloxi, M S .......................................................................... Hagerstown-Martinsburg, M D -W V............................................... Hanford-Corcoran, CA.................................................................... Harrisburg-Carlisle, PA................................................................... Harrisonburg, VA Hartford-West Hartford-East Hartford, C T................................... Hattiesburg, MS Hickory-Lenoir-Morganton, NC...................................................... Hinesville-Fort Stewart, G A ........................................................... Holland-Grand Haven, M l.............................................................. Honolulu, HI Hot Springs, AR Houma-Bayou Cane-Thibodaux, LA............................................. Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, T X ............................................... Huntington-Ashland, WV-KY-OH.................................................. Huntsville, A L .. Idaho Falls, ID ................................................................................. Indianapolis-Carmel, IN.................................................................. Iowa City, IA Ithaca, NY Jackson, Ml Jackson, MS.... Jackson, T N .... Jacksonville, FL Jacksonville, NC Janesville, W l.. Jefferson City, M O .......................................................................... Johnson City, T N ............................................................................. Johnstown, PA. Jonesboro, AR. Joplin, M O ........................................................................................ See the footnotes at the end of the table. Per capita personal income 1 Percent change from preceding period 2 Millions of dollars 2006 2007 2008 239,309 3,700 2,199 2,922 13,098 28,473 4,426 3,848 15,292 110,890 21,539 167,246 4,249 4,368 2,999 8,734 18,018 4,907 3,993 3,548 6,420 2,591 18,409 8,189 11,005 12,019 3,307 6,792 3,331 11,813 13,155 4,006 12,342 6,048 3,944 3,344 10,373 8,230 13,388 25,730 2,814 8,314 5,137 3,820 3,215 3,066 4,292 25,180 2,753 6,372 10,454 23,432 5,082 19,452 7,300 7,955 3,500 19,264 3,375 55,454 3,751 10,437 1,743 8,221 37,020 2,930 6,686 234,212 7,874 13,393 3,674 64,005 5,055 2,967 4,476 18,038 3,372 50,263 5,334 4,909 4,549 5,393 4,083 3,178 4,665 254,067 3,867 2,327 3,050 13,943 29,308 4,685 4,109 15,895 116,354 22,732 170,963 4,562 4,626 3,133 9,189 19,556 5,130 4,231 3,661 6,615 2,788 19,596 8,689 11,353 12,217 3,537 7,226 3,568 12,828 14,373 4,259 12,529 6,301 4,220 3,538 11,112 8,664 13,870 27,117 2,993 8,732 5,413 4,087 3,416 3,259 4,811 25,596 2,886 6,780 10,917 24,421 5,420 20,704 8,669 8,398 3,893 20,259 3,577 59,198 3,937 10,797 1,830 8,424 39,258 3,190 7,361 248,161 8,286 14,397 3,975 65,586 5,441 3,251 4,649 18,610 3,543 52,267 6,016 5,059 4,768 5,768 4,310 3,357 4,880 262,549 3,851 2,456 3,165 14,540 29,736 4,884 4,241 15,964 120,044 23,552 172,649 4,718 4,781 3,266 9,520 20,092 5,261 4,512 3,820 6,457 2,942 20,728 9,031 11,680 12,737 3,833 7,801 3,858 13,838 14,818 4,409 12,646 6,528 4,377 3,649 11,378 8,937 14,067 27,994 3,098 8,884 5,578 4,248 3,557 3,487 5,203 26,076 2,997 7,068 11,204 25,038 5,682 21,451 8,427 8,757 3,977 20,875 3,688 60,458 4,094 10,981 1,913 8,612 40,809 3,253 7,910 262,484 8,713 15,197 4,142 67,623 5,716 3,420 4,745 19,368 3,668 52,697 6,758 5,098 4,975 6,007 4,511 3,571 5,120 Continues 2007 6.2 4.5 5.8 4.4 6.4 2.9 5.9 6.8 3.9 4.9 5.5 2.2 . 7.4 5.9 4.5 5.2 8.5 4.6 6.0 3.2 3.0 7.6 6.5 6.1 3.2 1.6 6.9 6.4 7.1 8.6 9.3 6.3 1.5 4.2 7.0 5.8 7.1 5.3 3.6 5.4 6.3 5.0 5.4 7.0 6.3 6.3 12.1 1.7 4.8 6.4 4.4 4.2 6.6 6.4 18.8 5.6 11.2 5.2 6.0 6.8 5.0 3.5 5.0 2.5 6.0 8.9 10.1 6.0 5.2 7.5 8.2 2.5 7.6 9.6 3.9 3.2 5.1 4.0 12.8 3.1 4.8 6.9 5.6 5.6 4.6 2008 3.3 -0 .4 5.5 3.8 4.3 1.5 4.2 3.2 0.4 3.2 3.6 1.0 3.4 3.3 4.2 3.6 2.7 2.6 6.7 4.3 -2.4 5.5 5.8 3.9 2.9 4.3 8.4 8.0 8.1 7.9 3.1 3.5 0.9 3.6 3.7 3.1 2.4 3.2 1.4 3.2 3.5 1.7 3.0 3.9 4.1 7.0 8.1 1.9 3.8 4.2 2.6 2.5 4.8 3.6 -2.8 4.3 2.2 3.0 3.1 2.1 4.0 1.7 4.6 2.2 4.0 2.0 7.5 5.8 5.2 5.6 4.2 3.1 5.1 5.2 2.1 4.1 3.5 0.8 12.3 0.8 4.3 4.1 4.7 6.4 4.9 Rank in United States Dollars 2006 39,889 28,033 26,982 27,544 35,039 33,834 29,868 35,296 30,937 46,211 40,357 37,294 30,825 29,503 32,813 31,908 38,480 31,474 25,465 32,062 32,640 29,391 25,541 29,255 32,437 34,465 34,885 35,887 27,391 33,939 30,572 31,789 28,218 30,542 27,687 33,813 36,887 28,734 32,967 29,305 27,360 32,762 29,887 29,854 28,525 31,354 32,114 32,670 33,652 27,188 35,045 34,179 30,141 32,260 32,346 31,035 24,112 36,653 28,993 46,891 27,711 29,257 24,368 32,006 40,976 30,687 33,281 42,701 27,647 35,310 31,856 38,283 35,038 29,666 27,494 33,992 30,061 39,295 33,122 31,064 31,471 28,158 27,997 27,729 27,697 2007 41,267 28,980 28,758 28,803 37,145 34,908 31,382 37,798 31,869 47,501 41,769 38,362 32,639 30,419 33,960 33,550 40,809 32,594 26,382 32,790 33,344 31,656 26,924 31,054 32,924 34,899 36,105 37,566 29,173 36,544 32,363 33,417 28,863 31,659 29,481 35,601 38,726 29,929 33,858 30,472 28,995 33,963 30,269 31,833 30,150 33,673 34,792 33,038 35,286 27,988 36,278 35,074 31,361 33,558 37,434 32,142 26,369 38,241 30,359 49,900 28,346 29,984 25,496 32,551 43,683 33,055 36,532 44,333 29,099 37,134 33,341 38,633 37,092 32,374 28,576 34,863 31,440 40,171 36,771 31,730 32,826 29,830 29,710 28,870 28,535 2008 41,667 28,675 30,523 29,789 38,571 35,526 32,483 39,147 32,098 48,010 42,506 39,028 33,357 30,749 35,273 34,595 40,927 33,193 27,666 33,981 32,263 33,469 28,071 32,294 33,522 36,329 38,969 39,812 31,518 39,054 32,537 34,330 29,488 32,603 30,433 36,541 38,848 30,714 34,176 30,997 29,947 34,277 30,195 33,018 31,364 35,855 36,665 33,582 36,533 28,402 37,060 35,405 32,179 34,044 35,683 33,135 26,734 39,106 31,055 50,755 29,036 30,230 27,224 33,009 45,205 33,298 39,019 45,835 30,583 38,259 33,639 39,297 38,273 33,856 29,610 36,054 32,456 40,028 39,932 31,826 33,970 30,682 31,221 30,228 29,663 2008 56 344 312 329 109 174 256 91 269 19 50 96 233 300 184 197 62 237 354 211 265 230 349 263 228 148 99 78 283 95 255 201 335 252 315 141 102 302 204 297 328 203 321 242 290 159 140 227 143 346 134 179 268 207 165 239 357 93 296 15 340 319 356 243 35 236 97 32 308 114 222 88 113 215 334 153 257 71 74 274 213 304 293 320 332 Percent change from preceding period 2007 3.5 3.4 6.6 4.6 6.0 3.2 5.1 7.1 3.0 2.8 3.5 2.9 5.9 3.1 3.5 5.1 6.1 3.6 3.6 2.3 2.2 7.7 5.4 6.1 1.5 1.3 3.5 4.7 6.5 7.7 5.9 5.1 2.3 3.7 6.5 5.3 5.0 4.2 2.7 4.0 6.0 3.7 1.3 6.6 5.7 7.4 8.3 1.1 4.9 2.9 3.5 2.6 4.0 4.0 15.7 3.6 9.4 4.3 4.7 6.4 2.3 2.5 4.6 1.7 6.6 7.7 9.8 3.8 5.3 5.2 4.7 0.9 5.9 9.1 3.9 2.6 4.6 2.2 11.0 2.1 4.3 5.9 6.1 4.1 3.0 2008 1.0 -1.1 6.1 3.4 3.8 1.8 3.5 3.6 0.7 1.1 1.8 1.7 2.2 1.1 3.9 3.1 0.3 1.8 4.9 3.6 -3.2 5.7 4.3 4.0 1.8 4.1 7.9 6.0 8.0 6.9 0.5 2.7 2.2 3.0 3.2 2.6 0.3 2.6 0.9 1.7 3.3 0.9 -0.2 3.7 4.0 6.5 5.4 1.6 3.5 1.5 2.2 0.9 2.6 1.4 -4.7 3.1 1.4 2.3 2.3 1.7 2.4 0.8 6.8 1.4 3.5 0.7 6.8 3.4 5.1 3.0 0.9 1.7 3.2 4.6 3.6 3.4 3.2 -0 .4 8.6 0.3 3.5 2.9 5.1 4.7 4.0 May 2010 33 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Table 1. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by Metropolitan Area, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Area See the footnotes at the end of the table. Percent change from preceding period 2 Millions of dollars 2006 Kalamazoo-Portage, Ml .............................................................. Kankakee-Bradley, IL , Kansas City, MO-KS........... Kennewick-Pasco-Richland, W A .................................................. Killeen-Temple-Fort Hood, T X ....................................................... Kingsport-Bristol-Bristol, TN-VA................................................... Kingston, N Y ....................... Knoxville, T N ....................... Kokomo, IN ...................................................................................... La Crosse, WI-MN.......................................................................... Lafayette, IN Lafayette, L A ................................................................................... Lake Charles, LA............................................................................ Lake Havasu City-Kingman, A Z ................................................... Lakeland-Winter Haven, FL........................................................... Lancaster, PA Lansing-East Lansing, M l.............................................................. Laredo, TX....................................................................................... Las Cruces, NM ........................................................................ Las Vegas-Paradise, N V ............................................................... Lawrence, K S ........ Lawton, O K ............ Lebanon, PA........... Lewiston, ID-WA., Lewiston-Auburn, M E ..................................................................... Lexington-Fayette, KY Lima, O H ................ Lincoln, N E ............. Little Rock-North Little Rock-Conway, A R ................................... Logan, UT-ID................................................................................... Longview, TX.......... Longview, WA Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, C A ................................... Louisville-Jefferson County, KY-IN................................................ Lubbock, TX ........................................................................ Lynchburg, VA .. . Macon, G A ............. Madera-Chowchilla, CA.................................................................. Madison, W l........... Manchester-Nashua, NH............................................................... Manhattan, KS ........................................................................ Mankato-North Mankato, M N ........................................................ Mansfield, O H ....... McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, T X ...................................................... Medford, O R ........... Memphis, TN-MS-AR..................................................................... Merced, C A ............ Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach, F L .............................. Michigan City-La Porte, IN ............................................................ Midland, T X ..................................................................................... Milwaukee-Waukesha-West Allis, W l........................................... Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, M N-W I................................. Missoula, MT................................................................................... Mobile, A L ....................................................................................... Modesto, CA.................................................................................... Monroe, LA...................................................................................... Monroe, M l............................................................................ Montgomery, A L .................................................................... Morgantown, W V.................................................................. Morristown, TN ...................................................................... Mount Vernon-Anacortes, WA............................................. Muncie, IN ....................................................................................... Muskegon-Norton Shores, M l....................................................... Myrtle Beach-North Myrtle Beach-Conway, S C ......................... Napa, CA.......................................................................................... Naples-Marco Island, F L ................................................................ Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro-Franklin, T N ......................... New Haven-Milford, C T .................................................................. New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, LA. New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA........... Niles-Benton Harbor, M l................................................................. North Port-Bradenton-Sarasota, FL Norwich-New London, C T ............. Ocala, FL.......................................... Ocean City, N J ................................ Odessa, T X ..................................................................................... Ogden-Clearfield, U T ..................................................................... Oklahoma City, O K . Olympia, WA Omaha-Council Bluffs, NE-IA........................................................ Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL.................................................. Oshkosh-Neenah, W l..................................................................... Owensboro, KY Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, C A ......................................... 10,137 3,172 76,175 6,726 11,765 8,783 5,995 22,118 3,168 4,285 5,438 9,335 6,063 4,742 17,669 16,932 14,375 4,748 4,858 68,867 3,363 3,547 4,212 1,847 3,426 15,845 3,050 10,186 23,716 2,772 6,463 2,741 536,330 44,362 7,912 7,524 7,295 3,565 22,973 17,135 3,756 3,043 3,553 12,333 6,619 46,732 6,062 228,854 3,152 6,068 62,727 142,465 3,461 11,513 14,916 5,242 4,899 12,310 3,573 3,418 4,053 3,197 4,628 7,098 6,408 19,129 56,846 36,326 43,191 942,868 4,938 32,542 11,319 9,617 4,140 3,740 15,493 42,997 8,697 33,395 69,945 5,664 3,319 35,706 2007 10,563 3,396 80,154 7,368 13,102 9,274 6,488 23,316 3,297 4,479 5,702 9,906 6,572 5,005 18,583 17,874 14,869 5,088 5,281 73,444 3,519 3,752 4,477 1,974 3,570 16,512 3,161 10,687 26,042 3,052 6,933 2,933 555,946 46,378 8,426 7,925 7,566 3,808 24,113 18,012 4,292 3,118 3,645 13,320 6,825 49,107 6,802 234,822 3,259 6,252 64,768 150,181 3,679 11,947 15,605 5,356 5,078 12,817 3,771 3,611 4,335 3,271 4,773 7,455 6,820 20,140 60,049 38,551 48,912 1,018,093 5,239 33,611 12,063 9,961 4,310 4,139 16,871 44,274 9,426 34,979 72,381 5,837 3,479 37,192 Per capita personal income 1 2008 10,919 3,545 82,653 7,837 14,071 9,657 6,694 24,017 3,257 4,645 5,991 10,438 6,908 5,124 18,901 18,303 15,386 5,387 5,611 75,013 3,608 3,959 4,640 2,047 3,727 16,897 3,182 11,027 26,369 3,236 7,371 3,016 568,435 47,484 8,812 8,267 7,879 3,914 24,828 18,358 4,697 3,298 3,717 14,224 6,911 50,094 6,810 236,645 3,399 6,970 66,396 154,282 3,776 12,506 15,977 5,571 5,105 13,209 3,980 3,744 4,497 3,372 4,899 7,604 6,969 19,739 61,893 39,673 48,775 1,041,636 5,398 33,413 12,341 10,216 4,438 4,542 17,416 46,951 9,820 36,098 73,612 6,020 3,691 37,185 2007 4.2 7.0 5.2 9.5 11.4 5.6 8.2 5.4 4.1 4.5 4.9 6.1 8.4 5.6 5.2 5.6 3.4 7.2 8.7 6.6 4.6 5.8 6.3 6.9 4.2 4.2 3.6 4.9 9.8 10.1 7.3 7.0 3.7 4.5 6.5 5.3 3.7 6.8 5.0 5.1 14.3 2.5 2.6 8.0 3.1 5.1 12.2 2.6 3.4 3.0 3.3 5.4 6.3 3.8 4.6 2.2 3.6 4.1 5.5 5.6 7.0 2.3 3.1 5.0 6.4 5.3 5.6 6.1 13.2 8.0 6.1 3.3 6.6 3.6 4.1 10.7 8.9 3.0 8.4 4.7 3.5 3.1 4.8 4.2 2008 3.4 4.4 3.1 6.4 7.4 4.1 3.2 3.0 -1.2 3.7 5.1 5.4 5.1 2.4 1.7 2.4 3.5 5.9 6.3 2.1 2.5 5.5 3.6 3.7 4.4 2.3 0.7 3.2 1.3 6.0 6.3 2.8 2.2 2.4 4.6 4.3 4.1 2.8 3.0 1.9 9.4 5.7 2.0 6.8 1.3 2.0 0.1 0.8 4.3 11.5 2.5 2.7 2.6 4.7 2.4 4.0 0.5 3.1 5.6 3.7 3.7 3.1 2.6 2.0 2.2 -2 .0 3.1 2.9 -0 .3 2.3 3.0 -0 .6 2.3 2.6 3.0 9.7 3.2 6.0 4.2 3.2 1.7 3.1 6.1 0.0 Rank in United States Dollars 2006 31,528 28,811 38,376 30,065 32,812 29,119 33,023 32,952 31,659 33,000 28,799 36,630 31,844 24,603 31,695 34,249 31,527 21,012 25,068 38,730 29,877 31,590 33,271 30,962 32,024 35,337 29,014 35,445 36,062 23,415 32,121 27,703 42,185 36,287 29,706 31,329 31,854 24,956 41,991 42,704 32,079 33,486 28,107 18,039 33,743 36,490 25,205 41,863 28,867 49,173 40,724 44,975 33,249 28,624 29,654 30,324 31,957 33,944 30,531 25,787 35,422 27,652 26,582 29,484 48,981 61,381 38,173 43,191 43,736 50,084 30,927 48,056 42,181 30,632 42,322 29,662 30,785 36,602 37,274 40,723 34,973 35,298 29,758 45,308 2007 32,746 30,393 39,841 32,180 35,255 30,548 35,738 34,180 33,035 34,192 29,795 38,570 34,312 25,557 32,404 35,794 32,643 22,041 26,642 39,945 31,028 32,764 34,926 32,939 33,461 36,250 30,131 36,749 39,074 25,259 34,169 29,170 43,801 37,491 31,306 32,563 32,895 26,225 43,455 44,726 36,244 33,985 28,922 18,979 34,409 38,050 27,981 42,967 29,528 49,590 41,926 46,870 34,758 29,481 30,816 31,031 33,111 35,057 31,977 26,750 37,289 28,368 27,390 29,711 51,684 64,251 39,378 45,697 44,088 53,864 32,767 49,220 45,610 30,836 44,575 32,121 32,610 37,166 39,485 42,185 35,570 36,151 30,986 47,098 2008 33,685 31,449 40,396 33,040 37,070 31,697 36,836 34,696 32,752 35,263 30,921 40,182 35,799 26,197 32,572 36,330 33,844 22,831 27,855 39,920 31,443 35,272 35,885 33,973 34,808 36,413 30,351 37,423 39,012 26,023 36,046 29,703 44,519 37,995 32,447 33,662 34,147 26,524 44,172 45,432 38,485 35,619 29,719 19,721 34,506 38,577 27,871 43,013 30,689 53,968 42,824 47,653 35,108 30,567 31,485 32,204 33,397 36,129 33,468 27,415 37,989 29,349 28,062 29,383 52,169 62,559 39,768 46,918 41,740 54,914 33,669 48,713 46,426 31,225 46,001 34,622 32,799 38,882 39,988 43,012 35,717 37,139 32,684 46,787 2008 218 287 67 241 132 278 138 195 248 186 299 68 162 359 254 147 216 364 352 75 288 185 158 212 191 145 316 128 98 360 155 331 38 120 259 221 205 358 39 33 110 169 330 366 199 108 351 42 303 10 48 23 187 309 286 266 232 151 231 355 121 337 350 336 12 3 82 26 55 9 219 18 29 292 30 196 246 100 72 43 164 130 250 27 Percent change from preceding period 2007 3.9 5.5 3.8 7.0 7.4 4.9 8.2 3.7 4.3 3.6 3.5 5.3 7.8 3.9 2.2 4.5 3.5 4.9 6.3 3.1 3.9 3.7 5.0 6.4 4.5 2.6 3.8 3.7 8.4 7.9 6.4 5.3 3.8 3.3 5.4 3.9 3.3 5.1 3.5 4.7 13.0 1.5 2.9 5.2 2.0 4.3 11.0 2.6 2.3 0.8 3.0 4.2 4.5 3.0 3.9 2.3 3.6 3.3 4.7 3.7 5.3 2.6 3.0 0.8 5.5 4.7 3.2 5.8 0.8 7.5 5.9 2.4 8.1 0.7 5.3 8.3 5.9 1.5 5.9 3.6 1.7 2.4 4.1 4.0 2008 2.9 3.5 1.4 2.7 5,1 3.8 3.1 1.5 -0.9 3.1 3.8 4.2 4.3 2.5 0.5 1.5 3.7 3.6 4.6 -0.1 1.3 7.7 2.7 3.1 4.0 0.4 0.7 1.8 -0.2 3.0 5.5 1.8 1.6 1.3 3.6 3.4 3.8 1.1 1.6 1.6 6.2 4.8 2.8 3.9 0.3 1.4 -0 .4 0.1 3.9 8.8 2.1 1.7 1.0 3.7 2.2 3.8 0.9 3.1 4.7 2.5 1.9 3.5 2.5 -1.1 0.9 -2 .6 1.0 2.7 -5 .3 1.9 2.8 -1 .0 1.8 1.3 3.2 7.8 0.6 4.6 1.3 2.0 0.4 2.7 5.5 -0.7 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income 34 May 2010 Table 1. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by Metropolitan Area, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Area Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville, FL................................................ Palm Coast, FL................................................................................ Panama City-Lynn Haven-Panama City Beach, FL .................... Parkersburg-Marietta-Vienna, W V-OH......................................... Pascagoula, M S ...................... Pensacola-Ferry Pass-Brent, F L ................................................... Peoria, IL .................................. Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD..................... Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale, A Z ......................................................... Pine Bluff, A R .................................................................................. Pittsburgh, PA.................................................................................. Pittsfield, M A ... Pocatello, ID .... Portland-South Portland-Biddeford, M E ...................................... Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR-WA......................................... Port St. Lucie, FL............................................................................. Poughkeepsie-Newburgh-Middletown, N Y .................................. Prescott, AZ...................................................................................... Providence-New Bedford-Fall River, RI-MA................................. Provo-Orem, U T .............................................................................. Pueblo, C O ..... Punta Gorda, FL.............................................................................. Racine, W l...... Raleigh-Cary, N C ............................................................................ Rapid City, S D . Reading, PA Redding, CA.... Reno-Sparks, NV Richmond, VA.. Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, C A ....................................... Roanoke, VA.... Rochester, MN. Rochester, N Y . Rockford, IL .... Rocky Mount, N C ............................................................................ Rome, G A ....... Sacramento-Arden-Arcade-Roseville, C A ................................... Saginaw-Saginaw Township North, M l......................................... St. Cloud, M N .................................................................................. St. George, UT St. Joseph, MO-KS St. Louis, MO-IL Salem, O R....... Salinas, CA..... Salisbury, M D .. Salt Lake City, U T............................................................................ San Angelo, TX ....................................................... San Antonio-New Braunfels, T X .................................................... San Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos, CA.......................................... Sandusky, OH........................... San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, CA ........................................... San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, C A ......................................... San Luis Obispo-Paso Robles, CA ............................................... Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Goleta, CA ...................................... Santa Cruz-Watsonville, CA... Santa Fe, N M .................................................................................. Santa Rosa-Petaluma, C A ............................................................ Savannah, G A ................................................................................. Scranton-Wilkes-Barre, PA............................................................ Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, W A ....................................................... Sebastian-Vero Beach, F L ............................................................ Sheboygan, Wl Sherman-Denison, TX.................................................................... Shreveport-Bossier City, L A .......................................................... Sioux City, IA-NE-SD Sioux Falls, SD South Bend-Mishawaka, IN-MI...................................................... Spartanburg, SC Spokane, WA... Springfield, IL .. Springfield, MA Springfield, MO Springfield, OH State College, PA............................................................................. Steubenville-Weirton, OH-WV....................................................... Stockton, C A ................................................................................... Sumter, S C ....................................................................................... Syracuse, N Y .................................................................................. See the footnotes at the end of the table. Per capita personal incom e1 Percent change from preceding period 2 Millions of dollars 2006 2007 2008 18,892 2,542 5,506 4,617 4,323 14,131 13,707 254,916 145,502 2,664 91,734 5,163 2,338 19,923 80,796 15,294 24,186 5,817 60,726 11,272 4,196 5,335 6,931 38,792 4,171 13,670 5,877 17,705 47,863 116,926 10,434 7,100 36,989 10,731 4,221 2,812 79,966 5,770 5,787 3,224 3,546 108,332 11,514 16,419 3,565 38,845 3,312 63,686 129,585 2,693 247,435 97,951 10,000 18,329 11,992 5,867 21,132 11,563 17,796 153,102 7,321 4,171 3,262 13,016 4,339 8,375 10,535 7,886 14,142 7,382 23,989 12,253 4,282 4,406 3,437 19,476 2,825 21,346 19,501 2,759 5,670 4,875 5,128 14,700 14,598 265,838 153,131 2,803 95,780 5,462 2,480 20,733 85,339 16,128 26,126 6,345 63,409 12,369 4,518 5,567 7,255 41,897 4,414 14,306 6,144 19,464 50,735 122,811 11,186 7,524 39,852 11,395 4,486 2,949 84,193 5,894 6,061 3,473 3,759 112,948 11,986 17,019 3,768 41,551 3,495 68,213 136,616 2,770 263,201 105,576 10,565 19,089 12,924 6,335 22,116 12,473 18,807 164,759 7,714 4,365 3,509 13,176 4,641 8,887 10,844 8,305 15,133 7,855 25,367 13,005 4,406 4,675 3,596 20,635 2,946 23,069 19,863 2,879 5,808 5,082 5,194 15,107 15,199 272,829 155,014 2,907 99,172 5,602 2,554 21,427 88,022 16,099 26,961 6,450 65,391 12,853 4,768 5,574 7,406 43,182 4,622 14,675 6,233 19,553 51,918 125,379 11,576 7,741 41,132 11,646 4,635 3,065 86,397 6,054 6,340 3,512 3,957 117,886 12,504 17,385 3,915 42,505 3,675 70,947 140,847 2,840 266,680 105,979 10,774 19,358 12,935 6,531 22,274 13,109 19,445 169,798 7,669 4,436 3,625 13,884 4,980 9,290 11,130 8,619 15,727 8,219 26,485 13,421 4,518 4,852 3,796 21,097 3,057 23,852 2007 3.2 8.6 3.0 5.6 18.6 4.0 6.5 4.3 5.2 5.2 4.4 5.8 6.1 4.1 5.6 5.5 8.0 9.1 4.4 9.7 7.7 4.4 4.7 8.0 5.8 4.7 4.5 9.9 6.0 5.0 7.2 6.0 7.7 6.2 6.3 4.9 5.3 2.2 4.7 7.7 6.0 4.3 4.1 3.6 5.7 7.0 5.5 7.1 5.4 2.8 6.4 7.8 5.7 4.2 7.8 8.0 4.7 7.9 5.7 7.6 5.4 4.6 7.6 1.2 7.0 6.1 2.9 5.3 7.0 6.4 5.7 6.1 2.9 6.1 4.6 6.0 4.3 8.1 2008 1.9 4.3 2.4 4.3 1.3 2.8 4.1 2.6 1.2 3.7 3.5 2.6 3.0 3.3 3.1 -0 .2 3.2 1.7 3.1 3.9 5.5 0.1 2.1 3.1 4.7 2.6 1.4 0.5 2.3 2.1 3.5 2.9 3.2 2.2 3.3 3.9 2.6 2.7 4.6 1.1 5.3 4.4 4.3 2.2 3.9 2.3 5.1 4.0 3.1 2.5 1.3 0.4 2.0 1.4 0.1 3.1 0.7 5.1 3.4 3.1 -0.6 1.6 3.3 5.4 7.3 4.5 2.6 3.8 3.9 4.6 4.4 3.2 2.5 3.8 5.6 2.2 3.7 3.4 Rank in United States Dollars 2006 35,624 30,892 33,613 28,638 28,869 31,432 37,171 43,346 35,957 25,877 38,846 39,567 26,793 38,907 38,040 39,469 36,378 28,144 37,863 22,938 27,636 34,444 34,936 38,832 35,014 34,237 32,934 44,000 40,031 29,464 35,398 39,721 35,861 31,170 29,205 29,613 38,996 28,181 31,492 25,439 28,516 38,805 30,406 40,908 30,191 36,210 30,765 32,952 43,969 34,730 59,440 55,827 38,556 45,976 48,206 41,485 45,960 35,982 32,475 46,965 56,323 36,640 27,875 33,619 30,690 37,714 33,330 29,127 31,623 35,889 34,599 29,827 30,398 30,588 27,783 29,513 27,091 33,103 2007 36,491 31,324 34,723 30,291 33,516 32,643 39,345 44,961 36,673 27,519 40,634 41,941 28,226 40,353 39,443 40,389 39,109 29,930 39,643 23,675 29,270 35,408 36,346 40,059 36,603 35,545 34,260 47,401 41,844 30,332 37,667 41,624 38,635 32,486 30,828 31,003 40,572 29,177 32,571 26,252 29,896 40,247 31,126 42,322 31,516 38,030 32,291 34,368 45,911 35,807 62,634 59,365 40,372 47,664 51,669 44,186 47,929 37,853 34,244 49,816 58,074 38,247 29,687 33,988 32,693 38,985 34,215 30,012 33,172 38,063 36,514 30,966 31,432 32,444 29,400 31,018 28,271 35,797 2008 37,035 31,741 35,459 31,580 33,613 33,338 40,787 45,927 36,156 28,698 42,104 43,237 28,702 41,522 39,942 39,777 40,119 30,011 40,887 23,814 30,564 35,337 37,012 39,602 37,669 36,256 34,527 46,929 42,309 30,634 38,727 42,208 39,812 32,955 31,631 32,032 41,119 30,143 33,782 25,886 31,392 41,823 32,016 42,857 32,628 38,237 33,666 34,937 46,649 36,717 62,598 58,531 40,635 47,957 51,140 44,927 47,755 39,183 35,399 50,586 57,107 38,755 30,516 35,657 34,885 39,786 34,986 30,506 34,011 39,646 38,006 31,496 32,314 33,336 31,194 31,547 29,302 36,980 2008 135 275 176 281 224 234 65 31 150 343 53 41 342 57 73 81 69 326 64 363 310 182 136 85 125 149 198 25 51 307 107 52 79 245 280 270 59 322 217 361 289 54 271 46 251 115 220 189 28 139 2 4 66 20 14 36 22 90 181 16 5 104 313 166 190 80 188 314 208 83 119 285 262 235 294 282 338 137 Percent change from preceding period 2007 2.4 1.4 3.3 5.8 16.1 3.9 5.8 3.7 2.0 6.3 4.6 6.0 5.3 3.7 3.7 2.3 7.5 6.3 4.7 3.2 5.9 2.8 4.0 3.2 4.5 3.8 4.0 7.7 4.5 2.9 6.4 4.8 7.7 4.2 5.6 4.7 4.0 3.5 3.4 3.2 4.8 3.7 2.4 3.5 4.4 5.0 5.0 4.3 4.4 3.1 5.4 6.3 4.7 3.7 7.2 6.5 4.3 5.2 5.4 6.1 3.1 4.4 6.5 1.1 6.5 3.4 2.7 3.0 4.9 6.1 5.5 3.8 3.4 6.1 5.8 5.1 4.4 8.1 2008 1.5 1.3 2.1 4.3 0.3 2.1 3.7 2.1 -1.4 4.3 3.6 3.1 1.7 2.9 1.3 -1 .5 2.6 0.3 3.1 0.6 4.4 -0.2 1.8 -1.1 2.9 2.0 0.8 -1 .0 1.1 1.0 2.8 1.4 3.0 1.4 2.6 3.3 1.3 3.3 3.7 -1 .4 5.0 3.9 2.9 1.3 3.5 0.5 4.3 1.7 1.6 2.5 -0.1 -1.4 0.7 0.6 -1 .0 1.7 -0 .4 3.5 3.4 1.5 -1 .7 1.3 2.8 4.9 6.7 2.1 2.3 1.6 2.5 4.2 4.1 1.7 2.8 2.7 6.1 1.7 3.6 3.3 May 2010 35 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Table 1. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by Metropolitan Area, 2006-2008—Table Ends Personal income Area Tallahassee, F L ............................................................................... Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, F L .......................................... Terre Haute, IN ................................................................................ Texarkana, TX-Texarkana, AR....................................................... Toledo, O H .. Topeka, KS.. Trenton-Ewing, N J.......................................................................... Tucson, A Z ...................................................................................... Tulsa, OK .................................................................................... Tuscaloosa, A L ................................................................................ Tyler, TX Utica-Rome, N Y .............................................................................. Valdosta, G A ................................................................................... Vallejo-Fairfield, C A ........................................................................ Victoria, TX ...................................................................................... Vineland-Millville-Bridgeton, N J .................................................... Virginia Beacn-Norfoik-Newport News, vA -N C .......................... Visalia-Porterville, C A .................................................................... Waco. T X .......................................................................................... Warner Robins, G A ........................................................................ Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV.................... Waterloo-Cedar Falls, IA ............................................................... Wausau, W l..................................................................................... Wenatchee-East Wenatchee, W A ................................................ Wheeling, WV-OH.......................................................................... Wichita, KS...................................................................................... Wichita Falls, T X ............................................................................. Williamsport, PA.............................................................................. Wilmington, N C ............................................................................... Winchester, VA-WV........................................................................ Winston-Salem, NC........................................................................ Worcester, MA................................................................................. Yakima, W A ..................................................................................... York-Hanover, PA............................................................................. Youngstown-Warren-Boardman, OH-PA...................................... Yuba City, CA................................................................................... Yuma, AZ.......................................................................................... Percent change from preceding period 2 Millions of dollars 2006 2007 2008 11,231 98,467 4,626 3,904 21,599 7,464 18,311 31,298 34,392 6,347 6,576 8,607 3,432 14,876 3,645 4,517 60,739 10,651 6,449 3,962 281,157 5,274 4,481 3,135 4,300 22,097 4,929 3,369 10,657 3,874 16,098 31,142 6,284 13,859 17,375 4,570 4,324 11,767 101,211 4,842 4,210 22,282 7,884 19,317 33,112 35,796 6,750 6,996 9,275 3,644 15,606 3,902 4,725 63,748 11,757 6,809 4,195 296,134 5,596 4,701 3,352 4,478 22,642 5,050 3,529 11,445 4,041 16,839 33,034 6,726 14,700 17,870 4,824 4,686 12,015 102,407 5,035 4,397 22,560 8,176 20,113 34,393 37,540 7,016 7,333 9,656 3,899 16,025 4,091 4,973 65,639 12,083 7,098 4,348 305,595 5,900 4,788 3,545 4,705 23,650 5,301 3,657 11,784 4,168 17,187 34,252 7,202 15,179 18,075 5,043 4,840 1. Per capita personal income was computed using Census Bureau midyear population estimates. 2. Percent change calculated from unrounded data. 3. The personal income level shown for the United States is derived as the sum of the county estimates. It differs from the estimate of personal income in the national income and product accounts because of differ ences in coverage, in the methodologies used to prepare the estimates, and in the timing of the availability of Per capita personal incom e1 2007 4.8 2.8 4.7 7.9 3.2 5.6 5.5 5.8 4.1 6.3 6.4 7.8 6.2 4.9 7.1 4.6 5.0 10.4 5.6 5.9 5.3 6.1 4.9 6.9 4.1 2.5 2.4 4.8 7.4 4.3 4.6 6.1 7.0 6.1 2.8 5.6 8.4 2008 2006 2.1 1.2 4.0 4.4 1.3 3.7 4.1 3.9 4.9 3.9 4.8 4.1 7.0 2.7 4.9 5.3 3.0 2.8 4.3 3.7 3.2 5.4 1.8 5.8 5.1 4.5 5.0 3.6 3.0 3.1 2.1 3.7 7.1 3.3 1.1 4.5 3.3 Rank in United States Dollars 32,332 36,678 27,224 29,153 32,063 32,809 50,471 32,085 38,529 31,125 33,825 29,334 26,688 36,623 32,377 29,346 36,319 26,001 28,593 30,903 53,401 32,495 34,785 29,772 29,306 37,566 32,982 28,747 32,356 32,599 34,766 39,305 27,302 33,398 30,148 28,606 23,338 2007 33,283 37,331 28,482 31,311 32,993 34,487 53,156 33,225 39,524 32,737 35,329 31,614 27,982 38,440 34,392 30,405 38,135 28,248 29,830 31,949 55,737 34,449 36,162 31,330 30,682 38,032 34,065 30,208 33,709 33,362 35,676 41,498 28,955 34,868 31,289 29,559 24,768 2008 33,639 37,512 29,652 32,338 33,505 35,581 55,170 34,058 40,981 33,587 36,456 32,975 29,169 39,442 35,809 31,721 39,300 28,610 30,748 32,577 56,824 36,053 36,536 32,737 32,454 39,207 35,910 31,344 33,858 33,994 35,801 42,850 30,661 35,651 31,911 30,562 25,041 2008 223 127 333 261 229 172 8 206 61 226 144 244 339 86 160 276 87 345 301 253 6 154 142 249 258 89 157 291 214 210 161 47 306 167 273 311 362 Percent change from preceding period 2007 2008 2.9 1.8 4.6 7.4 2.9 5.1 5.3 3.6 2.6 5.2 4.4 7.8 4.8 5.0 6.2 3.6 5.0 8.6 4.3 3.4 4.4 6.0 4.0 5.2 4.7 1.2 3.3 5.1 4.2 2.3 2.6 5.6 6.1 4.4 3.8 3.3 6.1 1.1 0.5 4.1 3.3 1.6 3.2 3.8 2.5 3.7 2.6 3.2 4.3 4.2 2.6 4.1 4.3 3.1 1.3 3.1 2.0 2.0 4.7 1.0 4.5 5.8 3.1 5.4 3.8 0.4 1.9 0.4 3.3 5.9 2.2 2.0 3.4 1.1 source data. 4. The metropolitan area definitions used by BEA for its personal income estimates are the county-based definitions issued by the Office of Management and Budget in June 2003 (with revisions released February 2004, March 2005, December 2006, November 2007, November 2008, and December 2009) for federal statis tical purposes. 36 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income May 2010 Table 2. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by Economic Area, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Area Millions of dollars 2006 United States 3.......................................................... 2007 Per capita personal income1 Percent change: 2008 Dollars 2006 2008 2007 Rank in United States 2008 11,256,516 11,879,836 12,225,589 2.9 37,698 39,392 40,166 2,574 6,305 15,048 49,805 28,410 6,710 14,387 26,307 28,572 19,729 251,977 17,580 59,624 9,661 26,011 13,692 6,779 11,544 58,857 5,738 23,051 377,125 46,828 13,966 8,034 15,246 17,115 15,460 33,804 21,737 94,333 431,122 84,895 9,303 158,152 23,098 14,746 31,543 13,581 86,192 21,802 285,043 16,332 44,690 166,909 42,674 244,119 8,637 17,017 10,941 26,981 14,535 24,724 23,660 9,770 6,329 14,672 4,196 9,259 23,731 43,993 13,244 6,447 58,567 4,621 60,725 20,397 39,988 11,623 69,575 9,115 94,616 8,240 49,124 259,220 31,707 8,673 111,005 60,468 46,972 23,764 7,938 9,906 92,480 9,693 14,735 19,660 34,742 7,580 25,636 2,943 6,853 15,731 53,311 29,981 6,946 15,544 28,030 29,824 20,907 266,802 18,417 63,534 10,024 27,691 14,564 7,095 12,417 61,717 6,242 24,075 397,699 49,997 14,613 8,423 16,383 18,297 16,497 35,488 23,139 99,542 454,457 88,267 9,770 163,534 24,506 15,496 32,977 14,436 90,187 23,288 303,149 17,434 46,209 176,183 45,262 250,041 9,234 18,034 11,495 28,866 15,338 25,523 24,373 10,521 6,830 15,970 4,464 9,781 24,509 47,149 13,910 6,993 60,110 4,869 63,369 22,147 42,207 13,797 73,421 9,574 100,728 8,791 52,253 274,940 33,804 9,306 114,459 62,951 48,794 25,077 8,354 10,340 97,310 10,735 15,992 21,440 36,636 7,984 27,182 3,368 7,146 16,601 55,359 31,154 7,160 16,262 30,224 30,648 21,413 271,067 19,294 65,681 10,486 29,331 15,373 7,212 12,867 63,387 6,471 24,285 409,271 51,974 15,082 8,961 17,420 19,194 17,480 37,377 24,015 101,802 463,397 90,214 10,349 166,510 25,432 16,158 34,299 15,090 92,714 24,658 313,945 18,231 46,966 181,823 47,592 253,407 9,572 18,661 11,916 30,555 15,972 26,143 25,500 11,592 7,219 16,480 4,619 10,104 24,961 48,564 14,205 7,831 61,634 5,147 65,018 23,552 43,792 13,620 75,651 9,852 103,528 9,042 54,175 290,477 35,322 9,686 118,470 63,812 51,112 26,237 8,991 10,875 100,593 11,388 17,073 22,778 37,815 8,273 28,731 14.4 4.3 5.5 3.8 3.9 3.1 4.6 7.8 2.8 2.4 1.6 4.8 3.4 4.6 5.9 5.6 1.7 3.6 2.7 3.7 0.9 2.9 4.0 3.2 6.4 6.3 4.9 6.0 5.3 3.8 2.3 2.0 2.2 5.9 1.8 3.8 4.3 4.0 4.5 2.8 5.9 3.6 4.6 1.6 3.2 5.1 1.3 3.7 3.5 3.7 5.9 4.1 2.4 4.6 10.2 5.7 3.2 3.5 3.3 1.8 3.0 2.1 12.0 2.5 5.7 2.6 6.3 3.8 -1 .3 3.0 2.9 2.8 2.9 3.7 5.7 4.5 4.1 3.5 1.4 4.8 4.6 7.6 5.2 3.4 6.1 6.8 6.2 3.2 3.6 5.7 32,640 29,137 25,104 36,467 32,913 28,149 30,751 38,839 34,619 30,401 34,992 29,807 36,282 29,862 32,587 31,031 33,049 34,463 34,631 33,966 34,387 45,910 32,148 36,402 27,400 47,371 34,774 29,036 28,473 33,109 34,898 41,711 36,436 28,972 34,186 34,613 30,534 31,365 30,334 33,275 27,269 37,544 33,868 32,409 42,906 35,279 34,710 28,750 31,069 31,482 25,152 28,371 31,562 31,585 34,670 30,033 29,818 31,680 27,998 30,259 27,606 28,574 31,180 30,722 31,561 32,097 31,297 30,166 30,959 33,211 29,864 41,855 33,471 38,510 40,540 30,394 26,851 33,547 36,524 27,974 27,695 26,192 27,083 35,816 30,263 28,607 30,589 29,792 30,483 30,859 37,503 31,629 26,056 38,993 34,067 29,263 33,097 41,081 35,908 31,829 36,142 30,928 37,147 30,939 34,383 32,794 33,677 36,748 36,055 36,602 34,817 48,229 34,476 37,996 28,752 49,393 36,768 30,906 29,916 34,477 35,730 43,702 37,462 30,312 35,444 36,387 31,825 32,306 32,309 34,502 28,949 39,068 36,064 33,585 44,375 37,121 35,738 30,374 32,333 33,041 26,603 29,993 32,280 32,450 37,068 32,092 31,526 33,326 29,294 31,140 29,160 29,598 34,161 31,431 33,310 33,065 33,667 31,279 35,875 34,749 31,075 44,526 35,055 40,924 42,222 32,019 28,317 34,300 37,398 28,961 29,090 27,458 28,142 37,266 33,577 30,594 32,585 30,956 31,857 32,586 43,173 32,976 27,215 40,445 34,928 30,421 34,584 43,922 36,735 32,261 36,017 32,106 37,087 32,370 36,098 34,471 33,551 37,691 36,724 37,645 34,486 49,361 35,915 39,106 30,639 51,395 38,152 32,777 31,527 34,980 35,626 44,274 38,117 31,933 36,184 37,197 32,967 33,167 33,583 35,186 30,400 39,668 37,582 34,209 44,874 38,761 36,484 31,200 32,960 34,139 27,792 31,317 32,827 33,895 40,486 33,729 31,831 34,222 30,128 31,644 29,616 29,960 38,314 32,130 35,206 33,494 35,224 31,904 34,864 35,559 31,818 45,583 35,459 42,078 43,692 33,010 28,866 35,219 37,491 30,260 30,287 29,384 29,568 38,003 35,559 31,960 34,070 31,556 32,854 34,237 2008 BEA econom ic areas Aberdeen, S D ............................................................. Abilene, T X .................................................................. Albany, GA................................................................... Albany-Schenectady-Amsterdam, N Y ..................... Albuquerque, N M .................... Alpena, M l................................ Amarillo, T X .............................. Anchorage, A K ........................................................... Appleton-Oshkosh-Neenah, W l................................ Asheville-Brevard, N C ............ Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Gainesville, G A-AL............ Augusta-Richmond County, GA-SC......................... Austin-Round Rock, T X ................................... Bangor, ME.................. Baton Rouge-Pierre Part, LA.................................... Beaumont-Port Arthur, TX Bend-Prineville, OR.... Billings, M T.................................................................. Birmingham-Hoover-Cullman, AL............................ Bismarck, N D ............. Boise City-Nampa, ID. Boston-Worcester-Manchester, M A-N H................. Buffalo-Niagara-Cattaraugus, NY Burlington-South Burlington, VT............................... Cape Girardeau-Jackson, MO-IL............................. Casper, W Y .............................. Cedar Rapids, IA ..................... Champaign-Urbana, IL ........... Charleston, W V ....................... Charleston-North Charleston, S C ........................... Charlotte-Gastonia-Salisbury, NC-SC.................... Chicago-Naperville-Michigan City, IL-IN-W I........... Cincinnati-Middletown-Wilmington, OH-KY-IN....... Clarksburg, WV+Morgantown, W V.......................... Cleveland-Akron-Elyria, O H ... Colorado Springs, C O ............ Columbia, M O ......................... Columbia-Newberry, S C ............................................ Columbus-Auburn-Opelika, G A -A L ......................... Columbus-Marion-Chillicothe, O H ........................... Corpus Christi-Kingsville, T X . Dallas-Fort Worth, T X ............................................... Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, IA -IL ...................... Dayton-Springfield-Greenville, O H .......................... Denver-Aurora-Boulder, C O ... Des Moines-Newton-Pella, IA................................... Detroit-Warren-Flint, M l............................................. Dothan-Enterprise-Ozark, AL................................... Dover, D E .................................................................... Duluth, MN-WI............................................................ El Paso, TX.................................................................. Erie, PA........................................................................ Eugene-Springfield, O R ............................................ Evansville, IN-KY........................................................ Fargo-Wahpeton, ND-MN....... Farmington, NM....................... Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers, AR-MO.................. Flagstaff, A Z ............................................................... Fort Smith, A R -O K .................................................... Fort Wayne-Huntington-Auburn, IN ......................... Fresno-Madera, C A ................................................... Gainesville, FL Grand Forks, ND-MN................................................. Grand Rapids-Muskegon-Holland, M l..................... Great Falls, M T........................................................... Greensboro-Winston-Salem-High Point, N C .......... Greenville, N C ............................................................ Greenville-Spartanburg-Anderson, SC.................... G ulfport- Bilox i- Pascago ula, M S .............................. Harrisburg-Carlisle-Lebanon, PA............................. Harrisonburg, V A ..................... Hartford-West Hartford-Willimantic, C T .................. Helena, MT............................... Honolulu, HI.............................. Houston-Baytown-Huntsville, T X ............................. Huntsville-Decatur, A L ............................................... Idaho Falls-Blackfoot, ID............................................ Indianapolis-Anderson-Columbus, IN...................... Jacksonville, F L ....................... Jackson-Yazoo City, M S ......... Johnson City-Kingsport-Bristol (Tri-Cities), TN-VA Jonesboro, A R ............................................................ Joplin, M O ................................ Kansas City-Overland Park-Kansas City, M O -KS. Kearney, NE................................................................ Kennewick-Richland-Pasco, WA.............................. Killeen-Temple-Fort Hood, TX Knoxville-Sevierville-La Follette, T N ........................ La Crosse, WI-M N................... Lafayette-Acadiana, L A .......... See footnotes at end of table. 15 122 178 26 89 158 93 13 59 134 68 136 56 132 67 95 115 45 60 47 94 5 71 34 157 4 39 127 146 88 75 12 41 140 66 55 123 118 114 83 159 29 48 100 10 35 63 149 124 102 177 148 126 107 25 111 142 99 163 144 168 165 36 135 82 117 80 141 90 76 143 9 78 19 14 120 174 81 51 162 161 171 169 42 77 139 103 145 125 98 M ay 2 0 1 0 Survey of C urrent 37 B u s in e s s Table 2. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by Economic Area, 2006-2008—Table Ends Per capita personal income1 Personal income Lake Charles-Jennings, L A ........................................................... Las Vegas-Paradise-Pahrump, N V ............................................... Lewiston, ID-WA.............................................................................. Lexington-Fayette-Frankfort-Richmond, K Y ................................ Lincoln, N E ....................................................................................... Little Rock-North Little Rock-Pine Bluff, A R ................................ Los Angeles-Long Beach-Riverside, C A ..................................... Louisville-Elizabethtown-Scottsburg, KY-IN................................. Lubbock-Levelland, TX Macon-Warner Robins-Fort Valley, G A ....................................... Madison-Baraboo, W l..................................................................... Marinette, WI-MI Mason City, IA ,, , McAllen-Edinburg-Pharr, TX.......................................................... Memphis, TN-MS-AR..................................................................... Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Miami Beach, FL.................................... Midland-Odessa, TX Milwaukee-Racine-Waukesha, W l................................................ Minneapolis-St. Paul-St. Cloud, MN -W I...................................... Minot, N D ................ Missoula, M T........... Mobile-Daphne-Fairhope, A L ........................................................ Monroe-Bastrop, L A ....................................................................... Montgomery-Alexander City, A L ................................................... Myrtle Beach-Conway-Georgetown, S C ..................................... Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro-Columbia, TN ....................... New Orleans-Metairie-Bogalusa, LA............................................ New York-Newark-Bridgeport, NY-NJ-CT-PA............................... Oklahoma City-Shawnee, O K ....................................................... Omaha-Council Bluffs-Fremont, NE-IA ....................................... Orlando-The Villages. FL Paducah, KY-IL ....................................................................... Panama City-Lynn Haven, FL........................................................ Pendleton-Hermiston, O R ............................................................. Pensacola-Ferry Pass-Brent, F L ................ Peoria-Canton, IL .......................................... Philadelphia-Camden-Vineland, PA-NJ-DE-MD......................... Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, A Z..................... Pittsburgh-New Castle, PA.......................... Portland-Lewiston-South Portland, ME , Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton, OR-W A.... Pueblo, C O .................................................... Raleigh-Durham-Cary, N C ............................................................ Rapid City, S D ........ Redding, C A ............ Reno-Sparks, N V ... Richmond, VA Roanoke, VA Rochester-Batavia-Seneca Falls, N Y ........................................... Sacramento-Arden-Arcade-Truckee, CA-NV............................... Salina, K S .............. Salt Lake City-Ogden-Clearfield, U T............................................ San Angelo, T X ..... San Antonio, TX San Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos, C A ........................................ San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland, CA........................................ Santa Fe-Espanola, NM Sarasota-Bradenton-Vemce, F L ................................................... Savannah-Hinesville-Fort Stewart, GA........................................ Scotts Bluff, NE Scranton-Wilkes-Barre, PA............................................................ Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia, W A ....................................................... Shreveport-Bossier City-Minden, L A ............................................ Sioux City-Vermillion, IA-NE-SD.................................................. Sioux Falls, SD................................................................................ South Bend-Mishawaka, IN-MI...................................................... Spokane, WA Springfield, IL Springfield, M O ............................................................................... St. Louis-St. Charles-Farmington, MO-IL.................................... State College, P A ............................................................................ Syracuse-Auburn, NY......... Tallahassee, F L ................... Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, F L .......................................... Texarkana, TX-Texarkana, AR....................................................... Toledo-Fremont, O H ........... Topeka, K S .......................... Traverse City, M l.................. Tucson, A Z ...................................................................................... Tulsa-Bartlesville, OK Tupelo, M S ............. Twin Falls, ID .......... Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA-NC..................<■....... Washington-Baltimore-Northern Virginia, DC-MD-VA-WV Waterloo-Cedar Falls, IA ............................................................... Wausau-Merrill, W l.......................................................................... Wenatchee, WA............................................................................... Wichita Falls, T X ............................................................................. Wichita-Winfield, KS....................................................................... 2006 2007 2008 9,822 79,339 2,628 40,393 13,460 46,356 748,592 52,618 11,945 18,160 41,294 8,850 5,093 20,846 65,340 257,965 18,109 88,922 205,014 4,074 9,002 20,973 9,199 17,078 29,605 89,670 55,857 1,140,152 65,576 39,522 142,936 6,876 8,290 3,765 22,778 28,895 291,303 158,980 106,608 34,645 106,463 6,392 101,286 7,182 10,819 26,670 60,854 24,307 50,635 100,224 5,986 74,235 4,117 70,788 129,585 470,452 9,783 81,696 25,261 2,832 20,409 195,571 17,085 11,513 16,554 29,666 23,921 19,806 26,455 122,949 22,370 60,270 15,630 98,467 8,193 31,838 14,683 8,037 36,040 45,239 13,854 5,641 66,435 434,916 6,893 16,379 6,715 5,954 35,823 10,579 84,626 2,807 42,172 14,276 50,245 779,219 54,942 12,952 18,960 43,262 9,258 5,459 22,495 68,630 265,419 19,500 92,220 215,742 4,553 9,553 21,946 9,488 17,799 31,203 94,510 62,686 1,226,519 68,124 41,607 148,515 7,165 8,581 4,003 23,599 30,698 303,871 167,673 111,417 36,118 112,226 6,866 108,722 7,591 11,310 29,094 64,576 25,807 54,291 105,882 6,463 80,263 4,393 75,833 136,616 500,834 10,408 84,678 26,887 3,028 21,569 210,230 17,426 12,321 18,094 30,817 25,657 21,210 28,022 128,334 23,621 65,098 16,357 101,211 8,783 32,927 15,817 8,300 38,239 47,463 14,471 6,244 69,694 457,397 7,348 17,168 7,232 6,156 36,987 11,303 86,440 2,931 43,872 14,871 51,622 796,187 56,420 13,231 19,773 44,488 9,679 5,773 23,969 70,601 267,200 21,379 94,520 223,278 5,239 9,762 22,886 9,919 18,387 32,171 98,092 63,473 1,254,194 72,544 43,118 151,089 7,468 8,838 4,214 24,054 32,200 312,150 170,287 115,556 37,508 115,980 7,229 112,988 8,006 11,571 29,522 66,213 26,741 56,133 108,793 7,080 82,881 4,644 78,920 140,847 507,101 10,777 83,553 27,941 3,205 22,280 216,792 18,368 13,342 19,322 31,273 26,696 22,246 29,115 133,934 24,505 67,717 16,781 102,407 9,121 33,368 16,805 8,544 39,806 49,850 15,028 6,476 71,765 472,008 7,773 17,567 7,800 6,390 39,009 1. Per capita personal income was computed using Census Bureau midyear population estimates. 2. Percent change from the preceding period was calculated from unrounded data. 3. The personal income level shown for the United States is derived as the sum of the county estimates. It Percent change2 Millions of dollars Area 2008 2006 6.8 2.1 4.4 4.0 4.2 2.7 2.2 2.7 2.2 4.3 2.8 4.5 5.7 6.6 2.9 0.7 9.6 2.5 3.5 15.1 2.2 4.3 4.5 3.3 3.1 3.8 1.3 2.3 6.5 3.6 1.7 4.2 3.0 5.3 1.9 4.9 2.7 1.6 3.7 3.8 3.3 5.3 3.9 5.5 2.3 1.5 2.5 3.6 3.4 2.7 9.5 3.3 5.7 4.1 3.1 1.3 3.6 -1 .3 3.9 5.9 3.3 3.1 5.4 8.3 6.8 1.5 4.0 4.9 3.9 4.4 3.7 4.0 2.6 1.2 3.9 1.3 6.2 2.9 4.1 5.0 3.9 3.7 3.0 3.2 5.8 2.3 7.8 3.8 5.5 Rank in United States Dollars 29,742 36,180 29,552 26,803 33,965 30,791 38,809 34,451 28,383 28,415 36,115 26,502 31,938 18,266 32,765 41,957 33,416 38,358 39,811 32,453 31,004 29,026 27,824 31,482 30,146 33,337 39,259 49,598 33,484 38,888 33,170 28,468 29,277 26,595 33,331 33,594 41,924 34,542 36,881 34,944 35,844 26,794 33,696 31,113 30,188 39,203 38,371 31,290 33,697 37,713 31,849 30,715 29,558 31,911 43,969 49,974 36,170 46,833 32,452 31,769 31,839 43,562 31,252 30,847 34,867 31,189 29,849 31,828 27,452 36,669 27,928 30,188 30,577 36,678 26,187 31,420 31,821 29,136 31,496 34,801 25,862 32,909 35,511 48,301 31,542 31,627 27,690 31,531 34,223 2007 32,022 37,357 31,488 27,793 35,774 33,180 40,211 35,601 30,639 29,304 37,487 27,792 34,433 19,294 34,249 43,079 35,399 39,658 41,524 36,301 32,373 30,107 28,794 32,609 31,082 34,409 40,441 53,138 34,390 40,595 33,811 29,576 30,264 28,196 34,505 35,533 43,507 35,367 38,650 36,361 37,129 28,590 35,304 32,641 31,419 41,980 40,218 32,906 36,146 39,400 34,530 32,235 31,451 33,387 45,911 52,761 38,227 47,735 33,880 33,940 33,590 46,198 31,855 33,182 37,581 32,281 31,483 34,103 28,652 38,111 29,526 32,622 31,499 37,331 28,041 32,454 34,114 30,059 32,766 36,132 26,917 35,844 37,186 50,389 33,640 33,140 29,323 32,901 35,127 2008 34,277 37,416 32,752 28,689 36,995 33,856 40,771 36,220 31,192 30,328 38,275 29,133 36,641 20,102 35,090 43,062 38,151 40,514 42,643 41,713 32,621 31,110 30,078 33,691 31,485 35,180 39,349 54,133 36,283 41,709 34,052 30,760 30,782 29,671 35,034 37,200 44,489 35,042 40,138 37,668 37,748 29,891 35,872 34,180 31,980 42,197 40,780 33,859 37,356 40,042 37,984 32,512 33,032 34,029 46,649 52,808 39,415 46,862 34,736 35,941 34,732 46,942 33,504 35,916 39,643 32,624 32,288 35,776 29,486 39,633 30,647 33,979 31,997 37,512 28,995 32,990 35,878 30,943 33,694 37,582 27,868 36,510 38,292 51,521 35,408 33,891 31,039 34,355 36,829 2008 97 52 128 175 57 110 23 65 150 160 38 172 61 179 85 16 40 24 17 20 130 151 164 113 147 84 33 1 64 21 104 155 154 167 87 54 11 86 27 46 44 166 73 101 138 18 22 109 53 28 43 131 119 105 8 2 32 7 91 69 92 6 116 70 30 129 133 74 170 31 156 106 137 50 173 121 72 153 112 49 176 62 37 3 79 108 152 96 58 differs from the estimate of personal income in the national income and product accounts because of differences in coverage, in the methodologies used to prepare the estimates, and in the timing of the availability of source data. 38 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income May 2010 Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars Area 2006 2007 Rank in state Dollars 2008 2006 2007 2008 United States 2......... 11,256,516 11,879,836 12,225,589 37,698 39,392 40,166 M etropolitan p o rtio n ............ 9,862,997 10,404,973 10,684,318 39,548 41,260 41,930 Nonm etropolitan p o r tio n .... 1,393,519 1,474,863 1,541,271 28,324 29,856 31,098 A la b a m a ........................ 144,437 152,136 157,422 31,415 32,803 33,655 Metropolitan p o rtio n ............ 108,758 114,583 118,584 33,226 34,651 35,506 Nonm etropolitan p o r tio n .... A utauga................................... Baldwin.................................... Barbour.................................... B ib b ......................................... B lount...................................... Bullock..................................... B utler....................................... Calhoun................................... Chambers................................ Cherokee................................. Chilton..................................... Choctaw................................... Clarke ...................................... C la y ......................................... Cleburne.................................. Coffee...................................... Colbert..................................... Conecuh.................................. Coosa...................................... Covington................................ Crenshaw................................ C ullm an................................... D ale.......................................... Dallas....................................... DeKalb..................................... Elm ore..................................... Escambia................................. Etowah..................................... Fayette..................................... Franklin.................................... Geneva.................................... Greene..................................... H ale.......................................... Henry....................................... Houston................................... Jackson.................................... Jefferson.................................. Lam ar...................................... Lauderdale............................... Lawrence................................. Lee............................................ Limestone................................ Lowndes.................................. Macon...................................... Madison................................... M arengo.................................. M arion..................................... Marshall................................... Mobile...................................... Monroe.................................... Montgomery........................... M organ.................................... Perry........................................ Pickens.................................... Pike........................................... Randolph................................. Russell..................................... St. Clair.................................... Shelby...................................... Sumter..................................... Talladega................................. Tallapoosa............................... Tuscaloosa............................... Walker...................................... Washington.............................. W ilcox...................................... Winston.................................... 35,679 1,468 5,676 663 479 1,345 221 507 3,268 875 589 1,066 363 698 360 364 1,422 1,455 329 259 957 386 2,209 1,287 1,140 1,651 2,163 921 2,814 415 736 692 273 424 428 3,129 1,419 27,364 344 2,489 853 3,349 2,136 308 483 11,257 612 734 2,441 11,513 578 8,371 3,573 254 497 879 509 1,295 2,128 7,490 300 2,249 1,122 5,650 1,979 394 253 584 37,553 1,569 6,074 697 507 1,439 229 540 3,515 908 632 1,141 372 739 368 396 1,546 1,539 336 266 1,001 405 2,297 1,368 1,159 1,743 2,317 948 2,993 432 776 733 281 438 450 3,378 1,471 28,146 360 2,680 916 3,594 2,260 321 503 12,137 628 767 2,590 11,947 599 8,609 3,769 265 522 946 547 1,370 2,315 8,147 305 2,367 1,171 6,031 2,040 415 262 605 38,838 1,639 6,297 709 527 1,495 236 561 3,652 897 654 1,173 377 760 369 407 1,619 1,601 352 272 1,036 411 2,358 1,425 1,196 1,795 2,425 999 3,098 440 798 764 287 460 466 3,488 1,527 28,645 366 2,776 986 3,693 2,376 347 549 12,822 642 788 2,680 12,506 626 8,797 3,898 281 541 999 571 1,436 2,434 8,417 316 2,441 1,223 6,270 2,107 436 268 619 26,940 29,886 33,681 22,424 22,488 24,020 20,561 25,046 29,063 25,124 24,023 25,488 25,193 26,098 26,130 25,233 31,150 26,718 24,735 23,849 26,066 28,215 27,657 26,792 26,491 24,483 28,649 24,523 27,360 23,385 23,905 26,845 29,906 23,694 25,866 32,759 26,775 41,370 23,821 28,287 25,180 26,123 29,751 24,248 21,434 36,608 28,684 24,797 28,130 28,624 25,126 37,150 31,257 24,033 25,212 29,341 22,655 26,061 28,290 41,879 22,270 28,073 27,545 31,940 28,685 22,665 20,165 24,021 28,212 31,488 35,146 23,428 23,598 25,299 20,907 26,700 31,163 26,139 25,834 26,933 26,253 27,962 26,717 26,935 33,032 28,192 25,588 24,634 27,199 29,462 28,496 28,350 27,096 25,528 29,914 25,200 28,995 24,635 25,339 28,519 30,871 24,226 27,050 34,683 27,869 42,551 24,871 30,277 26,823 27,476 30,575 25,358 22,580 38,679 29,522 25,991 29,443 29,481 26,309 38,154 32,734 24,708 26,757 31,345 24,413 27,284 29,479 44,401 22,975 29,522 28,708 33,692 29,710 24,217 20,818 24,851 29,036 32,547 35,738 23,764 24,401 25,868 21,634 27,800 32,199 26,020 26,780 27,477 26,763 28,949 26,710 27,593 33,884 29,314 26,981 25,342 28,271 30,040 28,930 29,438 28,065 26,059 31,043 26,612 29,947 25,014 25,698 29,419 31,713 25,431 28,022 35,289 28,842 43,180 25,502 31,118 28,946 27,749 31,130 27,568 24,725 39,954 30,422 26,816 30,046 30,567 27,628 39,182 33,519 26,101 27,887 32,889 25,245 28,548 30,316 44,658 24,129 30,324 29,889 34,492 30,572 25,506 21,228 25,707 43,922 A laska............................ 26,307 28,030 30,224 38,839 41,081 Metropolitan p o rtio n ............ 18,466 19,604 21,100 40,662 42,724 45,460 Nonm etropolitan p o r tio n .... Aleutians East Borough......... Aleutians West Census Area Anchorage Municipality......... Bethel Census Area............... Bristol Bay Borough............... Denali Borough....................... Dillingham Census A rea........ Fairbanks North Star Borough Haines Borough...................... Hoonah-Angoon Census Area 7,840 78 155 12,485 447 47 92 161 3,307 102 (N) 8,425 79 157 13,104 466 49 94 170 3,537 114 (N) 9,124 88 166 13,969 499 51 97 184 3,833 123 83 35,129 29,625 30,834 44,601 26,151 45,309 50,246 32,598 34,885 45,619 (N) 37,707 28,039 32,906 47,051 27,240 49,046 52,048 34,347 36,105 49,084 (N) 40,734 32,168 36,127 49,805 29,010 53,630 53,131 37,377 38,969 52,887 38,066 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Personal income Area 2008 11 5 65 63 53 66 38 12 52 46 43 47 29 48 41 8 28 44 59 34 23 31 26 35 51 16 49 24 61 55 27 13 58 36 6 32 2 57 15 30 39 14 42 62 3 19 45 22 18 40 4 9 50 37 10 60 33 21 1 64 20 25 7 17 56 67 54 23 21 7 26 3 4 19 16 5 18 Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 Juneau City and B orough.............. Kenai Peninsula Borough............... Ketchikan Gateway Borough Kodiak Island Borough.................... Lake and Peninsula Borough Matanuska-Susitna Borough Nome Census A re a ........................ North Slope Borough...................... Northwest Arctic Borough.............. Pr. of Wales-Outer Ketchikan Census Area................................ Sitka City and Borough................... Skagway Borough........................... Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Census A re a .............................................. Southeast Fairbanks Census Area Valdez-Cordova Census Area........ Wade Hampton Census A re a ........ Wrangell-Petersburg Census Area Yakutat City and Borough.............. Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area......... 1,321 1,792 592 470 46 2,674 263 340 206 1,405 1,959 635 506 51 2,964 278 389 215 1,501 2,145 680 548 55 3,298 310 448 233 43,062 34,341 44,550 35,860 30,224 33,673 28,263 50,954 27,708 46,011 36,806 48,380 38,733 33,132 35,969 29,850 58,610 28,922 48,435 39,986 52,030 41,617 36,665 38,657 33,254 66,664 31,168 8 15 6 13 20 17 22 1 25 135 323 (N) 142 345 (N) 158 365 57 23,783 36,162 (N) 25,496 39,472 (N) 28,359 41,872 62,685 27 12 2 124 244 372 126 221 25 158 133 275 398 136 237 27 167 (N) 296 426 154 248 29 178 39,426 36,122 38,247 16,902 36,712 38,424 27,082 42,797 40,129 42,038 17,957 39,276 39,865 28,752 (N) 43,432 45,687 20,177 41,514 44,168 31,187 11 9 28 14 10 24 2006 2007 2008 A riz o n a ................................... 206,957 218,639 223,184 33,423 34,365 34,339 M etropolitan p o rtio n ..................... 195,689 206,538 210,231 34,135 35,026 34,868 N onm etropolitan p o rtio n ............. Apache.............................................. Cochise............................................. Coconino........................................... G ila .. Graham............................................. Greenlee........................................... La Paz Maricopa........................................... Mohave............................................. Navajo............................................... Pima.................................................. Pinal.................................................. Santa Cruz....................................... Yavapai.............................................. Yuma................................................. 11,269 1,428 3,743 4,006 1,421 727 223 466 139,070 4,742 2,261 31,298 6,433 999 5,817 4,324 12,101 1,506 4,044 4,259 1,525 799 249 489 145,967 5,005 2,405 33,112 7,164 1,084 6,345 4,686 12,953 1,644 4,271 4,409 1,615 906 312 522 147,122 5,124 2,541 34,393 7,892 1,142 6,450 4,840 24,531 20,682 29,531 31,789 27,529 21,831 29,931 23,148 36,829 24,603 20,743 32,085 23,785 23,760 28,144 23,338 25,993 21,741 31,657 33,417 29,192 23,006 32,148 24,281 37,689 25,557 21,670 33,225 23,673 25,386 29,930 24,768 27,562 23,643 33,259 34,330 30,904 25,029 38,779 26,103 37,168 26,197 22,613 34,058 23,985 26,466 30,011 25,041 32,257 A rk a n s a s ................................ 82,929 89,576 92,505 29,459 31,517 Metropolitan p o rtio n ..................... 53,831 58,452 59,869 32,250 34,461 34,776 Nonm etropolitan p o rtio n ............. Arkansas........................................... Ashley............................................... B axte r............................................... Benton.............................................. B oone............................................... Bradley.............................................. C alhoun............................................ C arroll............................................... Chicot................................................ Clark ................................................. Clay................................................... Cleburne........................................... Cleveland.......................................... Columbia........................................... Conway............................................. Craighead........................................ Crawford........................................... Crittenden........................................ C ro ss ................................................ Dallas................................................ D esha............................................... D rew ................................................. Faulkner............................................ Franklin............................................. Fulton................................................ Garland............................................. Grant................................................. Greene.............................................. Hempstead...................................... Hot Spring........................................ Howard............................................. Independence.................................. Izard.................................................. Jackson............................................. Jefferson........................................... Johnson............................................ Lafayette........................................... Lawrence.......................................... Lee..................................................... Lincoln.............................................. Little River........................................ Logan................................................ Lonoke.............................................. Madison............................................ Marion............................................... 29,098 639 620 1,152 6,469 965 295 133 627 298 590 398 717 246 712 571 2,557 1,444 1,403 441 226 341 480 2,931 475 279 2,930 502 979 528 773 351 999 311 446 2,126 538 184 394 244 291 326 514 1,763 347 377 31,124 672 636 1,258 7,235 1,020 313 140 694 328 645 426 766 267 753 631 2,720 1,525 1,489 454 237 365 510 3,206 516 295 3,190 547 1,036 559 812 378 1,081 324 472 2,219 591 197 417 271 316 354 565 1,919 364 400 32,636 762 661 1,283 7,527 1,042 319 146 716 358 665 463 801 274 774 659 2,861 1,569 1,559 511 243 387 528 3,327 526 307 3,253 557 1,133 576 828 386 1,107 338 526 2,298 615 201 452 285 335 374 578 1,998 365 411 25,393 32,519 27,551 27,993 32,104 26,836 24,612 24,141 23,151 23,867 25,240 24,398 28,479 28,332 28,936 27,858 28,517 24,864 27,067 23,310 27,156 24,347 25,502 28,645 26,318 23,998 30,687 28,778 24,536 22,790 24,477 24,659 29,047 23,664 25,969 26,440 22,160 23,701 23,461 22,311 21,062 25,157 22,768 28,463 22,643 22,756 27,159 34,804 28,589 30,065 34,296 27,822 26,175 25,634 25,443 26,674 27,243 26,488 30,289 30,621 30,997 30,533 29,767 25,839 28,571 24,348 28,920 26,649 27,261 30,631 28,510 25,037 33,055 31,221 25,709 24,095 25,501 26,791 31,313 24,895 27,696 27,943 23,864 25,531 24,707 25,336 23,080 27,494 24,905 30,181 23,426 24,111 28,473 39,776 29,777 30,596 34,293 28,275 26,788 27,506 26,037 29,699 27,849 29,345 31,616 31,885 32,104 31,858 30,622 26,336 29,669 27,296 29,998 28,741 28,309 31,008 29,086 26,105 33,298 31,368 27,900 25,093 25,944 27,013 32,093 25,788 31,304 29,043 24,730 26,211 26,608 26,734 24,680 29,054 25,591 30,631 23,083 24,441 2008 14 5 3 6 12 1 10 2 9 15 4 13 8 7 11 3 25 21 6 39 49 44 57 26 43 29 14 12 9 13 20 53 27 46 24 34 38 18 30 56 7 15 42 64 58 48 10 59 16 32 65 55 52 50 66 31 61 19 73 67 M ay 2010 Survey of C urrent B u s in e s s 39 Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Area Per capita personal income1 Millions of dollars 2006 M iller............................................. Mississippi................................... M onroe......................................... M ontgomery................................ Nevada........................................ N ew ton........................................ Ouachita...................................... Perry............................................. Phillips.......................................... Pike............................................... Poinsett......................................... Polk............................................... Pope............................................. Prairie........................................... Pulaski.......................................... Randolph..................................... St. Francis................................... S a lin e ........................................... S cott............................................. S earcy.......................................... Sebastian.................................... S evier........................................... Sharp............................................ Stone............................................ Union............................................ Van Buren.................................... Washington.................................. W hite............................................ Woodruff...................................... Yell................................................ 1,254 1,265 225 203 234 180 678 276 546 281 621 430 1,525 229 15,240 407 611 3,004 231 172 4,136 368 365 266 1,562 392 5,816 1,795 180 504 2007 2006 2007 2008 1,344 1,324 230 214 250 191 711 298 610 307 636 458 1,638 243 16,664 435 647 3,409 247 185 4,350 399 386 302 1,684 420 6,237 1,908 193 539 2008 1,386 1,423 226 218 256 198 739 303 646 310 710 474 1,712 270 16,663 462 691 3,521 253 193 4,466 402 402 309 1,747 440 6,370 2,052 211 567 29,293 27,063 25,396 22,358 24,785 21,455 25,783 26,973 24,328 25,984 24,898 21,292 26,112 25,815 40,858 22,413 22,534 32,403 20,555 21,426 34,362 22,583 20,463 22,213 35,931 23,971 30,516 24,669 22,872 23,172 31,328 28,413 26,882 23,563 26,779 22,996 27,327 28,792 27,830 28,397 25,573 22,733 27,665 27,576 44,437 24,105 24,136 35,738 21,888 22,986 35,733 24,393 21,751 25,313 39,214 25,523 32,037 25,906 25,258 24,651 31,994 30,437 27,095 23,938 27,952 23,875 28,731 29,465 30,110 28,952 28,740 23,553 28,648 31,178 44,065 25,569 26,325 36,221 22,527 23,976 36,477 24,113 22,742 25,721 40,629 26,654 32,301 27,373 28,198 25,561 C a lifo rn ia ........................... 1,495,560 1,572,271 1,604,113 41,567 43,402 43,852 M etropolitan p o r tio n ............... 1,469,245 1,544,366 1,575,316 41,800 43,632 44,067 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ........ Alam eda...................................... A lp ine ........................................... Amador........................................ Butte............................................. Calaveras.................................... Colusa.......................................... Contra C osta............................... Del N orte..................................... El Dorado.................................... Fresno.......................................... Glenn............................................ Humboldt..................................... Imperial........................................ Inyo............................................... Kern.............................................. K ings............................................ Lake.............................................. Lassen.......................................... Los Angeles................................. Madera........................................ M a rin ............................................ Mariposa...................................... Mendocino................................... M erced........................................ Modoc........................................... M o n o ............................................ Monterey...................................... Napa............................................. Nevada........................................ O range........................................ Placer........................................... Plum as........................................ Riverside...................................... Sacramento................................. San Benito................................... San Bernardino.......................... San Diego.................................... San Francisco............................. San Joaquin................................ San Luis Obispo......................... San M ateo................................... Santa B arbara............................ Santa C la ra ................................. Santa C ru z.................................. S hasta ......................................... Sierra............................................ S iskiyou....................................... Solano ......................................... Sonom a....................................... Stanislaus.................................... Sutter............................................ Tehama........................................ Trinity............................................ Tulare............................................ Tuolumne..................................... Ventura........................................ Yolo............................................... Yuba.............................................. 26,315 68,718 41 1,268 6,479 1,510 590 55,313 677 8,224 25,730 694 3,955 3,993 606 21,371 3,500 1,930 830 385,733 3,565 21,793 546 2,846 6,062 262 542 16,419 6,408 4,134 150,598 15,050 729 60,451 50,167 1,859 56,476 129,585 53,917 19,476 10,000 47,694 18,329 96,091 11,992 5,877 94 1,337 14,876 21,132 14,916 2,810 1,521 356 10,651 1,848 35,706 6,524 1,760 27,904 72,328 43 1,364 6,856 1,596 679 58,491 720 8,641 27,117 793 4,149 4,231 632 23,023 3,893 2,022 888 402,108 3,808 23,122 575 3,010 6,802 277 555 17,019 6,820 4,392 153,839 15,889 761 63,492 52,625 1,972 59,319 136,616 57,417 20,635 10,565 51,843 19,089 103,604 12,924 6,144 99 1,406 15,606 22,116 15,605 2,954 1,600 376 11,757 1,967 37,192 7,038 1,870 28,797 73,160 44 1,394 7,101 1,621 769 59,348 750 8,823 27,994 854 4,295 4,512 652 23,952 3,977 2,089 923 413,317 3,914 23,136 595 3,102 6,810 293 577 17,385 6,969 4,447 155,118 16,095 784 64,504 54,178 1,986 60,875 140,847 58,752 21,097 10,774 52,286 19,358 103,993 12,935 6,233 102 1,455 16,025 22,274 15,977 3,068 1,651 390 12,083 2,007 37,185 7,301 1,975 31,719 47,781 35,693 33,301 29,867 32,459 28,240 55,241 23,813 46,996 29,305 25,053 30,655 25,465 34,606 27,820 24,112 29,860 24,348 39,519 24,956 89,191 30,527 33,106 25,205 28,290 41,349 40,908 48,981 42,714 50,997 46,421 35,201 30,303 36,825 34,139 28,615 43,969 68,584 29,513 38,556 68,843 45,976 56,521 48,206 32,934 27,974 30,243 36,623 45,960 29,654 31,306 25,188 25,659 26,001 32,953 45,308 34,505 25,144 33,590 49,915 37,607 35,447 31,486 34,057 32,168 57,881 25,051 49,163 30,472 28,464 32,273 26,382 36,218 29,341 26,369 31,282 25,375 41,307 26,225 93,953 31,984 35,183 27,981 30,405 43,299 42,322 51,684 45,306 52,009 47,877 36,928 30,882 38,312 36,173 29,764 45,911 71,844 31,018 40,372 74,343 47,664 60,098 51,669 34,260 30,033 31,803 38,440 47,929 30,816 32,286 26,337 26,987 28,248 35,321 47,098 36,294 26,078 34,621 49,757 42,000 36,707 32,349 34,528 36,361 57,874 25,980 49,844 30,997 30,374 33,329 27,666 37,883 30,047 26,734 32,099 26,721 42,265 26,524 93,159 33,137 36,162 27,871 32,196 44,764 42,857 52,169 45,708 51,894 47,195 38,525 30,894 39,076 36,239 30,363 46,649 72,712 31,547 40,635 73,839 47,957 59,227 51,140 34,527 31,323 32,681 39,442 47,755 31,485 33,301 27,008 27,831 28,610 36,092 46,787 37,132 27,099 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Personal income Rank in state 11 22 47 70 41 71 36 28 23 33 35 72 37 17 1 62 54 5 75 69 4 68 74 60 2 51 8 45 40 63 10 20 27 38 32 28 5 58 9 44 46 34 52 25 48 55 40 56 19 57 1 36 30 50 39 17 18 6 16 7 13 24 45 23 29 47 15 3 41 21 2 11 4 8 33 43 37 22 12 42 35 54 51 49 31 14 26 53 Area Per capita personal income1 Millions of dollars Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 205,548 212,320 40,899 181,190 24,358 13,466 444 27,775 358 118 127 14,886 2,023 536 81 497 182 85 89 132 881 30,311 58 15,608 2,677 946 21,868 1,159 2,123 211 555 526 28 188 55 24,950 58 267 213 1,994 11,112 461 138 663 4,811 28 483 805 1,187 796 538 201 567 131 1,445 374 4,518 290 365 1,170 128 21 392 102 1,198 861 147 6,780 367 187,083 25,237 14,000 473 28,122 365 120 136 15,040 2,023 557 74 502 193 94 95 135 922 31,308 59 16,970 2,741 967 22,699 1,218 2,262 217 567 533 30 198 55 25,361 53 286 221 2,060 11,378 481 137 707 5,203 29 510 826 1,227 836 575 205 575 138 1,447 386 4,768 307 392 1,197 137 22 399 97 1,212 883 145 7,068 379 41,988 34,138 31,187 26,972 50,552 27,535 25,490 19,890 48,954 35,841 29,834 31,423 55,777 21,125 24,514 13,964 31,875 26,924 51,935 27,644 52,562 50,954 39,116 35,667 23,148 37,130 41,529 38,816 33,677 31,873 22,798 37,628 45,815 27,071 28,182 25,826 37,557 36,887 27,527 22,608 29,008 32,114 29,799 33,599 29,477 29,289 28,217 27,135 43,375 32,865 25,171 90,500 26,307 27,636 41,181 28,919 49,346 17,333 31,838 50,721 32,869 43,825 37,477 27,459 27,188 36,933 42,449 43,407 36,464 32,093 28,993 51,113 28,675 30,769 22,030 50,344 37,697 31,772 45,589 55,593 22,700 25,824 13,712 33,219 29,140 52,370 30,551 57,390 52,929 41,710 37,348 24,488 40,083 41,561 40,856 35,090 33,747 24,378 40,176 47,218 44,443 33,867 27,135 40,147 38,726 29,118 26,351 31,708 34,792 29,316 35,636 32,048 30,079 28,876 28,754 45,658 33,419 29,357 95,687 28,718 29,270 46,847 31,401 52,356 18,629 35,866 52,542 43,640 45,679 39,586 31,901 27,988 38,258 43,021 M etropolitan p o rtio n ............... N onm etropolitan p o rtio n ........ Adams.......................................... Alamosa...................................... A rapahoe.................................... Archuleta..................................... Baca............................................. B e n t............................................. B oulder....................................... Broomfield................................... Chaffee....................................... Cheyenne.................................... Clear Creek................................. Conejos....................................... Costilla......................................... Crowley....................................... C uster.......................................... D e lta ............................................ Denver........................................ D olores....................................... Douglas....................................... Eagle............................................ E lb ert........................................... El Paso......................................... Fremont....................................... G arfield........................................ Gilpin............................................ Grand........................................... G unnison.................................... Hinsdale...................................... Huerfano..................................... Jackson........................................ Jefferson..................................... Kiowa........................................... Kit Carson................................... Lake............................................. La Plata....................................... Larimer........................................ Las Animas................................. Lincoln........................................ Logan........................................... M esa............................................ Mineral........................................ Moffat........................................... Montezuma................................. Montrose..................................... Morgan........................................ Otero............................................ O uray........................................... Park P hillips......................................... Pitkin............................................ Prowers....................................... Pueblo.......................................... Rio B lanco.................................. Rio G rande ................................. R outt............................................ Saguache.................................... San Juan..................................... San Miguel.................................. Sedgwick..................................... Summit......................................... Teller............................................ Washington................................. Weld............................................. Yuma............................................ 194,393 171,871 22,523 12,772 412 26,911 333 100 121 14,268 1,844 496 58 495 171 82 87 123 805 29,535 52 13,660 2,502 886 20,677 1093 1,898 209 519 494 26 177 52 24,030 37 224 198 1,834 10,373 433 120 606 4,292 27 447 734 1,116 780 515 183 547 113 1,349 352 4,196 248 342 1072 119 18 364 79 1128 804 128 6,372 355 C o nn e cticut...................... M etropolitan p o rtio n ............... N onm etropolitan portion Fairfield....................................... Hartford....................................... Litchfield...................................... Middlesex.................................... New Haven.................................. New London................................ Tolland.......................................... Windham..................................... 183,820 171,081 12,739 67,982 41,646 8,885 7,766 36,326 11,319 6,042 3,854 194,068 180,560 13,508 70,748 44,253 9,409 8,428 38,551 12,063 6,518 4,099 197,024 183,226 13,798 70,754 45,232 9,554 8,565 39,673 12,341 6,661 4,244 52,744 53,790 41,818 76,511 47,773 47,160 47,551 43,191 42,181 40,946 33,160 Delaware........................... Metropolitan p o rtio n ............... N onm etropolitan portion Kent.............................................. New Castle.................................. Sussex........................................ 33,307 34,537 35,377 27,440 5,867 4,368 23,072 5,867 28,295 6,242 4,626 23,669 6,242 28,951 39,046 40,802 41,618 40,375 42,169 6,426 4,781 24,170 6,426 32,503 29,503 43,991 32,503 33,735 30,419 44,845 33,735 33,881 30,749 45,512 33,881 C o lo ra d o ........................... 55,629 56,717 44,270 79,576 50,626 49,923 51,379 45,697 45,610 43,978 35,138 39,932 2008 43,942 37,237 32,588 30,650 50,727 29,206 31,626 22,479 50,058 36,915 32,766 41,541 56,303 24,180 29,095 14,553 34,216 29,909 52,788 30,134 60,361 52,684 42,148 38,126 25,552 41,256 41,506 41,164 35,002 36,131 25,454 41,371 47,556 41,408 35,246 27,624 40,677 38,848 30,232 26,374 34,103 36,665 31,017 36,934 32,858 30,318 30,344 30,842 44,650 33,831 30,973 92,680 29,747 30,564 48,637 33,742 52,106 19,496 37,914 52,945 41,142 45,355 40,829 32,388 28,402 39,389 40 46 8 54 42 62 9 29 39 15 3 61 55 64 34 52 5 51 2 6 14 26 59 19 16 20 33 31 60 18 11 17 32 57 23 25 50 58 35 30 43 28 38 49 48 45 13 36 44 1 53 47 10 37 7 63 27 4 21 12 22 41 56 24 56,245 57,312 45,097 79,108 51,616 50,646 51,930 46,918 46,426 44,430 36,174 1 3 4 2 5 6 7 8 D istrict of C olum bia 35,172 37,554 39,131 60,229 64,040 66,316 F lo rid a ................................ M etropolitan p o rtio n ............... 690,273 661,430 713,490 719,708 38,161 39,036 39,064 688,938 30,770 8,405 682 38,832 27,324 33,162 25,584 39,729 28,843 7,866 640 683,349 30,140 8,265 668 39,715 N onm etropolitan portion Alachua....................................... Baker............................................ 28,128 34,410 26,096 28,410 34,713 26,173 3 1 2 23 45 40 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income May 2010 Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Area Per capita personal incom e' Millions of dollars 2006 2007 B a y .............................................. Bradford...................................... Brevard....................................... Broward...................................... Calhoun...................................... Charlotte..................................... C itrus........................................... C la y ............................................. C ollier.......................................... CoiumDia.................................... DeSoto......................................... Dixie............................................. D uval........................................... Escambia.................................... Flagler.......................................... Franklin....................................... Gadsden..................................... G ilchrist...................................... G lades........................................ Gulf Hamilton. Hardee.... Hendry.... Hernando Highlands.................................... Hillsborough................................ Holmes........................................ Indian R iver................................ Jackson... Jefferson. Lafayette. Lake Lee............................................... Leon............................................. Levy............................................. Liberty.......................................... Madison...................................... Manatee...................................... M a rio n ........................................ M a rtin .......................................... Miami-Dade................................ M onroe....................................... N assau... Okaloosa O keechobee............................... Orange.... O sceola.. Palm B each................................ Pasco Pinellas....................................... Polk .................................... Putnam ... St. Johns. St. Lucie.. Santa Rosa................................. Sarasota. Seminole. Sumter.... Suwannee................................... Taylor..... U n io n , Volusia.... Wakulla... Walton Washington................................. 5,506 702 18,892 71,940 284 5,335 3,999 5,812 19,129 1,596 748 303 32,677 9,579 2,542 303 1,197 448 261 378 244 605 1022 4,638 2,570 42,675 464 7,321 1,139 388 129 8,929 23,942 8,897 957 179 413 12,557 9,617 8,172 85,192 4,287 2,857 7,144 925 37,773 5,960 71,721 12,412 38,742 17,669 1,775 8,276 7,122 4,552 19,985 17,283 1,804 979 488 264 15,292 749 1,503 520 5,670 738 19,501 73,126 293 5,567 4,183 6,086 20,140 1,686 742 311 33,545 9,907 2,759 316 1,226 467 265 388 255 608 1034 4,859 2,660 44,020 475 7,714 1,207 404 146 9,455 24,617 9,334 977 189 423 12,820 9,961 8,553 86,779 4,511 3,098 7,321 943 38,790 6,361 74,917 13,157 39,175 18,583 1,837 8,870 7,576 4,793 20,791 17,776 1,983 1051 523 269 15,895 803 1,578 548 G eorgia.............................. Metropolitan p o rtio n ............... 311,927 267,644 Nonm etropolitan portion Appling........................................ Atkinson...................................... Bacon.......................................... Baker Baldwin....................................... Banks Barrow......................................... B artow ......................................... Ben H ill....................................... Berrien........................................ B ib b ............................................. Bleckley...................................... Brantley...................................... B rooks......................................... Bryan........................................... Bulloch......................................... Burke........................................... Butts Calhoun...................................... Camden...................................... Candler........................................ Carroll.......................................... C atoosa...................................... 44,283 408 159 231 102 1,188 457 1,695 2,636 439 451 5,144 333 352 409 984 1,453 505 566 122 1,312 240 2,880 1,651 329,983 283,409 46,575 431 164 243 104 1,238 500 1,828 2,759 452 471 5,284 337 366 433 1074 1,558 528 598 126 1,397 245 3,055 1,743 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Personal income Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 5,808 762 19,863 73,591 305 5,574 4,250 6,178 19,739 1,729 749 321 33,675 10,161 2,879 322 1,266 479 266 399 269 633 1029 4,997 2,704 44,583 491 7,669 1,269 412 150 9,707 24,077 9,499 1006 193 439 12,754 10,216 8,364 88,955 4,532 3,163 7,370 961 39,414 6,652 74,099 13,636 39,191 18,901 1,889 9,000 7,734 4,945 20,659 17,839 2,069 1075 540 277 15,964 837 1,578 565 33,613 24,547 35,624 40,821 21,189 34,444 29,233 32,887 61,381 23,823 21,529 20,411 38,805 31,377 30,892 27,242 25,959 27,031 23,527 24,025 17,289 21,454 26,139 28,359 26,425 36,845 24,352 56,323 23,321 27,715 16,107 30,650 42,303 34,472 25,024 23,206 21,760 40,303 30,632 59,329 34,934 57,857 42,951 39,154 23,239 35,840 24,200 56,665 27,935 42,178 31,695 24,177 49,040 28,516 31,550 54,662 42,312 26,309 25,261 24,371 18,475 30,937 25,681 29,260 23,257 34,723 25,448 36,491 41,859 21,670 35,408 29,913 33,366 64,251 24,817 21,153 20,938 39,518 32,741 31,324 28,067 26,239 27,614 24,205 24,583 17,910 21,089 26,257 28,757 27,005 37,627 24,870 58,074 24,658 29,189 18,151 31,291 42,062 35,528 25,163 24,188 22,315 40,824 30,836 61,590 35,368 61,446 45,272 40,465 23,556 36,384 24,628 59,240 28,629 42,919 32,404 24,907 50,449 29,085 32,442 56,368 43,535 27,278 26,625 24,965 18,256 31,869 26,540 29,958 23,932 35,459 26,137 37,035 41,974 22,507 35,337 30,170 33,375 62,559 25,095 21,390 21,641 39,473 33,561 31,741 28,613 26,691 28,093 23,988 25,447 18,631 21,723 25,990 29,148 27,304 37,778 25,619 57,107 24,923 29,495 18,612 31,520 40,898 35,900 25,662 24,230 23,131 40,353 31,225 60,140 35,887 61,825 45,302 41,050 23,881 36,639 24,950 58,358 29,113 43,064 32,572 25,712 49,327 29,115 32,890 55,856 43,439 27,504 26,995 25,233 18,535 32,098 26,875 29,259 23,560 21 46 17 11 61 22 32 25 1 53 64 63 15 24 29 38 44 39 57 51 65 62 47 35 41 16 50 5 55 33 66 30 13 19 49 56 60 14 31 3 20 2 8 12 58 18 54 4 37 10 27 48 7 36 26 6 9 40 42 52 67 28 43 34 59 337,961 33,432 35,349 34,612 36,568 26,112 24,075 20,028 23,049 27,731 26,607 30,378 27,212 29,752 25,478 28,192 34,117 26,304 23,702 26,472 35,688 23,458 23,141 25,287 21,000 29,500 23,531 27,295 27,905 34,849 36,642 26,993 25,491 21,895 24,563 29,396 27,445 31,437 27,357 29,598 25,925 28,608 35,312 27,724 24,851 28,165 36,567 24,173 24,749 25,219 23,305 30,316 24,392 28,070 28,159 113 151 133 52 85 31 86 48 105 64 14 80 124 69 12 141 130 116 147 40 136 74 70 2008 289,325 48,636 460 179 259 111 1,289 524 1,922 2,812 458 487 5,476 354 385 464 1,145 1,639 565 615 143 1,454 256 3,194 1,780 25,182 23,084 19,734 22,358 26,263 25,962 28,321 26,762 29,171 25,068 26,997 33,216 26,778 22,897 25,026 34,165 22,396 22,222 24,508 20,080 28,769 23,382 26,600 27,070 Area 2008 Millions of dollars 2006 C harlton...................................... Chatham..................................... Chattahoochee.......................... Chattooga................................... Cherokee.................................... Clarke .......................................... Clay. Clayton........................................ Clinch........................................... C obb............................................ Coffee.......................................... Colquitt........................................ Columbia..................................... Cook Coweta........................................ Crawford..................................... Crisp D ade............................................ Dawson....................................... Decatur....................................... DeKalb........................................ Dodge.......................................... Dooly............................................ Dougherty................................... Douglas..’ .................................... E a rly ............................................ Echols.......................................... Effingham.................................... E lbert........................................... Emanuel...................................... Evans........................................... Fannin.......................................... Fayette........................................ Floyd............................................ Forsyth........................................ Franklin....................................... Fulton........................................... G ilm er......................................... Glascock..................................... G lynn........................................... Gordon........................................ G rady........................................... Greene........................................ Gwinnett...................................... Habersham................................. Hall............................................... Hancock...................................... H aralson..................................... H arris........................................... H art.............................................. Heard........................................... H enry........................................... Houston...................................... Irw in............................................. Jackson....................................... Jasper.......................................... Jeff Davis.................................... Jefferson..................................... Jenkins........................................ Johnson...................................... Jo ne s........................................... Lamar........................................... Lanier........................................... Laurens....................................... Lee.. Liberty.......................................... Lincoln........................................ Long............................................. Lowndes..................................... Lum pkin...................................... McDuffie...................................... McIntosh..................................... Macon Madison...................................... Marion.......................................... Meriwether.................................. M iller............................................ Mitchell........................................ Monroe......................................... Montgomery................................ Morgan........................................ Murray.......................................... Muscogee................................... Newton........................................ Oconee....................................... Oglethorpe.................................. Paulding...................................... Peach........................................... Pickens....................................... Pierce........................................... Pike.............................................. Per capita personal in com e1 211 9,175 345 553 6,778 2,775 84 6,428 143 29,442 927 1049 4,064 358 3,452 335 542 410 670 694 26,794 438 260 2,538 3,378 327 81 1,404 524 517 266 578 4,400 2,812 5,528 541 51,539 708 60 2,802 1,323 602 482 25,148 1019 5,137 176 753 1123 570 258 5,121 3,962 217 1,540 349 312 379 186 182 792 449 188 1,283 855 1,511 206 232 2,754 698 625 273 273 755 191 529 172 540 783 203 573 966 6,613 2,182 1,285 371 3,512 662 961 416 461 2007 220 9,860 355 582 7,288 2,884 85 6,707 150 31,211 963 1108 4,390 376 3,800 347 562 425 720 724 27,881 460 261 2,660 3,643 323 82 1,540 552 527 283 624 4,822 2,949 6,225 594 54,339 769 62 2,935 1,382 622 522 26,204 1113 5,413 182 803 1,207 605 279 5,573 4,195 224 1,674 372 321 386 189 188 834 468 203 1,329 907 1,586 209 244 2,926 738 646 294 292 795 200 550 173 556 849 209 617 999 7,017 2,344 1,394 403 4,005 718 1041 443 495 Rank in state Dollars 2008 228 10,303 372 586 7,365 2,952 92 6,709 158 31,260 1012 1,162 4,711 397 3,941 362 586 433 735 760 28,104 483 294 2,739 3,764 358 84 1,662 574 556 291 639 4,838 3,065 6,572 622 54,295 788 65 3,026 1,411 639 544 26,504 1,157 5,578 194 818 1,301 635 305 5,769 4,348 242 1,771 388 336 415 196 196 882 477 223 1,396 972 1,655 217 259 3,128 763 669 307 318 821 216 570 188 590 895 216 634 1007 7,322 2,452 1,499 428 4,319 764 1,049 472 513 2006 2007 2008 19,564 37,637 25,625 21,124 34,901 24,881 26,608 23,906 20,649 43,317 23,232 23,795 38,501 22,038 30,198 26,567 24,719 25,569 32,347 24,443 36,851 22,229 22,198 26,715 28,438 27,326 19,751 28,780 25,346 23,024 23,514 25,989 41,968 29,613 37,302 24,995 53,486 25,160 22,308 38,155 25,986 24,468 31,147 33,667 24,927 29,887 18,623 26,660 39,695 23,605 22,668 28,933 30,903 21,227 27,604 25,958 23,644 22,950 21,591 20,338 29,430 26,981 24,536 27,209 26,572 25,035 25,518 20,770 27,407 26,903 28,982 24,531 20,257 27,499 26,973 23,023 28,005 22,774 32,195 22,573 32,251 23,756 34,530 24,064 42,203 27,069 29,276 26,316 32,874 23,879 27,787 20,805 39,662 25,549 21,661 35,742 25,421 26,853 24,595 21,536 45,135 23,871 24,770 40,326 22,946 31,941 27,636 25,345 26,265 33,313 25,362 37,998 23,262 22,635 27,914 29,306 27,375 19,818 30,287 26,782 23,354 24,841 27,652 45,520 31,003 39,308 27,212 54,844 26,913 22,254 39,264 26,568 24,977 33,178 33,923 26,395 30,269 18,911 27,963 41,469 25,083 24,388 30,141 31,949 22,456 28,035 27,232 24,284 23,547 22,123 19,991 30,591 27,665 25,334 27,989 27,470 26,204 26,053 21,684 28,767 27,749 30,019 25,686 21,866 28,618 28,395 24,150 28,052 23,097 33,880 23,293 33,922 24,533 37,600 24,488 44,246 28,884 31,310 27,429 34,245 24,834 28,771 21,060 41,022 26,979 21,829 35,051 25,632 29,021 24,307 22,272 44,352 24,841 25,594 42,639 23,940 31,931 28,810 26,341 26,840 33,241 26,446 37,957 24,418 25,536 28,732 29,383 30,637 19,960 31,889 27,886 24,200 25,125 28,141 45,474 32,032 39,096 28,512 53,579 27,240 23,347 39,792 26,643 25,517 34,520 33,527 26,927 30,195 20,342 28,363 44,066 26,195 26,406 30,278 32,577 23,520 28,465 27,998 24,956 25,284 23,180 20,779 31,876 27,473 26,788 29,099 28,746 28,104 27,062 22,685 29,884 28,063 30,710 26,718 23,869 29,311 30,796 24,846 30,234 24,614 35,501 24,238 34,086 24,837 39,229 24,918 46,081 30,075 32,403 28,262 33,764 25,959 29,159 2008 154 7 92 152 15 107 59 137 150 4 126 108 6 142 28 61 101 94 22 99 11 134 110 63 53 36 157 29 78 139 121 72 3 27 10 65 1 87 146 8 98 111 16 20 93 43 156 67 5 102 100 41 25 145 66 77 122 114 148 155 30 84 95 58 62 73 91 149 46 75 35 97 143 54 34 125 42 132 13 138 18 127 9 123 2 44 26 68 19 103 56 M ay 2 0 1 0 Survey of C urrent 41 B u s in e s s Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Per capita personal income 1 Personal income Area Dollars Millions of dollars 2006 2006 2007 2008 Polk................................................... Pulaski............................................. Putnam............................................ Quitm an........................................... Rabun.............................................. Randolph......................................... Richmond....................................... Rockdale.......................................... Schley.............................................. S creven........................................... Sem inole........................................ S palding.......................................... Stephens......................................... Stewart............................................ Sumter............................................. Talbot............................................... Taliaferro.......................................... Tattnall............................................. Taylor............................................... Telfair............................................... Terrell............................................... Thom as........................................... T ift.................................................... Toombs............................................ Towns.............................................. Treutlen............................................ Troup................................................ Turner.............................................. Twiggs.............................................. Union............................................... Upson.............................................. W alker............................................. W alton............................................. W are................................................ Warren............................................. Washington..................................... Wayne.............................................. W ebster........................................... W heeler........................................... W hite ............................................... Whitfield........................................... W ilcox.............................................. W ilkes.............................................. W ilkinson......................................... Worth............................................... 956 283 642 60 472 170 5,439 2,536 94 343 237 1,687 674 119 837 149 41 506 188 252 244 1,397 1074 711 332 139 1,812 216 241 570 645 1,639 2,327 873 135 569 732 62 120 607 2,734 184 263 236 582 1010 289 686 61 482 175 5,646 2,671 100 359 242 1,758 710 125 865 157 43 546 200 254 258 1,478 1,107 751 361 143 1,885 218 251 619 675 1,748 2,523 897 140 597 775 65 121 655 2,868 190 272 242 604 1061 293 700 65 490 194 5,889 2,722 106 379 266 1,797 745 133 898 162 45 577 213 259 278 1,499 1,152 791 365 151 1,949 238 264 632 703 1,798 2,653 933 147 614 813 68 127 672 2,844 209 286 252 647 23,345 28,943 32,258 22,654 28,891 23,186 27,583 31,859 23,657 22,832 26,154 27,112 26,782 25,390 25,742 22,699 21,855 22,000 21,821 19,089 23,410 31,202 25,881 26,051 31,160 20,355 28,922 22,933 23,372 27,967 23,499 25,642 29,348 24,574 22,840 27,737 25,608 27,872 17,612 24,845 29,938 21,298 25,530 23,569 27,112 24,378 29,438 33,843 22,912 29,108 23,987 28,611 32,641 24,134 23,848 26,843 27,887 28,160 27,178 26,576 23,874 23,097 23,764 23,132 19,066 25,113 32,631 26,255 27,042 33,255 20,667 29,730 23,248 24,565 29,635 24,489 27,082 30,308 24,959 23,915 28,648 26,711 28,903 17,856 26,331 30,934 21,967 26,607 24,153 28,331 25,214 29,939 34,248 24,196 29,421 27,097 29,547 32,638 24,671 25,155 29,233 28,045 29,139 29,000 27,781 25,265 24,802 24,810 24,418 19,560 27,078 32,693 27,082 28,159 33,275 21,572 30,403 25,507 25,827 29,864 25,594 27,715 30,899 25,930 25,207 29,435 27,511 31,067 18,411 26,755 30,335 23,787 27,683 25,157 30,334 117 45 17 140 51 88 49 24 131 120 55 76 57 60 79 115 129 128 134 158 90 23 89 70 21 153 37 112 106 47 108 81 33 104 118 50 83 32 159 96 38 144 82 119 39 M etropolitan p o r tio n ................... 49,124 37,020 Maui + Kalawao............................. 12,103 5,065 37,020 2,059 4,980 52,253 39,258 12,995 5,454 39,258 2,240 5,301 54,175 40,809 13,367 5,641 40,809 2,305 5,420 38,510 40,976 32,524 29,873 40,976 33,167 35,440 40,924 43,683 34,367 31,491 43,683 35,606 37,325 42,078 45,205 34,742 31,978 45,205 36,093 37,521 4 1 3 2 Ida h o ...................................... M etropolitan p o r tio n ................... 46,273 31,799 49,231 33,554 50,399 34,114 31,598 33,461 32,837 34,300 32,994 34,142 Nonm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... A da ........ Adam s... Bannock. Bear L ake ....................................... Benewah Bingham B laine.... B o ise .... Bonner............................................. Bonneville....................................... Boundary......................................... Butte..... Camas... Canyon.. Caribou.. C a ssia ... C lark..... Clearwater...................................... Custer.... Elmore... Franklin............................................ Freemont (incl. Ylwstn. Natl. Pk.) Gem................................................. Gooding.......................................... Ida h o ............................................... Jefferson......................................... Je ro m e ............................................ Kootenai......................................... Lata h ............................................... Lemhi............................................... Lew is............................................... Lincoln............................................. Madison.......................................... Minidoka......................................... Nez Perce....................................... O neida............................................. 14,474 15,454 107 2,167 143 256 1035 1,319 218 1,201 3,156 237 81 34 3,939 197 595 25 237 116 795 289 276 411 450 384 518 580 3,989 1026 206 104 114 583 457 1,201 89 15,676 15,997 111 2,287 154 275 1,120 1,426 237 1,272 3,395 251 84 35 4,215 205 659 29 245 125 847 323 294 438 541 409 580 653 4,282 1089 217 116 131 623 498 1,294 101 16,285 16,036 110 2,349 163 288 1,153 1,433 246 1,291 3,508 267 96 40 4,267 217 725 42 252 135 880 333 305 451 557 425 634 666 4,422 1,142 228 139 141 650 540 1,340 103 28,154 42,826 31,105 27,256 24,140 27,625 24,023 61,302 29,171 29,675 33,750 22,325 29,505 32,228 22,991 28,677 28,694 26,593 28,544 28,411 28,007 24,084 22,218 25,208 31,684 25,248 23,745 29,579 30,602 27,464 26,460 28,623 25,736 15,930 24,530 31,155 21,605 30,089 42,949 31,201 28,511 26,353 29,646 25,776 65,763 31,150 30,907 35,199 23,116 30,121 32,238 23,577 29,862 31,431 30,632 29,803 30,545 29,218 26,529 23,312 26,584 37,736 26,771 25,470 32,645 31,976 29,194 27,879 31,976 28,708 16,763 26,652 33,366 24,351 30,824 42,273 30,835 28,902 28,114 30,697 26,178 64,875 32,549 31,127 35,346 24,382 34,474 36,060 23,173 31,697 33,794 43,579 30,873 32,203 30,180 26,634 24,105 27,288 38,448 27,692 26,542 32,343 32,279 30,156 28,889 38,190 30,603 17,010 28,671 34,472 24,818 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... See the footnotes at the end of the table. 2007 2008 Per capita personal income Personal income Rank in state Area 2008 2006 3 20 28 31 22 39 1 12 18 8 41 9 7 43 17 11 2 19 15 24 36 42 35 5 32 38 13 14 25 29 6 23 44 30 10 40 2007 O w yhee........................................... Payette............................................. Power............................................... Shoshone ........................................ Teton................................................ Twin Falls........................................ Valley............................................... Washington..................................... 286 587 170 351 214 2,092 336 249 313 610 194 379 254 2,302 358 264 Rank in state Dollars Millions of dollars 2006 2007 2008 324 633 205 396 268 2,375 351 275 26,331 26,492 22,032 27,294 27,268 29,368 38,837 24,918 28,589 26,794 25,239 29,640 30,230 31,571 40,170 26,491 28,962 27,533 26,597 30,806 29,627 31,995 39,294 27,446 2008 Illin o is .................................... 504,628 533,162 546,344 39,678 41,720 42,540 M etropolitan p o rtio n .................... 457,529 482,800 493,336 41,384 43,417 44,098 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... A da m s............................................. Alexander........................................ B ond................................................ Boone.............................................. Brown............................................... Bureau............................................. Calhoun........................................... C arroll.............................................. C a s s ................................................ Champaign..................................... C hristian.......................................... Clark ................................................ Clay.................................................. C linton............................................. C o le s............................................... C ook................................................ Crawford.......................................... Cumberland.................................... DeKalb............................................. De W itt............................................. D ouglas........................................... DuPage............................................ Edgar............................................... Edwards........................................... Effingham ........................................ Fayette............................................. Fo rd ................................................. Franklin............................................ Fulton............................................... G allatin............................................ Greene............................................. Grundy............................................. Ham ilton.......................................... Hancock........................................... Hardin.............................................. Henderson...................................... Henry............................................... Iroquois............................................ Jackson............................................ Jasper.............................................. Jefferson.......................................... Jersey.............................................. Jo Daviess...................................... Johnson........................................... K ane................................................ Kankakee........................................ Kendall............................................. Knox................................................. Lake................................................. La Salle............................................ Lawrence........................................ Lee.................................................... Livingston....................................... Logan............................................... McDonough.................................... M cHenry.......................................... McLean............................................ Macon.............................................. Macoupin........................................ Madison........................................... Marion.............................................. Marshall........................................... Mason.............................................. M assac............................................ M enard............................................ M ercer............................................. M onroe............................................ Montgomery.................................... M organ............................................ Moultrie............................................ O gle ................................................. P eoria.............................................. Perry................................................ P ia tt................................................. Pike.................................................. P ope................................................ Pulaski............................................. P utnam ............................................ Randolph........................................ Richland........................................... 47,099 2,091 175 515 1,571 146 1,114 141 455 364 5,774 1000 473 378 1,215 1,440 228,042 581 307 2,942 496 602 49,360 513 181 1061 487 481 974 1032 157 337 1,455 214 529 98 206 1,549 890 1,589 265 1,114 705 802 273 17,108 3,172 2,881 1,432 37,263 3,458 426 1015 1,263 805 818 11,776 5,832 3,848 1,429 8,781 1,090 416 442 401 404 515 1,167 786 978 424 1,629 6,993 501 593 442 99 155 204 810 411 50,361 2,254 184 532 1,689 158 1,196 147 488 393 6,195 1109 504 397 1,270 1,518 240,366 603 328 3,127 534 650 51,137 547 188 1,127 519 516 1038 1100 170 356 1,593 224 568 101 224 1,653 977 1,676 278 1,163 747 854 284 18,163 3,396 3,339 1,546 39,199 3,701 439 1113 1,396 884 876 12,147 6,105 4,109 1,514 9,275 1,150 450 492 421 445 555 1,264 837 1059 457 1,750 7,453 520 649 469 103 162 218 852 433 53,008 2,369 193 562 1,732 165 1,266 157 502 425 6,499 1,171 536 421 1,342 1,581 244,303 650 353 3,241 578 700 51,234 598 196 1,181 554 565 1064 1,161 178 382 1,676 242 623 104 240 1,737 1063 1,753 304 1,214 793 880 294 18,601 3,545 3,674 1,633 39,488 3,867 465 1,139 1,516 948 944 12,393 6,435 4,241 1,584 9,701 1,196 482 531 437 486 605 1,327 882 1121 484 1,751 7,747 534 714 484 108 177 226 894 456 28,332 31,250 20,826 28,413 30,530 22,189 31,902 27,461 28,480 26,940 30,297 28,858 28,159 27,345 33,566 27,566 43,545 29,623 28,237 28,632 30,207 30,723 53,525 27,144 27,695 30,910 23,102 34,431 24,768 27,894 26,078 24,325 31,916 25,950 28,007 21,679 27,144 31,269 29,615 26,898 27,406 27,782 31,523 35,931 19,981 35,264 28,811 32,790 27,381 53,362 30,857 25,836 29,040 33,251 26,902 24,816 38,083 36,044 35,296 29,667 32,998 27,430 32,271 29,232 26,552 32,649 31,228 36,536 26,228 27,609 29,699 29,832 38,305 22,105 35,967 26,847 24,162 23,769 34,512 24,544 26,241 30,350 33,716 22,442 29,050 31,764 24,259 34,332 28,915 30,782 28,909 32,104 32,089 29,930 28,957 35,062 29,036 45,908 30,932 30,398 29,692 32,711 33,402 55,407 29,058 28,752 32,903 24,767 36,688 26,467 29,869 28,597 25,997 33,833 27,494 30,286 22,656 29,678 33,387 32,549 28,782 28,900 29,012 33,399 38,509 20,742 36,661 30,393 34,386 29,768 55,802 32,902 26,467 31,654 36,746 29,579 26,470 38,601 37,228 37,798 31,392 34,724 29,040 34,892 32,703 27,853 35,545 33,797 38,955 28,103 29,947 31,832 31,802 40,706 23,025 39,438 28,323 25,112 25,140 36,388 25,946 27,768 32,015 35,409 23,798 30,931 32,141 25,068 36,423 31,154 31,769 31,313 33,574 33,987 31,940 30,810 36,856 30,342 46,475 33,469 32,633 30,430 35,539 36,238 55,246 32,130 30,099 34,462 26,431 40,516 27,091 31,617 30,332 28,069 34,920 29,753 33,565 23,660 32,191 35,152 35,460 30,142 31,581 30,288 35,087 39,835 21,500 36,903 31,449 36,194 31,534 55,804 34,304 28,141 32,471 40,068 31,704 28,786 38,956 38,865 39,147 32,890 36,218 30,333 37,820 35,472 29,062 38,747 36,757 40,355 29,705 31,884 33,700 31,669 42,148 23,762 43,313 29,509 26,770 28,032 37,776 27,325 29,478 2008 27 33 37 21 26 16 4 34 35 99 72 55 98 25 70 60 68 45 43 58 73 23 77 3 47 51 76 31 26 2 56 82 40 97 6 95 64 79 91 38 83 46 101 54 36 33 81 65 80 37 9 102 22 67 28 66 1 42 90 52 8 62 88 15 16 14 50 27 78 20 32 87 17 24 7 84 59 44 63 5 100 4 85 96 92 21 94 86 May 2010 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income 42 Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars Area Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 Rock Island..................................... St. Clair............................................ Saline............................................... Sangamon...................................... Schuyler.. S cott...... Shelby.... S tark...... Stephenson .................................... Tazewell.. Union............................................... Vermilion.......................................... Wabash... Warren.... Washington..................................... Wayne.... W hite ..... Whiteside W ill................................................... Williamson...................................... Winnebago ..................................... W oodford........................................ 5,018 8,414 676 6,978 208 136 579 187 1,497 4,791 459 2,199 345 462 468 460 450 1,761 23,358 1,838 9,159 1,320 5,382 8,907 712 7,410 222 149 627 212 1,615 5,049 485 2,327 363 506 482 476 473 1,898 25,153 1,950 9,706 1,434 5,628 9,289 739 7,733 247 165 698 240 1,682 5,210 499 2,456 373 561 505 516 509 1,970 26,291 2,004 9,914 1,520 34,291 32,298 26,006 36,097 29,787 25,865 26,435 30,612 31,870 36,900 25,324 26,982 28,037 26,207 31,487 27,893 30,336 29,781 35,603 28,933 31,283 35,326 36,593 34,095 27,382 38,226 32,003 28,510 28,841 34,820 34,567 38,552 26,773 28,758 29,782 28,755 32,760 28,660 32,227 32,190 37,541 30,348 32,615 37,758 38,376 35,437 28,624 39,704 35,968 31,755 32,013 39,451 36,093 39,624 27,658 30,523 30,798 32,214 34,450 31,264 34,591 33,358 38,716 31,026 33,102 39,457 Ind ia na ................................... 206,959 213,875 220,670 32,842 33,702 34,543 167,642 173,096 178,466 34,127 34,911 35,702 39,317 917 11,601 2,647 269 342 2,643 510 602 1,094 3,301 701 906 261 859 1,583 755 1 206 3,197 1,591 6,420 664 2,706 483 724 563 1020 1,874 891 11,637 2,577 1,094 4,457 1,305 2,628 1,109 1,238 965 557 892 755 4,505 1,148 2,512 834 15,605 3,152 1,291 3,836 32,918 1,300 287 909 3,636 1,114 2,319 391 1,263 165 491 581 420 526 333 6,096 918 40,778 942 12,000 2,742 293 355 2,689 528 635 1,139 3,459 733 969 269 901 1,652 800 1,246 3,271 1,611 6,615 673 2,833 507 745 589 1037 1,930 933 12,395 2,676 1,151 4,647 1,354 2,736 1,132 1,279 1056 575 904 786 4,701 1,203 2,644 844 16,253 3,259 1,321 3,891 33,029 1,342 296 945 3,803 1,169 2,389 413 1,312 179 532 605 436 541 351 6,464 950 42,204 936 12,168 2,874 335 363 2,800 545 661 1,189 3,598 759 1018 284 945 1,679 851 1,265 3,372 1,665 6,457 678 2,950 543 769 616 1,067 2,029 972 12,858 2,795 1,193 4,831 1,397 2,693 1,159 1,334 1111 603 932 831 4,876 1,282 2,671 837 16,923 3,399 1,359 4,026 33,798 1,386 309 963 3,970 1,218 2,482 444 1,331 185 559 626 456 557 373 6,751 1006 28,299 27,133 33,530 35,778 30,641 25,725 49,899 34,331 30,208 27,839 31,794 26,187 26,662 23,836 28,673 32,220 30,143 29,065 27,652 38,699 32,640 27,265 37,442 28,103 31,512 27,791 30,921 26,989 27,116 46,105 39,856 29,814 34,239 27,547 31,323 29,174 29,438 30,271 26,138 27,391 26,985 33,824 30,241 33,137 22,774 31,890 28,867 28,166 29,305 37,691 27,920 28,327 24,627 28,711 29,533 33,247 27,912 26,505 28,028 25,254 25,999 24,530 27,944 26,409 38,526 34,845 29,382 27,839 34,353 36,714 33,644 26 766 49,782 35,898 32,045 29,129 32,828 27,554 28,504 24,753 29,912 33,243 31,942 29,775 28,368 39,067 33,344 27,740 38,905 29,688 32,221 29,142 31,645 28,032 28,587 47,324 40,400 31,177 34,476 28,873 32,661 29,865 30,369 32,645 26,965 27,866 27,937 34,401 31,768 34,669 22,843 33,079 29,528 28,738 29,723 37,611 28,832 29,304 25,775 29,736 30,895 34,102 29,479 27,512 30,697 27,110 27,016 25,435 28,584 27,890 40,269 36,192 30,372 27,447 85 34,652 38,068 38,546 27,570 50,939 37,247 33,428 30,368 33,617 28,456 29,714 26,521 31,160 33,520 33,881 30,102 29,349 40,175 32,263 27,989 39,990 31,888 33,141 30,387 32,571 29,422 29,864 47,456 41,550 32,026 35,053 29,066 32,241 30,683 31,603 34,006 28,446 28,312 29,646 34,894 33,789 34,941 22,495 34,296 30,689 29,626 30,674 38,272 29,679 30,880 26,584 30,715 32,180 34,962 31,868 27,805 31,394 28,603 27,969 26,620 29,511 29,767 41,599 38,492 Nonm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... Adam s............................................. Allen....... Bartholom ew.................................. Benton.... B oone.... Brow n.... Carroll.... C a ss................................................ C lark................................................ C la y................................................. C linton............................................. Crawford.......................................... Daviess............................................ D earborn........................................ Delaware......................................... D ubois.... Elkhart..., Fayette.... Floyd...... Fountain.. Franklin... Fulton............................................... G ibson............................................. Grant................................................ Greene............................................. Hamilton.......................................... Hancock........................................... Harrison........................................... Hendricks........................................ Henry............................................... Howard............................................ Huntington...................................... Jackson... Jasper.... Ja y ......... Jefferson Jennings Johnson. K nox...... Kosciusko........................................ Lagrange Lake....... La Porte. Lawrence Madison. M arion... Marshall. M a rtin .... Miam i.... Monroe.. Montgomery................................... M organ............................................ New ton.. N oble.... O hio....... Orange... O w en.... Parke .... P erry..... Pike.................................................. Porter............................................... Posey............................................... See the footnotes at the end of the table. Personal income Rank in state Area 2008 19 34 89 10 30 61 57 13 29 11 93 75 74 53 41 69 39 48 18 71 49 12 21 11 8 84 1 13 31 57 28 78 66 90 48 29 26 60 73 5 37 81 6 43 33 56 35 72 64 2 4 41 17 75 38 54 46 24 79 80 68 20 27 19 92 23 53 69 55 10 67 49 89 52 39 18 44 83 47 76 82 88 71 65 3 9 Millions of dollars 2006 Pulaski............................................. Putnam............................................. Randolph.......................................... Ripley............................................... Rush................................................. St. Joseph....................................... S cott................................................. Shelby.............................................. Spencer............................................ Starke............................................... Steuben............................................ Sullivan............................................ Switzerland..................................... Tippecanoe..................................... Tipton............................................... Union................................................ Vanderburgh.................................... Vermillion......................................... Vigo.................................................. Wabash............................................ W arren............................................. W arrick............................................. Washington..................................... Wayne.............................................. W ells................................................ White................................................ W hitley............................................. Adair................................................. Adams.............................................. Allamakee....................................... Appanoose...................................... Audubon........................................... Benton.............................................. Black Haw k..................................... Boone............................................... Bremer............................................. Buchanan........................................ Buena Vista..................................... Calhoun............................................ Ca rro ll.............................................. Cass................................................. C edar............................................... Cerro G ordo.................................... Cherokee........................................ Chickasaw....................................... Clarke............................................... Clay.................................................. Clayton............................................. Clinton.............................................. Crawford........................................... Dallas............................................... Davis................................................ Decatur............................................ Delaware.......................................... Des M oines..................................... Dickinson........................................ Dubuque.......................................... Emmet.............................................. Fayette............................................. Floyd................................................ Franklin............................................ Fremont............................................ Greene............................................. G rundy............................................. Guthrie............................................. Hamilton........................................... Hancock........................................... H ardin.............................................. H arrison........................................... H enry............................................... Howard............................................. Humboldt.......................................... Ida.................................................... Iow a ................................................. Jackson............................................ Jasper.............................................. Jefferson.......................................... Johnson........................................... Jones ............................................... Keokuk............................................. Kossuth............................................ L ee................................................... L inn .................................................. Louisa.............................................. Lucas ............................................... Lyon................................................. Per capita personal incom e1 2007 Rank in state Dollars 2008 2006 2007 2008 389 1037 702 763 561 8,986 596 1,403 614 536 949 512 256 4,567 539 223 6,288 474 2,939 1002 236 2,084 731 1,994 808 697 980 416 1,085 729 788 579 9,228 617 1,447 641 566 972 542 272 4,774 562 227 6,337 505 3,062 1030 256 2,161 762 2,042 841 750 1030 441 1,122 775 823 615 9,467 638 1,517 670 591 983 576 284 4,995 564 239 6,594 522 3,179 1038 280 2,267 795 2,091 854 798 1,046 28,170 28,129 26,962 27,821 32,032 33,841 25,217 32,087 30,334 22,959 28,264 24,010 26,746 28,523 33,408 31,354 36,107 28,906 27,875 30,117 27,436 37,067 26,287 29,089 29,083 29,044 30,283 30,170 29,216 28,235 28,838 33,032 34,651 25,963 32,919 31,700 24,305 29,015 25,424 28,281 29,315 34,985 31,930 36,247 30,890 28,960 31,280 29,999 37,793 27,359 29,985 30,272 31,515 31,617 32,112 30,200 29,996 30,004 35,614 35,363 27,000 34,309 33,415 25,234 29,347 27,061 29,542 30,220 35,428 33,932 37,725 32,294 30,071 31,657 32,634 39,211 28,496 30,876 30,781 33,516 31,945 100,450 106,504 112,302 33,885 35,755 37,509 59,569 62,981 65,801 36,161 37,782 38,991 40,881 237 116 406 332 222 832 4,063 921 786 603 578 464 321 708 448 586 1,506 384 366 251 546 500 1,472 487 2,134 198 182 520 1,315 644 2,999 304 552 483 348 246 297 426 369 523 373 578 472 585 283 320 225 547 554 1,135 523 4,321 527 304 572 1023 7,469 346 233 366 43,523 251 122 424 334 238 895 4,288 960 843 644 628 513 359 734 471 630 1,568 410 388 267 586 527 1,593 542 2,455 207 185 555 1,396 675 3,133 325 595 517 395 263 325 466 391 576 412 633 503 615 303 345 260 566 584 1,163 539 4,655 557 327 629 1,072 7,973 375 241 379 46,501 280 135 436 348 273 968 4,500 1008 884 680 704 557 406 806 522 679 1,620 465 427 272 646 560 1,721 613 2,665 216 194 576 1,425 711 3,266 353 635 544 411 276 359 516 423 605 440 658 552 644 318 381 314 607 627 1,189 554 4,898 585 348 684 1,126 8,340 380 246 439 31,040 30,836 27,954 28,140 25,240 35,918 31,308 32,107 35,078 33,383 28,882 29,475 31,690 31,746 34,090 32,173 32,574 34,189 32,608 29,871 27,691 32,621 28,148 29,881 29,536 39,081 23,232 21,712 29,621 32,507 38,730 32,813 29,264 26,649 29,571 32,935 32,643 31,012 34,805 33,231 33,249 32,495 32,764 30,350 29,122 29,710 32,823 32,008 34,333 27,740 30,901 33,774 35,079 25,924 28,366 36,489 28,421 36,916 29,326 24,558 32,319 33,179 33,065 29,881 29,374 25,875 38,799 33,697 33,833 36,522 35,661 30,704 32,296 35,070 36,078 35,319 33,945 35,120 35,716 35,082 31,886 29,621 35,268 29,822 32,447 32,813 42,866 24,185 22,170 31,706 34,357 40,683 33,960 31,437 29,194 31,874 37,137 34,734 34,231 38,535 35,347 37,057 36,464 36,170 32,636 30,537 32,063 35,837 37,236 35,815 29,317 31,807 34,718 37,077 27,312 30,466 40,687 29,936 38,841 31,879 25,503 33,778 35,595 37,548 33,509 30,270 27,268 44,652 36,339 35,147 38,489 37,599 32,345 36,122 38,152 41,244 38,963 37,781 37,603 37,043 40,392 35,400 29,962 38,863 31,927 35,069 37,352 44,427 25,246 23,711 33,234 34,928 42,695 35,273 34,063 31,396 33,944 38,853 37,243 38,427 42,628 38,501 39,401 39,148 37,878 36,196 32,081 33,684 39,857 45,364 38,560 31,642 32,624 35,894 38,224 28,658 32,664 44,872 31,735 40,126 32,537 26,381 39,228 2008 40 59 63 62 14 16 87 22 32 91 74 86 70 58 15 25 12 36 61 45 34 7 77 51 30 42 42 76 90 94 3 47 60 31 41 82 49 35 13 25 38 40 45 17 55 91 26 84 61 43 4 98 99 77 65 8 59 71 87 74 27 44 32 9 30 22 24 37 48 83 75 21 1 29 86 80 50 33 92 79 2 85 19 81 95 23 May 2010 43 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Millions of dollars Area 2006 Madison........................................... Mahaska.......................................... M arion............................................. Marshall........................................... M ills.................................................. M itchell............................................ M onona........................................... M onroe............................................ M ontgomery................................... Muscatine....................................... O 'B rie n ............................................ O sceola........................................... Page................................................ Palo A lto .......................................... Plymouth......................................... Pocahontas...................................... Polk................................................... Pottawattamie................................. Poweshiek....................................... Ringgold.......................................... S a c ................................................... S cott................................................ Shelby.............................................. S io ux............................................... S tory................................................ Tama................................................ Taylor............................................... Union............................................... Van Buren....................................... Wapello............................................ Warren............................................. Washington..................................... Wayne.............................................. W ebster........................................... Winnebago..................................... Winneshiek..................................... W oodbury....................................... W orth............................................... W right.............................................. Per capita personal incom e1 2007 Dollars 2008 495 669 1018 1,265 577 321 254 241 330 1,448 484 214 471 297 857 243 17,029 3,007 643 126 335 6,017 387 1026 2,773 512 179 342 192 994 1,513 734 148 1,179 317 666 3,029 206 487 528 713 1090 1,331 598 351 285 254 343 1,532 501 239 486 334 907 263 17,744 3,063 678 129 370 6,352 419 1043 2,926 552 196 360 204 1048 1,614 786 156 1,267 358 695 3,211 237 534 554 751 1,126 1,397 630 381 342 265 369 1,570 565 262 509 375 1001 322 18,226 3,199 706 130 424 6,570 492 1,138 3,052 610 216 379 211 1,094 1,685 818 161 1,354 374 725 3,471 260 571 2006 2007 2008 32,572 30,337 30,995 32,545 38,128 29,721 27,565 31,491 29,656 34,303 34,082 32,606 29,330 31,431 35,040 31,758 41,620 33,637 34,566 24,635 31,955 37,263 31,467 31,945 33,217 28,745 27,295 28,488 25,071 27,857 34,645 34,794 23,113 30,592 28,961 32,064 29,863 26,987 36,896 34,440 32,252 33,384 34,058 39,450 32,532 31,198 33,599 31,323 36,092 35,672 37,099 30,530 35,456 37,305 34,536 42,626 34,200 36,356 25,439 35,968 39,130 34,086 32,570 34,329 31,264 30,519 29,876 26,595 29,653 36,431 37,180 24,883 32,948 33,268 33,352 31,673 31,090 40,937 35,874 33,958 34,370 35,606 41,657 35,312 37,952 35,001 34,204 36,784 40,646 40,701 32,767 40,198 41,253 43,075 43,098 35,545 38,193 25,924 41,547 39,953 40,587 35,482 35,400 34,775 34,108 31,207 27,463 30,985 37,612 38,567 25,734 35,290 34,994 34,985 34,034 34,157 44,372 K ansas................................... 98,554 103,845 108,779 35,764 37,414 38,886 M etropolitan p o r tio n ................... 71,953 75,804 78,586 38,666 40,256 41,198 A lle n ................................................ Anderson........................................ Atchison. Barber.... Barton.... Bourbon. B rown.... Butler..... Chase.... Chautauqua.................................... Cherokee Cheyenne....................................... C lark..... C la y ...... Cloud Coffey.... Comanche...................................... Cowley... Crawford Decatur.. Dickinson Doniphan Douglas. Edwards E lk .................................................... Ellis.................................................. Ellsworth.......................................... Finney.............................................. Ford................................................. Franklin............................................ G e a ry .............................................. G ove................................................ G raham ........................................... G ra nt............................................... Gray................................................. Greeley.. Greenwood..................................... Hamilton H a rp er... Harvey... Haskell... Hodgeman...................................... Jackson .......................................... Jefferson......................................... Jewell............................................... Johnson.......................................... K earny............................................. Kingman.......................................... 26,601 380 208 455 172 942 401 304 2,164 108 121 580 62 65 300 259 299 56 1049 1028 90 578 200 3,363 95 81 952 178 957 879 772 1003 77 90 229 160 34 196 67 215 1130 133 49 397 524 96 26,742 102 278 28,041 392 219 476 155 963 417 332 2,258 110 118 619 82 68 318 273 303 61 1090 1052 105 605 226 3,519 114 85 1007 187 1004 943 810 1172 91 111 244 178 52 200 88 205 1,154 150 56 417 558 98 28,459 114 264 30,193 412 241 503 171 1038 426 350 2,337 115 119 666 101 73 351 300 334 64 1,115 1,098 118 656 249 3,608 140 88 1077 202 1088 996 842 1,293 107 127 263 213 75 209 103 228 1,202 191 65 429 584 122 29,101 133 283 29,729 28,141 26,440 27,496 35,582 33,964 27,078 30,034 34,692 36,501 31,406 27,070 22,020 30,632 34,945 27,589 34,993 30,590 30,800 26,565 29,801 30,531 25,824 29,877 30,639 26,918 34,975 28,405 23,499 27,087 29,438 34,602 28,685 34,176 30,805 27,299 26,695 28,206 26,464 36,887 33,774 32,872 24,386 29,719 28,486 29,523 51,797 24,185 35,225 31,417 29,225 27,922 28,958 32,917 34,767 28,129 33,092 35,898 38,704 31,327 28,889 29,782 32,885 36,642 29,263 36,007 33,112 31,927 27,144 35,338 32,039 29,081 31,028 36,558 28,415 36,969 29,724 24,612 28,882 30,827 39,669 34,886 43,015 32,803 30,922 40,123 28,771 33,844 35,638 34,317 37,285 28,753 31,247 30,388 30,900 54,110 27,482 33,955 33,929 31,050 30,223 30,708 36,985 37,739 28,649 35,019 36,835 40,620 31,737 31,469 36,950 35,200 39,861 32,268 39,588 33,720 32,796 28,246 40,433 34,140 31,994 31,443 45,201 29,231 39,215 32,465 26,588 30,444 31,889 41,504 42,895 50,118 35,831 36,208 58,756 30,743 39,779 39,477 35,599 47,970 33,923 32,382 31,907 39,168 54,395 32,224 37,100 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Personal income Rank in state Area 2008 Millions of dollars 2006 51 73 67 52 10 57 36 62 68 46 15 14 78 18 12 7 6 53 34 96 11 20 16 54 55 66 70 88 93 89 39 28 97 58 63 64 72 69 5 Kiowa............................................... Labette............................................. Lane................................................. Leavenworth................................... Lincoln............................................. Linn.................................................. Logan............................................... Lyon................................................. McPherson..................................... Marion.............................................. Marshall........................................... Meade.............................................. 87 94 90 45 38 99 59 48 20 81 83 46 58 22 73 26 67 70 100 21 64 76 84 11 98 30 71 105 93 80 18 15 4 55 54 1 89 24 27 56 6 65 72 78 31 2 75 44 Per capita personal in com e1 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 45,866 31,904 37,316 33,128 34,314 29,531 44,591 27,179 38,563 32,243 42,796 39,598 39 463 36,470 30,991 31,275 43,441 36,639 31,104 52,777 33,158 29,347 36,553 30,464 37,303 39,371 35,382 38,638 47,163 31,566 34,657 27,977 38,025 36,503 36,839 34,881 38,699 33,754 39,847 29,871 36,827 49,107 40,917 38,511 37,714 45,207 43,738 37,686 38,183 37,592 34,564 46,695 30,497 41,676 31,924 27,024 27,966 S m ith ............................................... Stafford............................................ S tanton............................................ Stevens............................................ Sum ner............................................ Thomas............................................ Trego................................................ Wabaunsee..................................... W allace............................................ Washington..................................... Wichita............................................. W ilson.............................................. Woodson.......................................... Wyandotte....................................... 98 638 54 2,273 87 258 82 903 1070 331 356 120 1063 194 990 164 105 307 467 115 154 432 115 166 194 186 602 320 73 1,840 134 251 2,150 144 95 199 1,948 138 18,002 612 5,909 79 174 129 135 68 153 801 203 77 201 38 144 67 278 80 3,966 98 663 59 2,384 95 270 100 935 1073 348 365 151 1,157 202 1045 176 109 342 481 135 166 455 121 166 209 192 651 330 96 1,915 144 258 2,469 162 104 215 2,017 137 18,423 639 6,234 101 209 131 140 84 189 807 247 94 220 53 155 72 291 82 4,161 105 696 65 2,463 111 279 116 960 1,111 389 436 175 1,215 230 1,062 188 133 369 502 154 180 477 139 183 233 208 700 362 116 1,996 167 283 2,704 186 118 231 2,094 152 19,219 679 6,447 121 241 148 164 96 221 892 280 110 238 65 176 88 306 88 4,306 33,702 29,072 30,548 31,326 26,574 26,369 30,819 25,383 36,922 26,823 35,049 26,944 35 275 30,781 28,886 27,703 33,470 30,176 28,964 38,515 27,890 26,213 29,166 27,707 30,074 34,785 31,823 34,029 28,596 29,101 26,907 24,707 31,091 27,716 29,613 29,631 36,133 30,245 38,437 27,319 34,243 32,029 29,574 32,176 30,751 31,360 29,638 33,326 27,228 26,065 30,127 25,226 24,529 30,504 28,604 23,584 25,951 36,270 30,192 34,061 32,391 29,205 28,151 37,994 26,178 36,957 28,551 35,947 34,157 37,616 31,943 30,388 29,612 35,347 33,670 29,736 45,574 30,485 27,904 31,470 27,868 32,693 36,048 33,446 35,042 37,715 30,386 29,398 25,745 35,572 31,540 32,678 31,959 37,284 30,284 38,780 28,246 35,877 41,087 35 399 33,085 31,750 39,436 37,367 33,989 33,402 31,951 32,217 37,092 26,724 33,202 29,774 24,963 27,139 M itchell............................................ Montgomery.................................... Morris............................................... M orton............................................. Nemaha........................................... Neosho............................................ N e ss................................................ Norton.............................................. O sage.............................................. Osborne........................................... O ttaw a............................................. Pawnee............................................ Phillips............................................. Pottawatomie.................................. P ratt................................................. Rawlins............................................ R eno................................................ Republic........................................... R ic e ................................................. Riley................................................. R ooks.............................................. Rush................................................ Russell............................................. Saline............................................... S cott................................................ Sedgwick........................................ Seward............................................. Shawnee.......................................... Sheridan.......................................... Rank in state Dollars Kentucky ............................... 126,525 132,198 136,940 29,987 31,060 31,936 M etropolitan p o rtio n .................... 83,167 86,885 89,397 34,480 35,564 36,212 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... A d a ir................................................ Allen................................................. Anderson........................................ Ballard............................................. Barren.............................................. B ath ................................................. Bell 43,358 390 463 570 244 1036 252 607 3,513 608 1,467 770 224 328 446 1,939 283 343 930 2,996 129 287 573 329 2,158 1086 425 210 215 145 2,838 45,313 410 471 600 254 1,088 261 634 3,798 617 1,498 804 234 341 463 2,043 290 356 968 3,159 131 322 599 339 2,220 1,132 440 223 220 150 2,985 47,542 433 488 618 284 1,130 274 673 3,925 629 1,558 829 244 365 498 2,102 298 370 1004 3,196 141 327 636 356 2,493 1,150 469 234 231 159 3,149 23,990 21,865 24,774 27,399 29,891 25,585 21,733 20,830 32,062 31,091 30,090 26,831 26,097 20,956 23,533 26,779 21,115 26,835 25,840 34,384 24,604 27,524 20,929 20,270 27,509 30,868 17,787 22,443 23,548 20,856 30,428 24,991 22,881 24,982 28,129 31,230 26,501 22,635 21,839 33,665 31,462 30,848 27,822 27,154 21,894 24,271 27,709 21,833 27,753 26,774 36,186 25,325 30,641 21,928 20,806 27,429 31,736 18,568 23,562 24,225 22,017 31,768 26,133 24,197 25,617 28,803 34,579 27,271 23,378 23,145 33,833 31,871 32,067 28,433 28,256 23,317 26,038 28,131 22,276 28,736 27,721 36,558 27,303 30,731 23,515 21,679 31,282 32,152 19,710 24,589 25,037 23,442 33,278 Boyd................................................. Boyle................................................ Bracken............................................ Breathitt........................................... Breckinridge.................................... Bullitt................................................ B utler............................................... Caldwell........................................... Calloway......................................... C am pbell........................................ Carlisle............................................. Carroll.............................................. C a rte r.............................................. Casey............................................... C hristian.......................................... C la rk................................................ Clay.................................................. C linton............................................. Crittenden........................................ Cumberland.................................... Daviess............................................ 2008 9 79 42 69 63 96 12 103 34 74 16 25 28 53 88 85 14 50 86 3 68 97 51 92 43 29 57 33 7 82 61 101 37 52 47 60 32 66 23 95 49 5 19 35 39 10 13 40 36 41 62 8 91 17 77 104 102 82 70 37 10 55 89 95 13 23 21 39 41 90 63 43 102 38 48 8 54 30 87 108 25 20 114 79 75 88 14 44 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income May 2010 Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Millions of dollars Area Elliott................................................ Estill................................................. Fayette............................................. Fleming............................................ Floyd................................................ Franklin............................................ Fulton............................................... G allatin............................................ G arrard............................................ Grant................................................ Graves............................................. Grayson........................................... Green............................................... Greenup........................................... Hancock........................................... Hardin.............................................. Harlan.............................................. Harrison........................................... Hart.................................................. Henderson...................................... Henry..... Hickman., Hopkins.., Jackson... Jefferson, Jessam ine...................................... Johnson........................................... Kenton............................................. K nott................................................ K no x................................................ Larue............................................... Laurel............................................... Lawrence......................................... Lee.................................................... Leslie............................................... Letcher... L ew is..... Lincoln.... Livingston........................................ Logan..... Lyon....... McCracken...................................... McCreary......................................... McLean............................................ Madison., Magoffin., M a rio n ..., Marshall., M a rtin.... Mason.... Meade.............................................. Menifee... Mercer... Metcalfe., M onroe.., Montgomery................................... M organ............................................ Muhlenberg..................................... N elson............................................. Nicholas........................................... Ohio................................................. Oldham............................................ O w en............................................... Owsley............................................. Pendleton......................................... P erry................................................ Pike.................................................. Powell.............................................. Pulaski............................................. Robertson........................................ Rockcastle...................................... Rowan............................................. Russell............................................. S cott................................................ Shelby.............................................. Simpson........................................... Spencer........................................... Taylor............................................... Todd................................................. Trigg................................................. Trimble............................................. Union............................................... Warren............................................. Washington..................................... Wayne.... W ebster. Whitley... Wolfe...... Woodford 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 261 118 299 10,542 308 968 1,570 170 194 401 617 933 539 247 1027 208 3,135 648 476 357 1,324 421 144 1,261 223 28,287 1,301 535 5,878 361 721 413 1,315 324 149 254 561 245 527 258 707 202 2,256 301 273 1,923 260 466 868 256 481 738 119 556 199 249 604 252 720 1,216 178 549 2,145 236 96 352 751 1,703 285 1,527 49 331 492 387 1,305 1,204 482 402 584 289 452 177 450 3,080 282 403 385 844 136 1003 275 123 310 10,940 316 1006 1,656 173 199 419 660 992 558 256 1,104 216 3,236 670 497 382 1,343 437 156 1,332 228 29,342 1,390 556 6,095 370 754 425 1,398 345 157 255 567 258 554 271 717 213 2,318 317 278 2,033 269 492 919 263 513 811 124 577 208 256 639 261 776 1,284 181 585 2,332 249 100 373 774 1,768 297 1,606 52 345 515 408 1,409 1,295 496 449 614 302 458 180 450 3,256 296 417 389 895 142 1,025 287 134 324 11,161 325 1081 1,683 187 205 430 689 1042 576 272 1,160 229 3,376 716 512 403 1,422 450 171 1,399 240 29,785 1,433 593 6,188 397 793 443 1,461 368 166 280 615 271 579 280 756 224 2,399 336 314 2,112 288 510 951 283 536 861 129 597 216 268 664 277 785 1,332 190 613 2,410 261 107 384 817 1,896 307 1,671 55 363 543 430 1,484 1,331 526 487 646 344 497 192 500 3,410 304 438 383 943 151 1,039 21,911 14,784 20,085 37,208 21,264 23,109 32,416 24,779 24,149 24,049 24,917 24,958 21,426 21,423 27,496 24,263 32,286 20,860 25,949 19,603 29,336 26,699 29,068 27,308 16,572 40,137 29,181 22,423 37,877 20,929 22,417 30,461 23,196 20,008 19,960 21,676 23,338 17,610 20,992 26,767 26,226 24,071 34,885 15,985 28,172 23,818 19,851 24,354 27,986 19,088 28,154 26,816 17,607 25,776 19,720 21,201 24,407 17,714 22,909 29,109 25,572 23,481 38,876 21,124 20,716 23,425 25,766 25,941 21,035 25,686 21,574 20,026 21,923 22,723 31,447 30,465 28,369 24,993 24,371 24,179 34,385 19,897 29,393 29,996 24,806 19,706 27,708 22,289 19,202 41,353 22,988 15,076 20,827 38,082 21,574 23,931 34,114 25,185 24,638 24,688 26,241 26,399 22,048 22,243 29,439 25,091 32,997 21,551 26,719 20,894 29,744 27,590 31,903 28,798 16,971 41,224 30,506 23,272 38,856 21,642 23,353 31,297 24,413 21,110 21,084 21,776 23,690 18,460 22,012 28,356 26,436 25,492 35,677 17,845 28,629 25,012 20,444 25,639 29,411 19,836 29,858 29,821 18,499 26,534 20,458 22,015 25,372 18,335 24,667 30,264 26,158 24,911 41,192 21,951 21,772 24,861 26,566 26,989 21,802 26,799 23,516 20,847 22,797 23,920 32,731 31,874 29,105 26,575 25,491 25,179 34,365 20,080 29,887 31,167 25,646 20,262 28,031 23,370 19,901 42,069 23,956 15,408 21,740 38,192 22,057 25,747 34,331 26,874 25,335 25,258 26,983 27,721 22,605 23,586 30,706 26,469 34,176 23,220 27,360 21,831 31,265 28,254 35,020 30,170 17,936 41,517 30,583 24,901 39,213 23,194 24,470 32,568 25,462 22,375 22,466 24,143 25,905 19,539 23,158 29,295 27,910 26,832 36,685 18,884 32,437 25,665 22,048 26,302 30,454 21,380 30,880 31,862 19,255 27,306 21,269 23,276 26,034 19,527 25,110 30,899 27,506 25,875 41,743 22,921 23,059 25,730 28.023 29.024 22,577 27,567 24,608 21,790 23,934 24,909 33,232 32,160 30,877 27,838 26,639 28,306 37,353 21,217 33,258 31,993 26,582 21,173 27,995 24,406 21,306 41,954 Per capita personal incom e1 Personal income Rank in state Dollars 2006 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Per capita personal incom e1 Area 2008 84 120 107 5 103 67 11 57 72 73 56 48 98 86 31 61 12 92 52 105 26 42 9 34 119 3 32 77 4 93 80 17 71 101 100 83 65 115 94 35 46 58 7 118 18 69 104 62 33 109 28 24 117 53 111 91 64 116 74 27 51 66 2 97 96 68 44 36 99 50 78 106 85 76 16 19 29 47 59 40 6 112 15 22 60 113 45 81 110 1 2006 2006 2007 2008 143,222 154,652 160,659 33,776 36,091 East Carroll..................................... East Feliciana................................. Evangeline...................................... Franklin............................................ Grant................................................ Iberia................................................ Iberville............................................ Jackson............................................ Jefferson.......................................... Jefferson Davis............................... Lafayette.......................................... Lafourche........................................ La Salle............................................ Lincoln............................................. Livingston........................................ Madison........................................... Morehouse...................................... Natchitoches................................... O rleans............................................ Ouachita.......................................... Plaquemines................................... Pointe Coupee................................ Rapides............................................ Red River........................................ Richland........................................... Sabine.............................................. St. B ernard..................................... St. Charles...................................... St. Helena....................................... St. James........................................ St. John the Baptist........................ St. Landry....................................... St. M artin........................................ St. M a ry........................................... St. Tammany................................... Tangipahoa..................................... Tensas ............................................. Terrebonne...................................... U nion............................................... Vermilion.......................................... Vernon ............................................. Washington..................................... W ebster........................................... West Baton Rouge......................... West C arroll.................................... West Feliciana................................ Winn................................................. 113,443 29,779 1,588 510 3,148 675 977 843 350 3,303 9,022 5,859 244 205 248 411 459 691 15,491 185 583 753 474 465 2,381 861 384 16,880 795 8,035 3,205 351 1,210 3,097 259 680 1031 12,754 4,655 775 643 4,309 218 509 536 961 1,701 276 579 1,382 2,307 1,300 1,739 8,737 3,031 159 3,480 587 1,431 1,611 1058 1,174 678 270 360 349 123,020 31,632 1,684 540 3,392 734 1038 899 367 3,459 9,009 6,317 258 255 267 427 485 708 16,352 203 617 800 498 492 2,510 934 403 18,548 859 8,514 3,503 366 1,266 3,363 269 716 1,067 14,795 4,745 920 697 4,496 226 538 560 1363 1,810 296 615 1,491 2,457 1,392 1,847 9,984 3,274 163 3,858 611 1,587 1,709 1,145 1,238 719 250 379 365 127,031 33,628 1,820 587 3,667 781 1,092 976 389 3,703 9,427 6,628 276 280 264 457 501 754 17,152 210 657 887 526 521 2,629 1001 423 18,270 962 8,942 3,761 401 1,344 3,644 281 753 1,118 14,891 4,938 966 734 4,697 236 558 601 1,344 1,879 318 655 1,564 2,625 1,496 1,928 9,861 3,486 161 4,149 632 1,692 1,870 1,197 1,289 756 259 397 392 36,469 26,361 26,645 19,948 32,801 29,241 23,048 24,351 23,464 30,661 35,611 32,024 23,547 27,439 23,805 25,009 23,985 26,480 35,951 22,273 27,756 21,129 23,637 23,567 31,967 26,174 25,239 40,126 25,486 39,453 34,549 25,035 28,432 27,278 21,667 23,340 26,548 61,155 31,035 36,417 28,701 32,538 23,760 24,902 22,713 66281 32,860 25,874 27,380 28,981 25,418 25,395 33,727 39,171 26,791 26,645 32,192 25,662 25,879 33,235 24,035 28,734 30,547 23,217 23,602 22,232 35,340 37,919 M a in e ..................................... Metropolitan p o rtio n .................... Nonm etropolitan p o rtio n ............ Androscoggin.................................. Aroostook........................................ Cumberland.................................... Franklin............................................ Hancock........................................... Kennebec........................................ Kno> Lincoln............................................. Oxford........ Penobscot.. Piscataquis Sagadahoc. Som erset... Waldo......... Washington..................................... York.................................................. 44,306 27,879 16,427 3,426 1,989 11,634 811 1,793 3,898 1,442 1,185 1,508 4,530 458 1,252 1,353 1,099 890 7,038 46,142 29,014 17,128 3,570 2,048 12,068 839 1,865 4,089 1,489 1,255 1,583 4,711 480 1,325 1,411 1,149 920 7,341 47,994 30,101 17,893 3,727 2,142 12,529 882 1,930 4,291 1,537 1,293 1,653 4,948 509 1,365 1,495 1,204 957 7,533 N onm etropolitan p o rtio n ............ Allegany........................................... Anne Arundel.................................. 252,781 241,643 11,138 1,981 26,286 264,367 252,617 11,751 2,082 27,467 272,542 260,340 12,202 2,204 28,141 L o u isia n a ............................... N onm etropolitan p o rtio n ............ Acadia.............................................. Allen................................................. Ascension....................................... Assumption..................................... Avoyelles......................................... Beauregard..................................... Bienville........................................... Bossier............................................. C addo.............................................. Calcasieu........................................ Caldwell........................................... Cameron......................................... Catahoula....................................... Claiborne........................................ Concordia....................................... De Soto............................................ 2007 Rank in state Dollars Millions of dollars 2008 2008 27,948 28,195 20,876 34,022 31,798 24,608 25,863 24,694 31,753 35,692 34,273 24,869 35,297 25,586 25,986 25,638 26,897 37,967 24,560 29,531 22,319 24,869 24,864 33,550 28,373 26,744 42,123 27,690 41,491 37,716 26,126 29,641 28,736 22,806 25,054 27,378 51,353 31,658 43,108 31,062 33,821 24,781 26,339 23,609 40,768 34,842 27,950 28,967 31,115 26,911 26,957 36,107 44,116 28,296 28,218 35,519 26,897 28,534 36,224 25,413 30,390 31,777 21,805 25,017 23,513 38,272 29,698 30,374 22,813 35,791 33,936 25,695 27,814 26,391 33,570 37,319 35,659 26,483 39,474 24,987 28,096 26,452 28,488 39,794 25,757 31,359 25,018 26,364 26,092 35,041 30,429 27,907 41,088 30,930 43,062 40,203 28,613 31,389 30,094 23,949 26,483 28,639 44,234 32,852 45,688 32,569 35,189 26,046 27,240 25,368 35,690 36,404 30,100 31,070 32,973 28,551 28,705 37,805 42,988 29,692 28,466 38,005 27,906 30,174 41,686 26,279 31,731 33,392 22,717 26,146 25,506 56 27 60 51 54 18 30 43 6 29 3 7 38 26 34 62 47 37 2 23 1 24 17 55 46 59 15 13 33 28 22 39 36 11 4 35 41 10 44 32 5 52 25 21 64 53 58 33,694 36,337 29,991 32,024 27,555 42,351 27,193 33,681 32,311 35,255 33,997 26,746 30,571 26,683 34,190 26,367 28,563 27,202 35,055 35,028 37,726 31,242 33,461 28,420 43,720 28,175 34,950 33,866 36,411 35,961 27,972 31,705 27,917 36,209 27,406 29,901 28,052 36,487 36,368 38,973 32,691 34,808 29,817 45,147 29,636 36,164 35,418 37,563 37,229 29,199 33,149 29,950 37,243 29,197 31,457 29,464 37,316 8 12 1 13 6 7 2 5 15 9 11 4 16 10 14 3 45,041 45,463 37,500 27,342 51,547 46,922 47,357 39,176 28,646 53,660 48,164 48,603 40,382 30,337 54,608 23 4 31 63 14 19 57 45 50 20 12 16 47 9 61 42 49 40 S u rv e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin ess May 2010 45 Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Area Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 Baltimore......................................... Calvert............................................. Caroline........................................... Carroll.............................................. Cecil Charles Dorchester Frederick.......................................... G arrett............................................. Harford............................................. Howard............................................ Kent ............................................... M ontgomery................................... Prince George’s .............................. Queen Anne’s ................................. St. Mary’s. Somerset. Talbot Washington..................................... Wicomico......................................... W orcester........................................ Baltimore C ity ................................. 37,043 3,501 926 6,773 3,404 5,467 947 9,294 949 10,043 15,825 874 60,473 30,412 1,986 3,626 629 1,961 4,665 2,936 1,853 20,925 38,508 3,705 976 7,022 3,608 5,738 1008 9,835 987 10,571 16,777 924 62,902 31,658 2,093 3,856 665 2,066 4,903 3,103 1,934 21,979 39,450 3,836 1014 7,176 3,736 5,955 1056 10,206 1034 10,885 17,213 935 64,404 32,761 2,160 4,041 688 2,109 5,110 3,227 2,014 23,188 47,134 39,962 28,571 40,165 34,532 39,225 30,242 41,861 32,023 41,863 58,451 44,030 64,665 36,351 43,220 36,759 24,318 54,389 32,567 31,837 37,774 32,647 48,923 42,049 29,605 41,460 36,296 40,786 31,742 43,716 33,288 43,989 61,221 46,493 66,811 38,019 44,694 38,410 25,356 57,255 33,817 33,246 39,288 34,334 50,035 43,320 30,467 42,264 37,381 42,103 32,985 45,054 34,856 45,091 62,098 46,116 67,531 39,447 45,503 39,748 26,347 58,401 35,130 34,377 40,957 36,340 M assachusetts..................... M etropolitan p o r tio n ................... 304,970 322,652 49,644 321,022 333,046 331,358 47,162 303,403 47,111 49,597 50,897 50,849 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... Barnstable...................................... Berkshire......................................... B ristol.............................................. Dukes Essex Franklin............................................ Hampden......................................... Hampshire...................................... M iddlesex....................................... N antucket....................................... Norfolk............................................. P lym outh......................................... Suffolk.............................................. Worcester........................................ 1,568 10,496 5,163 20,069 863 34,390 2,633 15,956 5,400 82,298 705 39,079 21,714 35,062 31,142 1,630 11,081 5,462 21,053 904 36,344 2,821 16,785 5,761 86,997 726 41,098 22,881 37,705 33,034 1,688 11,341 5,602 21,922 943 37,528 2,931 17,602 5,952 89,397 746 42,284 23,721 38,826 34,252 59,633 46,991 39,567 36,916 55,721 47,034 36,683 34,171 34,921 56,062 65,241 59,868 44,384 48,983 39,305 61,073 49,858 41,941 38,666 57,838 49,579 39,301 35,885 37,119 58,961 65,644 62,638 46,567 51,734 41,498 62,422 51,194 43,237 40,164 59,760 50,895 40,778 37,516 38,203 60,093 66,147 63,935 47,984 52,276 42,850 M ichigan................................ M etropolitan p o r tio n ................... N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... A lco na ............................................. A lger................................................ A llegan............................................ Alpena............................................. Antrim .............................................. Arenac............................................. Baraga............................................. Barry................................................ B a y ................................................... B enzie............................................. Berrien............................................. Branch............................................. Calhoun........................................... Cass Charlevoix Cheboygan..................................... Chippewa Clare Clinton Crawford. Delta Dickinson, Eaton Emmet Genesee.. G ladw in... Gogebic.. Grand Traverse............................... Gratiot.............................................. Hillsdale........................................... Houghton......................................... Huron, , Ingham ... Ionia,, , Iosco. Iro n ...... Isabella............................................ Jackson ........................................... K alam azoo..................................... Kalkaska.......................................... K en t................................................. Keweenaw...................................... Lake................................................. Lapeer............................................. Leelanau......................................... Lenawee......................................... Livingston....................................... 334,769 284,150 50,620 265 215 3,398 847 701 406 200 1,830 3,134 487 4,938 1,124 4,001 1,549 902 698 869 742 2,293 335 1031 835 3,267 1,178 12,342 601 408 2,951 1050 1,180 840 1036 8,814 1,493 632 326 1,720 4,476 8,102 382 20,626 60 252 2,715 838 2,957 6,766 See the footnotes at the end of the table. 343,585 291,175 52,410 274 221 3,526 876 728 421 208 1,884 3,218 509 5,239 1,144 4,150 1,616 920 723 904 759 2,414 345 1,066 876 3,402 1,252 12,529 621 427 3,037 1,080 1,210 883 1062 9,053 1,556 651 339 1,771 4,649 8,407 402 20,895 65 259 2,763 868 3,008 7,055 349,612 295,285 54,327 286 226 3,609 928 738 447 221 1,926 3,332 518 5,398 1,186 4,317 1,663 939 742 954 801 2,507 357 1,108 920 3,515 1,273 12,646 640 445 3,105 1,145 1,237 922 1175 9,363 1,621 679 357 1,844 4,745 8,662 422 21,225 68 275 2,803 888 3,081 7,128 33,203 34,553 27,232 23,088 22,474 30,227 28,424 28,954 24,207 22,940 31,103 29,023 27,678 30,927 24,261 29,113 30,645 34,514 25,816 22,534 23,913 33,036 22,786 27,343 30,791 30,457 35,227 28,218 22,517 25,090 34,971 24,817 25,269 24,027 30,807 31,562 23,307 23,860 27,057 25,857 27,494 33,283 22,172 34,455 27,487 22,617 29,422 38,293 29,205 37,097 Personal income Rank in state 34,185 35,522 34,953 36,201 28,271 24,056 22,873 31,223 29,448 30,080 25,311 23,988 31,898 29,968 29,054 32,767 24,739 30,361 31,921 35,105 26,947 23,305 24,748 34,620 23,744 28,504 32,313 31,748 37,490 28,863 23,635 26,429 35,618 25,468 26,058 25,271 31,962 32,492 24,301 24,714 28,418 26,548 28,576 34,362 23,459 34,687 29,034 23,335 30,074 39,670 29,728 38,565 29,435 25,293 23,728 31,837 31,340 30,727 27,273 25,767 32,743 30,971 29,763 33,669 25,901 31,652 32,983 36,120 28,018 24,586 26,392 35,913 24,743 29,760 34,209 32,906 37,935 29,488 24,643 27,717 36,129 27,047 26,923 26,107 36,024 33,685 25,371 26,005 30,277 27,639 29,610 35,190 24,632 35,099 30,048 24,926 30,829 40,656 30,594 39,039 Area 2008 5 10 22 11 16 12 21 9 19 8 2 6 1 15 7 14 24 3 18 20 13 17 6 9 12 4 7 11 14 13 3 1 2 8 5 10 70 81 25 27 31 53 67 22 28 37 16 65 26 19 9 50 77 62 11 74 38 14 21 6 43 75 51 8 55 57 63 10 15 68 64 33 52 39 12 76 13 36 72 30 3 32 5 Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 Luce................................................. Mackinac.......................................... Macomb........................................... Manistee.......................................... M arquette........................................ Mason.............................................. Mecosta........................................... Menominee..................................... Midland............................................ Missaukee........................................ M onroe............................................ Montcalm ......................................... Montmorency.................................. Muskegon Newaygo.......................................... Oakland........................................... Oceana O gem aw.......................................... Ontonagon...................................... O sceola ........................................... O scoda............................................ Otsego............................................. Ottawa Presque Isle.................................... Roscommon................................... Saginaw........................................... St. Clair............................................ St. Joseph........................................ Sanilac............................................. Schoolcraft...................................... Shiawassee.................................... Tuscola............................................. Van Buren........................................ Washtenaw..................................... Wayne Wexford............................................ 134 326 29,069 635 1,809 771 951 632 3,153 346 4,899 1,360 232 4,628 1,231 62,933 691 492 188 565 199 668 8,221 328 623 5,770 5,171 1,639 1,196 213 1,842 1,350 2,035 13,255 60,591 810 137 341 29,890 668 1,926 810 993 660 3,376 354 5,078 1,377 238 4,773 1,261 64,261 709 512 194 561 204 671 8,424 344 644 5,894 5,328 1,718 1,215 224 1,884 1,384 2,156 13,614 61,667 831 146 352 30,265 691 2,019 845 1034 694 3,467 368 5,105 1,430 249 4,899 1,304 64,506 738 536 199 577 214 690 8,612 362 668 6,054 5,397 1,747 1,295 242 1,924 1,447 2,256 13,483 62,551 856 20,050 29,627 35,120 25,473 27,783 26,769 22,558 25,995 38,074 23,044 31,957 21,550 22,504 26,582 25,020 52,308 24,686 22,936 26,635 24,317 22,112 27,547 32,006 23,600 24,303 28,181 30,366 26,300 27,231 24,689 25,508 23,665 26,058 38,305 30,164 25,607 20,500 31,228 36,061 26,944 29,552 28,297 23,736 27,331 40,877 23,681 33,111 21,913 23,335 27,390 25,602 53,474 25,466 24,047 27,945 24,278 22,827 27,887 32,551 24,882 25,362 29,177 31,351 27,530 27,922 26,533 26,252 24,415 27,671 39,142 31,125 26,205 22,158 32,957 36,462 28,079 30,838 29,515 24,747 28,736 41,990 24,541 33,397 22,755 24,481 28,062 26,577 53,650 26,585 25,314 29,592 25,218 24,064 29,152 33,009 26,657 26,768 30,143 31,956 28,058 30,143 29,571 27,163 25,818 28,934 39,107 32,094 27,010 M inn eso ta .............................. 205,803 216,436 224,671 39,975 41,693 42,953 M etropolitan p o rtio n .................... 165,161 173,936 179,138 43,050 44,864 45,752 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... Aitkin................................................ Anoka .............................................. Becker.............................................. Beltram i........................................... Benton............................................. Big Stone......................................... Blue Earth........................................ Brown............................................... Carlton............................................. Carver.............................................. C a ss................................................ Chippewa......................................... Chisago........................................... Clay.................................................. Clearwater...................................... C o ok................................................ Cottonwood.................................... Crow W ing ...................................... Dakota............................................. Dodge.............................................. D ouglas........................................... Faribault........................................... Fillmore............................................ Freeborn.......................................... Goodhue.......................................... Grant................................................ Hennepin........................................ Houston........................................... Hubbard........................................... Isanti................................................ Itasca............................................... Jackson............................................ Kanabec.......................................... Kandiyohi......................................... Kittson.............................................. Koochiching.................................... Lacqui Parle................................... Lake................................................. Lake of the Woods......................... Le S ueur.......................................... Lincoln............................................. Lyon................................................. McLeod............................................ Mahnomen...................................... M arshall........................................... M a rtin .............................................. Meeker............................................. Mille Lacs......................................... Morrison........................................... M ower.............................................. 40,643 425 11,866 1013 1,180 1,199 171 1,953 861 942 4,166 885 436 1,625 1,642 207 178 370 1,779 16,859 659 1,159 522 630 978 1,629 177 60,304 668 530 1,215 1,242 358 441 1,422 145 407 246 379 112 876 182 853 1,157 131 299 758 710 645 902 1,264 42,501 445 12,478 1060 1,227 1,232 175 2,011 885 995 4,572 927 458 1,666 1,744 213 186 389 1,859 17,809 693 1,217 570 666 1032 1,693 192 63,298 687 546 1,271 1,299 372 456 1,493 156 426 252 395 113 905 188 888 1,201 139 323 791 735 681 953 1,332 45,532 457 12,747 1,094 1,297 1,267 198 2,122 942 1033 4,798 966 500 1,750 1,894 225 191 420 1,907 18,243 719 1,328 657 692 1090 1,776 229 64,701 706 596 1,319 1,363 415 473 1,580 231 432 274 410 121 954 201 957 1,239 145 406 865 785 705 1030 1,398 30,982 26,623 36,576 31,883 27,425 30,730 31,977 32,909 33,049 27,961 48,152 30,822 34,755 32,916 30,370 25,290 33,147 32,422 29,279 43,720 33,910 32,617 34,779 30,054 31,188 35,840 29,441 53,587 34,073 28,536 31,824 28,175 32,653 27,488 34,795 31,523 30,119 33,847 35,042 26,771 31,729 31,047 34,358 31,381 25,983 31,079 36,975 30,555 24,853 27,715 33,153 32,338 27,804 38,162 33,266 28,384 31,146 32,657 33,538 34,151 29,576 51,768 32,378 36,891 33,367 31,910 25,872 34,324 34,351 30,181 45,630 35,716 33,821 38,417 31,678 33,036 37,038 32,146 55,819 35,201 29,164 32,666 29,228 34,021 28,215 36,534 34,899 31,824 34,707 36,698 27,856 32,290 32,336 35,747 32,354 27,540 34,226 38,744 31,623 25,985 29,102 35,003 34,622 28,747 38,744 34,241 29,633 31,763 37,309 35,009 36,576 30,317 53,219 33,664 40,418 34,764 33,988 27,228 34,813 37,415 30,595 46,357 36,565 36,655 44,836 33,128 35,177 38,789 38,437 56,564 36,563 31,784 33,647 30,656 38,396 29,264 38,571 52,127 32,631 38,179 38,421 30,559 34,042 34,680 38,212 33,351 28,557 43,631 42,414 33,739 26,811 31,240 36,798 2008 83 20 7 47 29 42 73 46 2 78 17 82 79 48 61 1 60 69 40 71 80 44 18 59 58 34 24 49 34 41 54 66 45 4 23 56 81 22 57 79 70 36 49 43 77 2 62 16 51 59 86 50 35 75 5 44 42 7 66 48 21 26 1 45 68 63 74 28 80 24 3 67 32 27 76 58 52 31 65 83 11 12 61 87 72 39 46 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income May 2010 Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Per capita personal income1 Personal income Rank in state Dollars Millions of dollars Area 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 Murray.............................................. Nicollet............................................. Nobles............................................. Norman.. Olmsted. Otter Tail Pennington....................................... Pine . .. Pipestone......................................... Polk Pope................................................ Ramsey........................................... Red Lake ......................................... Redwood......................................... Renville............................................ Rice Rock Roseau............................................ St. Louis........................................... Scott ............................................ Sherburne........................................ Sibley.... Stearns.. S teele.... Stevens., Swift.................................................. Todd................................................. Traverse........................................... Wabasha W adena. Waseca.. Washington..................................... Watonwan....................................... Wilkin W inona............................................ W right.............................................. Yellow Medicine.............................. 303 1090 675 235 5,722 1,698 463 709 315 962 347 21,527 107 512 517 1,829 309 538 6,595 4,636 2,474 469 4,588 1,220 327 297 615 117 719 337 571 10,082 334 215 1,589 3,668 331 323 1,107 722 246 6,066 1,775 491 742 336 1013 363 22,380 116 527 541 1,901 325 562 6,930 5,011 2,641 487 4,829 1,271 353 301 635 122 765 353 604 10,789 342 223 1,647 3,948 356 368 1,176 781 290 6,218 1,907 532 781 373 1126 411 22,960 123 589 631 1,989 364 629 7,187 5,279 2,711 538 5,073 1,355 386 342 676 148 804 382 655 11,169 373 267 1,711 4,135 380 35,159 34,573 33,643 34,960 41,635 29,727 33,673 25,323 33,982 31,346 31,457 43,339 26,099 32,590 31,702 29,745 32,944 33,589 33,622 37,774 29,452 31,325 31,697 33,841 33,936 26,505 25,689 31,257 32,863 25,354 29,498 45,387 30,060 33,077 32,094 32,201 32,478 38,095 34,829 35,921 37,330 43,455 31,163 35,616 26,315 36,201 32,958 33,032 44,813 28,120 33,778 33,489 30,663 34,304 35,182 35,277 39,714 30,796 32,340 32,956 34,965 36,883 27,128 26,425 33,246 35,150 26,363 31,078 47,657 31,131 34,396 33,144 33,689 35,341 43,665 36,776 38,261 44,339 43,833 33,513 38,607 27,506 39,890 36,854 37,542 45,677 29,707 37,782 39,844 31,776 38,540 39,434 36,454 40,851 31,080 35,714 34,328 37,021 40,186 31,241 28,176 40,986 36,740 28,672 33,786 48,617 34,344 41,932 34,499 34,466 38,281 30,383 M is s is s ip p i........................... 81,136 86,314 89,331 28,006 29,542 M etropolitan p o rtio n .................... 39,841 43,235 44,126 31,651 33,755 33,979 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... A da m s... A lco rn .... Amite Attala Benton... Bolivar.... Calhoun. Carroll.... Chickasaw....................................... Choctaw. Claiborne......................................... Clarke.... C la y ...... Coahoma......................................... Copiah.. Covington........................................ DeSoto............................................. Forrest............................................. Franklin. George.. Greene.. Grenada Hancock Harrison H inds............................................... H olm es............................................ Humphreys..................................... Issaquena........................................ Itawamba......................................... Jackson. Jasper... Jefferson.......................................... Jefferson Davis............................... Jones............................................... Kemper. Lafayette Lamar... Lauderdale...................................... Lawrence......................................... Leake.... Lee Leflore.............................................. Lincoln.. Lowndes Madison M arion.. Marshall M onroe. M ontgomery................................... Neshoba.......................................... N ew ton............................................ 41,295 906 877 317 449 156 885 335 271 423 185 219 381 579 744 635 458 4,630 2,094 179 498 255 593 1227 5,669 8,432 415 209 37 585 3,825 419 157 283 1,923 206 1,297 1,403 2,307 339 493 2,475 895 888 1,681 3,797 622 841 943 278 894 519 43,079 940 921 327 462 162 955 349 297 439 190 230 405 576 767 653 487 4,968 2,129 182 515 269 601 1,719 6,535 8,479 442 223 47 610 4,613 442 165 292 2,031 210 1,358 1,545 2,374 350 509 2,601 923 904 1,776 4,022 642 898 980 284 909 546 45,205 995 968 348 493 170 993 356 309 454 200 241 431 586 793 688 511 5,026 2,183 191 567 286 620 1,490 6,489 8,756 463 230 45 644 4,626 470 178 333 2,126 220 1,406 1,637 2,510 380 551 2,690 945 951 1,848 4,175 696 934 1011 297 958 574 25,205 28,220 24,737 23,424 23,048 19,635 23,533 22,934 26,446 22,363 20,170 19,817 21,857 27,593 26,658 21,700 22,665 32,090 27,020 21,646 23,091 19,621 25,758 31,961 32,983 33,610 20,185 20,746 21,196 25,486 29,841 23,404 17,559 21,949 28,964 20,386 30,275 30,574 29,983 25,678 21,795 31,220 25,466 26,009 28,197 43,518 24,439 23,394 25,390 24,008 30,022 23,274 26,254 29,742 25,744 24,560 23,615 20,302 25,552 23,868 28,725 23,250 21,071 21,509 23,317 27,615 27,827 22,323 23,994 33,191 26,903 21,842 23,391 19,652 26,000 43,260 37,074 34,057 21,638 22,508 28,085 26,536 35,220 24,620 18,416 22,938 30,386 21,032 31,350 32,501 30,445 26,393 22,352 32,466 26,299 26,349 29,841 44,940 25,036 24,615 26,444 24,749 30,447 24,184 27,537 31,924 27,017 26,282 25,011 20,997 26,835 24,530 29,753 24,176 22,029 22,252 24,840 28,301 29,159 23,538 24,933 32,393 27,342 22,929 25,212 20,026 26,830 36,796 36,188 35,385 22,565 23,024 27,372 27,894 35,045 25,969 19,970 26,359 31,505 22,302 32,181 33,452 31,908 28,624 23,979 33,219 26,943 27,446 31,196 45,635 27,058 25,326 27,219 26,355 31,812 25,479 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Personal income Area 2008 10 40 30 8 9 64 23 85 18 38 34 6 78 33 19 69 25 20 46 15 73 47 56 37 17 71 84 14 41 82 60 4 55 13 53 54 29 12 34 44 55 80 36 60 18 63 78 77 57 23 19 70 56 10 31 73 52 81 37 2 4 5 74 72 30 25 6 45 82 41 15 76 11 8 13 22 64 9 35 28 16 1 33 50 32 42 14 49 2007 Rank in state Dollars Millions of dollars 2006 Noxubee..... O ktibbeha... Panola.......... Pearl River.. P erry............ Pike.............. Pontotoc...... Prentiss....... Q uitm an..... Rankin......... Scott............. Sharkey....... Simpson...... Smith............ S tone........... Sunflower.... Tallahatchie. Tate Tippah......... Tishomingo. Tunica....... U nion........ Walthall.... W arren...... Washington. Wayne......... W ebster..... W ilkinson.... Winston....... Yalobusha... Yazoo.......... Per capita personal incom e1 2008 2006 2007 2008 257 1,167 820 1,312 254 954 707 537 199 4,454 610 129 720 365 404 649 314 714 494 416 244 662 334 1,622 1,338 480 212 200 475 321 642 269 1,223 859 1,378 262 983 730 562 211 4,691 647 147 765 378 415 697 334 746 518 434 279 689 344 1,655 1,417 507 223 207 486 327 675 281 1,281 907 1,449 274 1060 745 591 226 4,936 690 136 812 398 447 742 357 768 523 455 317 716 369 1,759 1,514 533 234 223 518 342 691 21,724 27,018 23,431 23,405 21,212 23,903 24,669 21,059 21,999 32,902 20,995 22,458 25,809 22,861 26,196 20,949 23,280 26,760 23,162 21,832 23,457 24,662 21,625 32,984 23,719 22,869 21,650 19,324 24,226 23,635 22,345 22,681 27,867 24,409 24,122 21,514 24,713 25,339 22,064 24,074 33,929 22,161 26,802 27,495 23,689 26,642 22,518 25,392 27,737 24,154 22,628 26,566 25,700 22,401 33,857 25,532 23,968 22,802 20,265 24,690 23,808 23,594 23,873 29,068 25,646 25,086 22,413 26,576 25,702 23,059 26,345 35,012 23,567 24,721 28,974 25,246 27,379 24,624 27,717 28,217 24,301 23,829 30,072 26,406 23,894 36,542 27,553 25,614 23,648 21,959 26,617 25,020 24,402 M isso u ri...................... 198,683 207,552 216,547 33,896 35,120 36,356 M etropolitan p o rtio n ......... 160,341 167,330 174,055 36,545 37,757 38,875 N onm etropolitan p ortion.. A d a ir..................................... Andrew.................................. Atchison................................ Audrain.................................. B arry..................................... Barton................................... Bates B enton.................................. Bollinger................................ B oone................................... Buchanan............................. B utle r.................................... Caldwell................................ Callaway.............................. C am den................................ Cape Girardeau.................. C arroll................................... Carler Cass C edar.................................... C hariton................................ Christian................................ C la rk..................................... Clay....................................... Clinton................................... C o le ...................................... Cooper.................................. Crawford.............................. D ade..................................... Dallas.................................... Daviess................................ DeKalb.................................. D ent...................................... Douglas................................ Dunklin.................................. Franklin................................ Gasconade.......................... Gentry................................... Greene.................................. Grundy.................................. Harrison............................... H enry.................................... Hickory.................................. H o lt....................................... H ow ard................................ Howell.................................. Iron Jackson................................ Jasper.................................. Jefferson.............................. Johnson............................... Knox..................................... Laclede................................ Lafayette.............................. Lawrence............................ Lewis.................................... Lincoln................................. 38,343 595 576 178 693 917 308 478 444 277 5,086 2,533 1,173 276 1088 1,266 2,279 270 141 2,988 314 233 1,908 184 7,410 610 2,647 443 654 191 426 194 237 370 296 832 3,210 423 185 8,404 257 213 609 182 140 296 956 241 24,235 3,052 6,559 1,323 107 864 1042 881 233 1,327 40,223 620 630 192 737 955 315 499 465 286 5,376 2,645 1,227 290 1,147 1,305 2,425 289 144 3,167 329 247 2,067 196 7,826 656 2,762 474 671 192 440 207 258 377 305 862 3,381 444 201 8,900 272 227 638 188 149 314 975 264 25,029 3,181 6,875 1,368 114 902 1116 927 250 1,403 42,492 642 672 207 789 984 346 544 492 302 5,576 2,764 1,356 308 1,201 1,342 2,483 315 151 3,306 340 260 2,159 208 8,102 690 2,868 506 697 207 453 215 273 395 316 918 3,555 454 208 9,126 284 237 663 199 163 334 1018 293 25,801 3,316 7,270 1,429 122 935 1,179 966 267 1,484 26,012 24,116 34,193 29,288 26,714 25,512 23,863 28,185 24,215 22,871 33,946 28,973 28,356 30,001 25,344 31,759 31,590 27,217 23,950 31,326 22,611 29,611 27,270 25,516 34,890 29,738 36,207 25,424 27,538 25,160 25,885 23,897 19,213 24,550 22,056 26,220 32,410 27,410 29,324 32,368 25,473 24,409 27,121 20,101 28,404 29,997 24,952 23,637 35,608 27,011 30,684 25,600 26,423 24,792 31,767 23,760 23,190 26,697 27,213 25,174 37,404 31,514 28,683 26,475 24,724 29,438 25,011 23,577 35,298 29,782 29,849 31,374 26,544 32,311 33,385 29,382 24,205 32,346 23,837 31,790 28,206 27,259 35,860 31,267 37,533 27,014 27,973 25,488 26,156 25,731 20,965 25,162 22,682 27,335 33,815 28,847 32,336 33,739 27,060 25,893 28,490 20,799 30,114 31,978 25,297 26,176 36,526 27,664 31,843 26,310 28,218 25,560 34,189 24,680 25,055 27,252 28,730 25,686 39,714 34,492 30,612 27,182 27,661 32,169 26,542 25,273 36,133 30,990 32,867 33,468 27,563 32,963 33,913 32,437 25,577 33,300 24,854 33,933 28,539 29,046 36,269 32,844 38,550 29,187 29,188 27,786 26,965 26,717 22,389 26,175 23,248 29,299 35,244 29,758 33,569 34,193 28,189 27,149 29,916 22,082 33,391 33,877 26,124 29,342 36,821 28,431 33,408 27,394 30,459 26,345 35,919 25,660 26,995 28,149 2008 66 20 47 53 75 39 46 71 43 7 69 58 21 51 29 59 26 24 62 67 17 40 65 3 27 48 68 79 38 54 61 92 4 12 44 76 72 33 85 98 9 42 27 21 73 26 16 29 95 25 102 15 61 58 8 28 6 57 56 70 80 83 110 88 109 55 11 51 18 14 66 77 50 113 23 17 89 53 7 64 22 74 46 87 10 93 78 67 May 2010 Survey of C urrent 47 B u s in e s s Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Area Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars 2006 2007 Linn......................................... Livingston.............................. McDonald............................. Macon.................................... Madison................................. Maries.................................... M arion................................... M ercer................................... Miller...................................... M ississippi............................ Moniteau............................... M onroe.................................. Montgomery......................... Morgan.................................. New M adrid.......................... Newton.................................. Nodaway............................... O regon.................................. O sage.................................... Ozark.................................... Pemiscot............................... Perry..................................... Pettis...................................... P helps.................................. Pike........................................ Platte Polk........................................ Pulaski................................... Putnam................................. R alls..................................... Randolph.............................. R ay........................................ Reynolds................................ Ripley..................................... St. Charles............................ St. Clair.................................. Ste. Genevieve.................... St. Francois......................... St. L ou is............................... S aline ................................... S chuyler............................... S cotland............................... S cott..................................... S hannon............................... Shelby................................... Stoddard............................... Stone.................................... Sullivan................................. Taney.................................... Texas.................................... V ernon.................................. W arren.................................. Washington.......................... Wayne................................... W ebster................................ W orth.................................... W right................................... St. Louis C ity ....................... 334 402 524 405 276 226 778 92 594 326 409 228 334 536 476 1,612 508 228 405 191 484 498 1,085 1,187 443 3,324 692 1,513 119 272 657 737 156 296 12,308 212 503 1,483 50,675 673 90 117 1,155 167 173 797 907 191 1,194 487 535 897 520 285 823 52 370 10,469 343 429 537 423 286 233 815 94 614 340 435 242 341 565 500 1,699 539 230 424 200 498 519 1,162 1,235 462 3,554 725 1,642 120 290 679 777 158 308 13,026 216 539 1,583 52,244 706 96 127 1,207 169 188 825 960 205 1,301 515 562 961 556 294 873 53 380 10,846 Dollars 2008 2006 2007 2008 361 442 555 437 300 244 863 93 639 374 456 256 371 593 553 1,804 565 241 450 209 570 543 1,222 1,275 499 3,710 771 1,820 123 297 712 808 170 326 13,768 234 571 1,651 53,927 757 99 128 1,269 179 192 923 996 216 1,356 545 589 1040 598 311 912 53 402 11,492 26,006 28,498 22,855 26,152 22,807 25,093 27,543 26,603 24,036 23,845 27,185 24,815 28,010 25,971 26,707 29,094 23,072 21,938 30,077 20,279 25,781 26,957 26,772 27,977 23,823 38,828 23,274 34,493 23,682 27,933 25,807 31,115 24,225 21,744 36,585 22,606 28,187 23,877 50,845 29,549 22,165 24,497 28,379 20,225 26,610 26,787 29,166 27,852 26,914 19,850 26,621 30,344 21,545 22,416 23,510 24,881 20,481 29,588 26,912 30,328 23,404 27,330 23,279 25,860 28,954 27,400 24,749 25,179 28,807 26,338 28,610 27,205 28,310 30,322 24,453 22,210 31,760 21,324 26,814 27,707 28,475 29,090 25,042 40,543 24,021 36,985 24,649 29,804 26,499 33,028 24,745 22,715 37,885 22,860 30,207 25,237 52,576 31,088 23,380 26,377 29,570 20,317 29,047 27,846 30,529 30,156 28,352 21,020 28,015 31,535 22,872 23,492 24,313 25,460 20,974 30,494 28,505 31,296 24,268 28,285 24,155 27,346 30,523 26,758 25,730 27,938 30,264 28,016 31,306 28,529 31,557 32,231 25,618 23,389 33,553 22,258 31,059 29,013 29,746 30,264 26,979 41,542 25,413 40,672 25,430 30,756 27,773 34,344 26,860 24,182 39,383 24,956 32,250 26,070 54,343 33,500 23,909 26,637 31,131 21,382 30,167 31,416 31,636 31,591 28,680 22,244 29,322 33,369 24,401 24,944 25,034 26,526 22,047 32,214 Montana...................... 30,447 32,475 33,516 32,177 33,927 34,622 M etropolitan p o r tio n ........ 11,582 12,307 12,673 34,690 36,473 37,067 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n . Beaverhead......................... Big H o rn ............................... B la ine ................................... Broadwater.......................... Carbon.................................. C a rte r................................... Cascade............................... Chouteau.............................. Custer................................... D aniels................................. Dawson................................. Deer Lodge.......................... Fallon.................................... Fergus.................................. Flathead............................... G allatin................................. Garfield................................. Glacier.................................. Golden V alley...................... Granite.................................. H ill......................................... Jefferson............................... Judith Basin......................... Lake...................................... Lewis and Clark................... L ibe rty.................................. Lincoln.................................. M cCone................................ Madison................................ M eagher.............................. 18,865 262 271 144 114 337 29 2,753 149 331 48 233 236 89 344 2,905 2,979 32 342 28 79 531 363 51 704 2,059 53 464 42 245 52 20,168 281 292 160 127 348 37 2,886 175 349 61 257 248 97 375 3,060 3,193 35 344 32 85 558 390 59 758 2,227 58 490 47 261 56 20,843 281 305 179 133 349 39 2,997 204 360 68 268 257 100 382 3,117 3,227 38 366 32 86 591 406 62 770 2,339 66 510 53 261 54 30,807 29,576 21,367 22,014 25,208 34,647 23,494 33,652 28,376 29,869 28,026 27,274 26,737 34,007 30,529 34,252 35,259 26,699 25,550 25,250 27,392 32,374 33,381 24,166 24,979 34,863 28,898 24,906 24,229 34,145 27,060 32,541 31,754 22,882 24,567 27,791 35,712 30,100 35,286 33,545 31,414 36,161 29,921 27,978 36,604 33,457 35,094 36,578 29,164 25,787 28,651 29,337 33,851 35,016 28,712 26,986 37,031 32,044 26,166 27,541 35,428 29,055 33,288 31,278 23,799 27,721 28,404 35,949 32,492 36,533 39,374 32,458 40,527 31,497 28,854 37,330 34,170 34,982 35,926 32,321 27,402 30,562 30,149 35,933 35,968 30,643 27,156 38,243 38,015 27,191 31,854 34,908 28,476 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Personal income Rank in state Area 2008 Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars 2006 2007 Rank in state Dollars 2008 2006 2007 2008 63 39 104 65 106 75 45 82 91 69 47 68 38 62 36 31 94 108 19 111 41 59 52 47 79 2 97 3 96 43 71 13 81 105 5 100 30 90 1 20 107 84 40 115 49 37 34 35 60 112 54 24 103 101 99 86 114 32 Mineral............................................. M issoula.......................................... Musselshell..................................... Park. Petroleum........................................ Phillips............................................. Pondera Powder R ive r.................................. Powell.............................................. Prairie.............................................. Ravalli.............................................. Richland Roosevelt Rosebud Sanders Sheridan Silver Bow Stillwater.......................................... Sweet G rass................................... Teton................................................ Toole Treasure Valley W heatland...................................... Wibaux Yellowstone..................................... 97 3,461 97 497 11 110 175 38 159 28 1113 317 217 284 258 100 1,142 268 102 199 164 16 220 52 21 5,031 103 3,679 104 522 12 122 183 40 163 31 1,191 358 251 296 271 113 1,181 290 110 217 167 18 233 57 25 5,394 104 3,776 107 538 13 129 196 41 170 32 1,207 375 256 306 278 132 1,234 294 109 229 190 20 250 57 23 5,551 24,400 33,249 21,754 31,382 23,088 27,869 29,403 21,760 22,442 26,417 27,960 35,031 21,168 31,281 23,779 29,517 34,988 31,709 27,808 32,550 31,894 23,912 31,958 26,289 23,788 36,392 26,609 34,758 23,377 32,542 26,852 30,918 30,850 23,779 22,950 29,682 29,552 39,367 24,829 32,482 24,577 33,796 36,248 33,550 29,440 35,168 33,376 27,118 33,835 28,355 27,566 38,514 26,962 35,108 23,708 33,412 29,309 32,878 33,558 24,090 24,161 29,704 29,743 40,919 25,375 33,423 25,162 40,529 37,660 33,801 29,403 37,181 37,530 30,395 36,230 27,816 26,667 38,927 32 55 45 43 15 27 12 4 28 3 31 41 10 21 19 17 29 46 34 36 16 14 33 48 6 7 47 30 20 42 Furnas ............................................. Gage................................................ Garden............................................. Garfield............................................ Gosper............................................. Grant................................................ Greeley............................................ H a ll.................................................. Ham ilton.......................................... Harlan.............................................. Hayes............................................... Hitchcock........................................ H o lt.................................................. Hooker............................................. Howard............................................ Jefferson.......................................... Johnson........................................... Kearney ........................................... Keith................................................. Keya Paha....................................... Kimball............................................. Knox................................................. Lancaster........................................ Lincoln............................................. Logan............................................... Loup................................................. McPherson..................................... Madison........................................... Merrick............................................. Morrill............................................... N e b raska ............................... 62,871 67,078 69,821 35,713 37,899 39,182 M etropolitan p o rtio n .................... 40,200 42,220 43,504 39,658 41,132 41,824 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... A dam s............................................. A ntelope.......................................... Arthur............................................... Banner............................................. Blaine............................................... Boone.............................................. Box B utte......................................... Boyd................................................. Brown............................................... Buffalo.............................................. B urt.................................................. B utler............................................... C a s s ................................................ Cedar............................................... Chase.............................................. Cherry.............................................. Cheyenne ....................................... Clay.................................................. Colfax............................................... Cum ing............................................ Custer.............................................. Dakota............................................. Dawes.............................................. Dawson............................................ D euel............................................... D ixon............................................... Dodge.............................................. D ouglas........................................... D undy.............................................. Fillmore............................................ Franklin............................................ 22,671 964 211 14 23 16 164 352 58 94 1,379 218 238 876 272 119 180 356 195 305 331 315 515 231 658 55 159 1,157 21,988 65 185 90 75 133 746 70 55 62 17 62 1,820 290 97 27 70 338 22 171 227 134 208 225 23 115 221 9,658 1117 21 14 13 1,067 222 173 24,858 1060 244 14 24 17 181 375 61 94 1,510 239 286 921 304 138 174 392 217 322 350 353 546 240 708 61 172 1,218 22,943 81 227 102 88 157 786 79 58 74 16 66 1,957 339 116 37 85 379 21 191 255 143 244 254 25 125 246 10,104 1,223 24 14 11 1,128 237 192 26,317 1082 272 13 25 14 190 395 68 90 1,566 253 310 970 344 160 181 421 255 334 340 384 574 256 719 64 185 1,267 23,432 94 262 118 95 182 833 84 57 86 17 68 2,032 379 134 48 87 428 21 206 262 152 268 277 28 131 258 10,412 1,302 26 14 9 1,177 246 206 30,359 29,339 31,198 37,923 31,288 33,605 29,518 31,992 27,306 28,874 30,996 30,574 28,364 34,386 31,243 31,550 31,133 36,630 30,515 30,667 35,168 28,760 25,623 26,535 26,566 28,884 25,680 32,258 44,668 32,041 30,400 27,370 27,828 27,916 32,323 36,019 31,176 31,713 27,031 25,941 33,178 31,228 28,395 27,404 24,177 32,663 29,525 26,412 29,548 26,027 31,633 28,103 26,042 31,116 25,622 35,671 31,504 28,353 21,764 26,591 30,259 28,796 34,603 33,435 32,251 36,553 36,605 34,110 37,430 32,806 33,961 29,145 29,633 33,634 34,074 34,080 36,074 35,608 37,328 30,713 39,642 34,435 32,299 37,797 32,629 26,848 27,381 28,587 32,477 27,543 33,971 46,135 40,643 37,643 32,663 33,186 33,724 34,063 42,941 33,788 37,649 26,465 28,234 35,329 36,383 34,458 38,170 29,657 36,998 29,744 29,618 34,234 28,297 37,146 31,748 29,822 34,505 28,549 36,832 34,501 33,001 21,076 21,661 33,034 31,306 38,375 35,478 32,632 41,138 35,288 37,452 32,392 34,660 35,643 32,649 29,053 34,659 36,282 36,934 37,835 40,984 44,377 32,521 42,682 40,735 33,216 36,959 35,494 28,231 29,480 28,941 34,001 29,535 35,529 46,576 47,975 43,677 38,166 36,966 39,730 36,468 46,859 33,271 45,103 28,706 29,488 36,030 40,751 40,736 49,005 30,492 42,505 28,675 32,103 35,758 29,948 41,224 35,535 34,501 36,975 30,439 37,453 36,494 36,718 20,676 17,926 34,407 32,307 41,512 2008 49 18 56 25 40 26 23 54 53 38 37 1 51 24 52 2 8 22 39 11 9 35 13 44 50 5 69 14 52 29 72 54 47 68 87 55 42 34 26 15 7 71 10 20 67 33 51 91 86 88 61 84 50 5 3 8 25 32 21 40 4 66 6 89 85 45 18 19 2 80 11 90 75 46 82 13 49 56 31 81 28 38 37 92 93 57 74 12 48 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income May 2010 Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Per capita personal incom e1 Personal income Area Millions of dollars Nevada.... 2007 Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 103 222 130 464 79 85 319 203 973 177 318 252 42 386 5,068 670 1106 529 153 76 41 178 160 19 180 127 737 248 104 28 420 114 239 151 496 87 118 351 227 1098 213 350 268 44 422 5,445 724 1,170 583 161 91 45 194 186 20 205 146 783 280 113 25 482 128 252 172 522 95 148 358 247 1,115 218 378 280 47 461 5,752 757 1,232 616 172 91 44 198 208 20 222 155 807 298 126 23 516 28,601 31,345 28,258 29,966 29,007 29,038 34,147 27,635 30,979 34,162 29,288 29,740 27,625 28,055 35,587 33,339 30,525 31,758 28,013 25,571 29,949 27,562 30,898 32,184 24,875 29,707 37,342 26,164 28,752 35,278 29,480 32,236 34,368 33,474 31,948 32,283 41,202 38,419 31,292 34,523 41,177 32,870 32,237 29,222 30,503 37,232 35,929 32,150 35,370 29,728 30,781 32,933 30,640 36,083 32,613 28,250 34,354 39,451 30,249 31,624 31,936 33,875 36,486 36,151 38,850 33,980 36,428 53,099 39,291 34,175 34,851 42,709 35,596 34,068 31,286 33,447 38,243 37,737 33,644 36,920 32,586 31,201 33,586 31,551 40,835 34,209 30,797 37,417 40,931 32,392 36,177 29,743 36,838 97,818 40,936 2006 Nance.............................................. Nemaha........................................... Nuckolls. Otoe Pawnee.. Perkins... Phelps.... Pierce.... Platte Polk Red W illow....................................... Richardson..................................... Rock Saline Sarpy S aunders......................................... Scotts B lu ff..................................... S ew ard.. Sheridan Sherman Sioux Stanton.. Thayer.... Thomas.. Thurston Valley Washington..................................... Wayne.... W ebster........................................... W heeler........................................... York.................................................. 2008 105,099 107,079 39,231 40,930 95,273 n ....................M etropolitan 88,811 p o rtio 96,940 39,725 41,346 41,233 9,827 959 73,444 2,739 1,692 30 55 553 190 108 1,436 142 1,433 147 157 19,306 345 2,365 10,139 1002 75,013 2,743 1,760 34 65 596 214 116 1,473 160 1,462 155 161 19,393 360 2,374 34,939 37,125 38,730 54,365 32,684 39,551 33,944 30,192 36,786 22,841 26,118 27,583 31,221 21,130 35,382 44,089 36,086 40,638 37,293 38,755 39,945 59,836 35,996 43,729 35,826 31,370 37,278 24,180 27,451 29,896 32,514 23,050 36,726 47,513 37,842 42,998 38,296 40,391 39,920 59,973 37,300 50,950 40,674 33,249 41,812 24,896 27,892 34,332 33,086 24,666 36,188 47,045 39,375 42,955 .................... Nonm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... Churchill........................................... Clark................................................ Douglas........................................... Elko................................................... Esmeralda...................................... Eureka............................................. Humboldt......................................... Lander............................................. Lincoln............................................. Lyon.................................................. Mineral............................................. N ye ................................................... Pershing........................................... Storey .............................................. Washoe............................................ White P ine....................................... Carson C ity...................................... 9,006 914 68,867 2,482 1,494 30 50 524 184 100 1,313 131 1,322 134 147 17,558 327 2,240 New Ham pshire.................... 53,661 56,205 57,399 40,903 42,665 43,423 M etropolitan p o rtio n .................... 34,944 36,726 37,412 42,731 44,692 45,329 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... Belknap............................................ Carroll.............................................. Cheshire.......................................... C oos................................................ Grafton............................................. Hillsborough.................................... Merrimack........................................ Rockingham.................................... Strafford........................................... Sullivan............................................ 18,717 2,273 1,846 2,852 1036 3,592 17,135 5,641 13,829 3,981 1,476 19,479 2,378 1,942 2,887 1066 3,750 18,012 5,896 14,505 4,209 1,560 19,987 2,442 1,973 2,976 1,093 3,865 18,358 6,041 14,693 4,361 1,597 37,878 37,336 38,903 36,867 31,789 42,105 42,704 38,150 46,743 32,986 34,603 39,306 38,963 40,571 37,283 32,976 43,820 44,726 39,678 48,848 34,471 36,496 40,253 39,851 41,040 38,563 34,239 44,795 45,432 40,548 49,250 35,477 37,298 New Je rse y........................... 411.746 434.948 445.928 47.746 50.364 51.473 ....................M etropolitan rtio n 411.746 p o434.948 10,024 10,407 Atlantic............................................. Bergen... 55,747 59,440 Burlington........................................ 20,291 19,473 Camden. 19,879 20,729 4,310 Cape M ay........................................ 4,140 Cumberland.................................... 4,517 4,725 Essex . 36,934 38,570 Gloucester....................................... 10,800 10,263 Hudson............................................ 22,726 24,355 8,837 Hunterdon........................................ 8,321 M ercer... 19,317 18,311 Middlesex 34,777 37,073 Monmouth........................................ 33,657 35,786 M o rris.... 34,623 33,149 Ocean.............................................. 20,640 21,951 19,894 Passaic............................................ 18,718 2,402 S alem .............................................. 2,316 22,954 Som erset......................................... 21,438 Sussex.............................................. 6,874 7,350 Union................................................ 26,535 25,526 W arren............................................. 4,599 4,318 445.928 10,780 60,244 20,744 21,348 4,438 4,973 39,594 11,250 25,725 8,929 20,113 38,052 36,429 34,969 22,514 20,684 2,522 23,332 7,536 27,038 4,714 47.746 37,194 63,021 43,551 38,484 42,322 29,346 47,837 36,401 38,377 64,326 50,471 44,823 52,499 68,364 36,742 38,392 35,130 67,455 45,448 49,062 39,448 50.364 38,553 67,113 45,463 40,052 44,575 30,405 50,146 37,754 41,324 68,154 53,156 47,540 55,826 71,300 38,816 40,845 36,401 71,564 48,474 51,054 41,928 51.473 39,835 67,696 46,564 41,234 46,001 31,721 51,617 39,040 43,446 68,785 55,170 48,454 56,755 71,812 39,521 42,354 38,103 72,201 49,763 51,815 42,897 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Personal income Area 7 8 1 10 2 6 13 5 16 15 12 14 17 11 3 9 4 6 4 7 10 3 2 5 1 9 8 17 4 11 16 12 21 8 19 13 3 6 10 5 2 18 15 20 1 9 7 14 Millions of dollars Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 New M e x ic o ............... 59,274 63,182 66,337 30,513 32,093 33,389 2008 39 44 23 62 41 1 22 59 53 9 48 60 77 65 24 27 63 35 70 78 64 76 17 58 79 30 16 72 43 83 36 Per capita personal income1 M etropolitan p o rtio n ......... 41,433 44,067 45,981 32,502 33,935 34,946 N onm etropolitan portion. Bernalillo............................... Catron................................... Chaves.................................. Cibola.................................... Colfax.................................... C urry..................................... De B aca................................ Dona A na .............................. Eddy...................................... G rant..................................... G uadalupe........................... H arding................................. Hidalgo.................................. Lea........................................ Lincoln................................... Los Alam os.......................... Luna...................................... M cKinley............................... Mora...................................... O tero..................................... Q ua y..................................... Rio A rriba............................. Roosevelt............................. Sandoval.............................. San Juan.............................. San Miguel........................... Santa F e ............................... S ie rra .................................... S ocorro................................. Taos...................................... Torrance................................ Union..................................... Valencia................................ 17,841 21,796 75 1,641 597 376 1,346 52 4,858 1,673 771 88 23 115 1,761 524 1,061 555 1,410 102 1,457 230 1002 480 3,319 3,331 737 5,867 288 436 927 419 114 1,843 19,115 22,830 77 1,798 635 396 1,459 53 5,281 1,802 833 90 21 126 1,967 571 1,066 597 1,509 106 1,538 242 1036 540 3,631 3,568 782 6,335 312 462 992 438 102 1,984 20,356 23,600 83 1,898 679 418 1,491 58 5,611 1,985 899 99 23 137 2,248 600 1,071 642 1,583 114 1,594 257 1091 564 3,846 3,858 829 6,531 338 493 1044 454 118 2,082 26,716 35,184 21,890 26,710 22,142 28,180 29,488 27,457 25,068 32,955 26,101 19,922 31,602 23,303 30,966 25,045 56,743 20,910 20,005 20,070 23,173 25,505 24,573 25,482 29,620 27,391 25,652 41,485 22,942 23,914 29,524 25,009 30,769 26,450 28,523 36,306 22,259 28,807 23,352 30,073 32,351 28,460 26,642 35,161 27,884 20,451 29,918 25,046 33,947 27,427 57,473 22,269 21,587 21,074 24,301 26,989 25,406 28,338 30,817 29,173 27,442 44,186 25,024 25,434 31,386 26,415 27,359 27,771 30,337 37,140 24,276 30,127 24,970 32,338 34,042 31,055 27,855 38,344 29,974 22,807 35,105 27,182 38,019 28,675 58,698 23,682 22,485 22,834 25,167 28,712 26,863 30,077 31,401 31,518 29,182 44,927 26,594 27,157 33,131 27,777 31,427 28,783 New Y ork..................... 851,635 925,063 950,210 43,997 47,628 48,809 M etropolitan p o rtio n ........ 807,293 877,584 900,678 45,329 49,091 50,243 N onm etropolitan p ortion.. Albany................................... Allegany................................ Bronx..................................... B room e................................. Cattaraugus......................... Cayuga.................................. Chautauqua......................... Chem ung............................. Chenango............................ Clinton................................... Columbia............................... Cortland................................ Delaware.............................. Dutchess............................... Erie Essex.................................... Franklin................................. Fulton.................................... Genesee.............................. Greene.................................. Hamilton................................ H erkim er.............................. Jefferson.............................. Kings..................................... Lewis..................................... Livingston............................. M adison............................... Monroe.................................. Montgomery......................... Nassau.................................. New York.............................. Niagara Oneida Onondaga............................ O ntario.................................. Orange.................................. O rleans................................. Oswego................................. Otsego Putnam Q ueens................................ Rensselaer........................... Richmond............................. Rockland.............................. St. Lawrence....................... S aratoga.............................. Schenectady........................ Schoharie............................. 44,341 12,441 1,143 35,264 5,906 2,241 2,257 3,530 2,591 1,396 2,347 2,163 1,280 1,288 11,572 31,732 1,094 1,247 1,652 1,726 1,477 155 1,687 3,926 77,601 687 1,756 2,080 27,756 1,445 80,873 177,314 6,403 6,920 16,108 3,566 12,614 1,076 3,158 1,721 4,784 77,352 5,249 19,430 14,852 2,688 8,496 5,457 902 47,479 13,339 1,198 38,319 6,442 2,414 2,460 3,800 2,788 1,493 2,541 2,358 1,375 1,365 12,554 33,947 1,180 1,344 1,756 1,845 1,571 170 1,799 4,243 84,330 746 1,906 2,245 29,854 1,540 88,045 193,230 6,831 7,476 17,460 3,918 13,572 1,135 3,364 1,810 5,216 84,500 5,631 21,160 16,282 2,882 8,998 5,932 982 49,531 13,821 1,285 40,180 6,740 2,532 2,538 3,994 2,942 1,549 2,623 2,402 1,433 1,411 12,921 35,298 1,228 1,417 1,842 1,893 1,648 175 1,859 4,506 87,701 771 1,968 2,303 30,785 1,606 88,858 197,041 7,019 7,798 18,050 4,048 14,040 1,187 3,499 1,889 5,267 87,506 5,895 21,711 16,823 3,008 9,369 6,209 1034 28,662 41,602 23,118 25,715 30,181 27,817 28,138 26,286 29,391 27,330 28,655 34,676 26,503 27,757 39,702 34,631 28,679 24,758 30,077 29,582 30,010 30,897 27,055 33,507 30,757 26,093 27,764 29,830 37,999 29,678 59,823 109,953 29,834 29,949 35,517 34,472 33,783 25,302 25,975 27,602 48,342 34,156 33,929 40,575 50,187 24,488 39,531 36,389 28,279 30,709 44,726 24,359 27,664 33,042 30,074 30,776 28,358 31,656 29,190 31,034 37,864 28,454 29,498 43,021 37,231 31,169 26,623 31,881 31,726 31,951 33,819 28,814 35,970 33,211 28,328 30,190 32,051 40,861 31,683 65,071 118,893 31,895 32,371 38,548 37,736 36,074 26,799 27,697 29,107 52,680 37,098 36,260 43,822 54,822 26,298 41,607 39,474 30,762 32,139 46,450 26,033 28,921 34,631 31,719 31,820 29,893 33,469 30,411 32,111 38,767 29,776 30,719 44,174 38,795 32,527 28,091 33,410 32,663 33,557 35,347 29,836 38,462 34,393 29,618 31,202 32,854 42,082 33,040 65,668 120,766 32,767 33,823 39,814 38,630 36,994 28,096 28,787 30,559 53,156 38,236 37,850 44,547 56,312 27,456 42,986 41,048 32,502 2008 5 29 14 28 9 7 13 21 3 16 32 6 23 4 20 1 30 33 31 27 19 25 15 12 10 17 2 26 24 8 22 11 18 7 62 56 26 43 42 50 32 49 41 15 53 47 9 14 39 60 33 38 31 24 51 17 27 54 46 36 11 35 3 1 37 30 13 16 20 59 57 48 5 18 19 8 4 61 10 12 40 May 2010 S urvey of C urrent 49 B u s in e s s Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Area Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 S chuyler.......................................... Seneca Steuben Suffolk.. Sullivan T io g a ... Tompkins......................................... Ulster............................................... Warren. Washington..................................... Wayne.. Westchester.................................... Wyoming.......................................... Yates................................................ 523 960 3,301 68,617 2,378 1,512 2,967 5,995 2,151 1,669 2,835 66,605 1,098 618 563 1032 3,398 74,842 2,548 1,623 3,251 6,488 2,298 1,789 3,038 72,998 1,174 675 590 1066 3,552 76,307 2,659 1,675 3,420 6,694 2,377 1,871 3,144 73,320 1,210 704 27,609 28,083 34,154 45,526 31,354 29,967 29,666 33,023 32,762 26,790 30,885 70,468 26,099 25,304 29,743 30,095 35,237 49,508 33,345 32,204 32,374 35,738 34,920 28,588 33,191 77,119 28,068 27,510 31,256 31,286 36,831 50,420 35,007 33,342 33,856 36,836 36,058 29,822 34,353 77,192 29,124 28,654 35,249 North C a ro lin a ..................... 297,558 316,023 325,954 33,558 34,865 M etropolitan p o r tio n ................... 221,096 235,375 242,582 35,753 37,051 37,277 Nonm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... Alam ance........................................ A lexander........................................ Alleghany......................................... A nson.............................................. A she .... A very... Beaufort........................................... Bertie... Bladen. Brunswick........................................ Buncombe...................................... Burke... Cabarrus.......................................... Caldwell........................................... Camden........................................... C arteret........................................... Caswell............................................ Catawba.......................................... Chatham.......................................... Cherokee......................................... Chow an........................................... C la y ................................................. Cleveland........................................ Colum bus....................................... Craven............................................. Cumberland.................................... Currituck.......................................... Dare Davidson.......................................... Davie... D uplin.. Durham............................................ Edgecombe.................................... Forsyth. Franklin Gaston. Gates............................................... G raham ........................................... Granville.......................................... Greene Guilford Halifax.. Harnett. Haywood.......................................... Henderson...................................... H ertford........................................... Hoke................................................ Hyde................................................ Iredell... Jackson Johnston.......................................... Jones... Lee Lenoir.. Lincoln. McDowell......................................... Macon.. Madison........................................... M artin.. Mecklenburg................................... Mitchell............................................ M ontgomery................................... M oore.............................................. Nash.... New Hanover.................................. Northampton.................................. O nslow ............................................ Orange Pamlico Pasquotank..................................... Pender. Perquimans.................................... Person............................................. 76,462 4,271 1029 298 651 694 454 1,333 497 846 2,799 7,425 2,501 5,389 2,156 284 2,150 617 4,752 2,461 609 443 257 2,696 1,488 3,128 10,838 757 1,220 4,608 1,372 1,360 9,300 1,402 12,436 1,544 6,293 284 212 1,403 524 17,133 1,405 2,847 1,648 3,312 579 975 128 4,650 1011 4,667 294 1,695 1,677 2,153 1038 933 512 656 38,120 379 705 3,071 2,819 6,569 595 5,334 5,205 397 1044 1,289 350 1052 80,648 4,502 1066 300 671 702 480 1,460 529 898 3,083 7,870 2,594 5,811 2,199 311 2,296 650 4,938 2,684 641 464 275 2,846 1,547 3,387 11,743 816 1,279 4,854 1,463 1,449 9,973 1,477 12,979 1,674 6,598 286 215 1,517 533 17,816 1,420 3,009 1,748 3,565 595 1085 146 4,964 1074 5,088 302 1,786 1,772 2,361 1,085 976 540 697 39,927 392 718 3,274 3,009 6,936 610 6,016 5,800 428 1079 1,425 366 1100 83,372 4,659 1,072 307 682 727 495 1,501 562 935 3,227 8,021 2,650 5,947 2,246 326 2,402 680 5,012 2,782 659 465 282 2,932 1,612 3,518 12,673 844 1,292 5,015 1,497 1,489 10,205 1,522 13,239 1,714 6,769 300 214 1,585 556 18,269 1,524 3,138 1,782 3,676 630 1,165 149 5,118 1,084 5,278 316 1,832 1,831 2,460 1,116 995 559 719 40,396 407 731 3,348 3,112 7,058 628 6,758 5,976 438 1,107 1,499 366 1,129 28,499 30,192 28,552 27,459 25,706 27,492 25,203 29,040 26,591 26,086 29,641 33,293 28,191 34,731 27,271 30,925 33,975 26,396 31,068 41,129 23,294 30,351 25,892 27,610 27,563 32,470 35,318 32,284 36,022 29,829 34,518 26,173 37,312 26,479 36,576 27,841 31,808 24,785 26,557 25,923 25,877 37,619 25,422 27,037 29,330 33,588 24,957 23,672 24,498 31,765 27,757 30,990 29,414 29,884 29,400 30,303 23,968 28,881 25,483 27,324 45,719 24,236 25,853 37,132 30,781 35,120 28,661 33,122 42,636 31,745 26,381 26,913 28,928 28,379 29,744 31,083 29,288 27,338 26,634 27,562 26,933 31,840 27,178 27,790 30,919 34,696 29,207 35,708 27,709 32,968 36,255 27,972 31,750 43,713 24,192 31,506 27,075 28,950 28,646 35,075 38,037 34,167 37,598 31,107 36,109 27,660 38,986 28,218 37,301 29,262 32,605 24,347 27,135 26,969 25,766 38,320 25,737 27,710 30,839 35,429 25,552 25,647 28,048 32,776 29,455 32,423 30,129 30,878 31,270 32,418 24,885 29,852 26,657 29,517 46,127 24,981 26,153 38,655 32,295 36,493 29,487 36,771 46,501 34,426 26,425 28,665 29,383 29,489 30,431 31,501 29,292 27,884 27,072 28,293 27,633 32,399 28,889 28,859 30,996 34,969 29,684 35,280 28,127 33,881 37,796 29,314 31,823 43,894 24,804 31,635 27,360 29,609 29,688 36,121 40,791 34,939 37,934 31,742 36,438 28,088 38,795 29,052 37,278 29,040 32,727 25,525 26,794 27,761 26,931 38,534 27,658 28,015 31,336 35,901 26,985 26,686 28,251 32,888 29,477 32,316 31,750 30,983 32,309 32,912 25,410 30,066 27,460 30,617 45,264 25,919 26,386 38,919 33,067 36,629 30,694 39,932 47,063 35,257 26,701 29,253 28,664 30,098 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Personal income Rank in state Area 2008 45 44 22 6 25 34 29 21 23 52 28 2 55 58 40 61 76 83 71 80 31 66 67 43 20 55 18 73 22 12 60 35 3 98 38 82 56 54 16 5 21 11 37 15 74 9 64 13 65 29 94 89 77 86 10 79 75 42 17 84 91 72 27 57 32 36 44 33 26 95 49 81 47 2 93 92 8 25 14 45 7 1 19 90 62 68 48 Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 Pitt.......................................... Polk........................................ Randolph.............................. Richmond.............................. Robeson ............................... Rockingham......................... Rowan................................... Rutherford............................. Sampson............................... Scotland... Stanly....... Stokes..... S urry........ Swain....... Transylvania......................... Tyrrell U nion.................................... Vance.................................... Wake W arren.................................. Washington.......................... Watauga................................ Wayne................................... W ilkes................................... W ilson................................... Yadkin................................... Yancey................................... 4,558 731 3,745 1,128 2,885 2,555 3,974 1,622 1,643 909 1,667 1,249 2,014 331 929 98 5,618 1,148 32,581 428 347 1,338 3,215 2,043 2,324 1041 417 4,887 761 3,945 1,170 3,057 2,660 4,158 1,703 1,734 927 1,755 1,304 2,108 345 995 102 6,208 1,213 35,135 454 368 1,412 3,416 2,082 2,434 1092 430 5,126 772 4,019 1,241 3,209 2,750 4,279 1,755 1,812 981 1,781 1,345 2,157 358 1018 104 6,512 1,263 36,190 478 385 1,456 3,557 2,105 2,539 1,106 443 30,724 38,363 27,092 24,614 22,805 27,792 29,346 25,735 26,251 25,008 28,462 27,251 27,980 24,618 31,291 23,856 32,626 26,661 41,089 21,962 26,619 30,258 28,525 30,738 30,685 27,799 22,943 32,121 39,740 28,318 25,474 23,924 28,904 30,273 26,981 27,484 25,450 29,660 28,326 29,223 25,876 33,226 24,589 33,650 28,239 42,242 23,277 28,599 31,669 30,150 31,234 31,771 29,141 23,358 32,874 40,129 28,510 26,960 24,935 29,850 30,620 27,667 28,559 26,901 29,836 29,155 29,802 26,799 33,771 25,288 33,673 29,373 41,691 24,457 29,735 32,049 31,364 31,552 32,683 29,327 23,887 N orth D akota............. Metropolitan p o rtio n ......... N onm etropolitan portion.. Adams................................... Barnes.................................. Benson.................................. B illings.................................. Bottineau............................... Bowman................................ B urke.................................... Burleigh................................. Cass...................................... Cavalier................................. Dickey................................... Divide.................................... D unn..................................... Eddy Emmons................................ Foster.................................... Golden Valley....................... Grand Forks......................... Grant..................................... G riggs................................... Hettinger............................... K idder................................... LaMoure................................ Logan.................................... McH enry............................... McIntosh............................... McKenzie.............................. McLean................................. Mercer................................... M orton.................................. Mountrail............................... Nelson................................... Oliver..................................... Pembina................................ Pierce.................................... Ramsey................................. Ransom ................................ Renville................................. Richland................................ R olette.................................. Sargent................................. Sheridan.............................. Sioux..................................... Slope Stark ..................................... Steele.................................... Stuisman.............................. Towner.................................. Traill....................................... Walsh.................................... Ward W ells..................................... W illiam s................................ 21,386 10,791 23,408 25,576 12,215 33,585 36,678 39,874 35,555 31,791 33,364 31,222 21,660 36,203 30,544 36,848 33,128 36,677 38,094 31,182 32,133 33,208 27,909 25,871 23,143 28,109 23,974 31,357 30,218 29,204 33,375 26,812 33,453 29,385 25,415 27,540 32,092 33,573 38,489 29,811 27,130 28,525 37,192 37,663 25,479 31,082 31,960 29,681 30,271 22,657 38,496 23,136 18,180 26,233 33,750 28,227 33,850 29,372 31,327 30,423 35,440 29,193 37,205 37,536 35,883 37,315 35,888 26,069 35,850 39,590 42,497 42,258 38,342 39,810 45,269 35,768 37,805 28,793 31,579 36,777 35,960 26,809 34,006 37,006 36,934 38,909 28,897 39,546 39,403 32,978 33,164 35,078 38,420 40,142 32,037 31,042 36,420 41,691 40,233 29,970 34,933 32,866 44,138 32,770 24,768 40,877 32,614 20,141 36,923 35,560 41,821 37,325 39,723 35,678 33,104 37,743 40,323 41,415 39,209 40,502 39,911 43,095 31,907 29,271 49,588 38,794 55,162 39,266 42,127 67,185 43,767 54,120 29,558 33,455 42,919 42,120 22,336 35,397 37,088 44,303 35,060 27,732 44,788 32,192 39,922 37,876 36,862 42,466 40,914 33,122 34,590 45,290 36,856 45,195 35,271 40,413 35,436 63,353 37,773 27,607 51,001 37,593 19,856 18,799 37,497 53,801 40,301 51,104 39,353 37,061 42,685 54,691 45,801 O hio.............................. Metropolitan p o rtio n ......... N onm etropolitan portion. Adams................................... Allen...................................... Ashland................................. Ashtabula.............................. 390,645 405,236 413,732 33,991 35,174 35,889 329,847 60,798 661 3,050 1,421 2,749 341,699 63,537 699 3,161 1,489 2,860 348,571 65,161 720 3,182 1,523 2,916 35,566 27,408 23,434 29,014 26,162 27,032 36,733 28,637 24,895 30,131 27,160 28,202 37,436 29,391 25,542 30,351 27,696 28,881 10,595 77 340 149 27 198 108 63 2,775 5,150 125 173 68 92 64 84 99 40 2,105 75 70 82 64 139 57 136 79 176 280 307 761 173 93 64 292 106 349 182 70 507 308 159 31 76 18 746 54 702 70 251 340 1,988 126 717 11,516 11,892 86 388 179 28 252 125 78 2,959 5,482 174 192 76 95 76 129 124 44 2,247 90 88 93 67 162 77 172 90 194 321 320 828 201 117 71 305 123 392 189 100 541 338 167 43 83 24 797 77 763 91 288 364 2,117 170 810 13,360 91 463 219 23 313 118 99 3,080 5,907 253 230 108 98 79 148 142 37 2,361 88 104 82 63 178 62 207 100 207 355 322 867 227 144 61 337 144 456 201 140 618 378 204 47 82 13 844 97 820 114 311 404 2,395 227 907 2008 28 6 70 85 97 50 46 78 69 87 51 63 52 88 23 96 24 58 4 99 53 34 41 39 30 59 100 26 16 46 48 9 29 3 28 20 1 15 5 47 43 17 21 51 39 34 14 41 49 13 45 25 30 36 19 22 44 42 11 37 12 40 23 38 2 31 50 8 32 52 53 33 6 24 7 27 35 18 4 10 81 50 71 62 50 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income May 2010 Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-200&—Continues Personal income Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars Area Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 Athens .................................. Auglaize................................ Belmont................................ B row n................................... Butler.................................... Carroll................................... Champaign.......................... C la rk..................................... Clermont............................... C linton.................................. Columbiana......................... Coshocton........................... Crawford............................... Cuyahoga............................ Darke.................................... Defiance............................... Delaware.............................. Erie Fairfield................................. Fayette.................................. Franklin................................. Fulton.................................... Gallia Geauga................................. Greene Guernsey.............................. Hamilton............................... Hancock................................ Hardin................................... Harrison................................ Henry.................................... Highland............................... Hocking................................. H olm es................................. Huron.................................... Jackson................................. Jefferson............................... Knox Lake...................................... Lawrence.............................. Licking.................................. Logan.................................... Lorain.................................... Lucas.................................... Madison................................ Mahoning.............................. M arion.................................. Medina.................................. Meigs.................................... M ercer.................................. Miami.................................... M onroe................................. Montgomery........................ M organ................................. Morrow.................................. Muskingum.......................... Noble.................................... O ttaw a.................................. Paulding................................ P erry..................................... Pickaway............................... Pike....................................... Portage................................. Preble................................... Putnam................................. Richland................................ R oss..................................... Sandusky.............................. Scioto.................................... Seneca................................. Shelby................................... Stark ..................................... S um m it................................. Trumbull................................ Tuscarawas.......................... Union.................................... Van W ert............................... V in to n ................................... Warren.................................. Washington.......................... Wayne................................... W illiam s................................ W ood.................................... Wyandot................................ 1,434 1,497 1,833 1,201 12,040 736 1,112 4,282 6,673 1,335 2,818 990 1,184 51,948 1,544 1,189 6,913 2,693 4,439 838 42,631 1,386 892 4,399 5,364 1007 35,914 2,525 759 390 897 1,154 723 979 1,635 795 1,921 1,657 8,345 1,554 5,181 1,379 9,342 14,707 1,293 7,585 1,821 6,076 499 1,228 3,313 354 18,607 311 894 2,325 265 1,430 547 784 1,481 663 5,006 1,189 1063 3,553 1,963 1,750 1,891 1,594 1,557 11,783 19,989 6,380 2,496 1,475 883 270 7,382 1,782 3,235 1,101 4,076 637 1,508 1,600 1,922 1,262 12,650 756 1,158 4,406 6,870 1,405 2,949 1014 1,216 53,209 1,603 1,228 8,006 2,770 4,580 897 43,691 1,426 917 4,531 5,616 1048 36,835 2,637 800 404 921 1,199 762 995 1,681 830 2,017 1,726 8,744 1,631 5,461 1,450 9,760 15,082 1,349 7,835 1,941 6,401 509 1,328 3,452 375 19,006 321 949 2,430 274 1,488 567 821 1,568 706 5,225 1,234 1,104 3,645 2,063 1,840 2,033 1,645 1,632 12,297 20,780 6,456 2,616 1,600 909 286 7,858 1,884 3,338 1,136 4,286 673 1,577 1,623 2,026 1,296 12,959 766 1,187 4,518 7,004 1,448 3,029 1029 1,245 53,947 1,654 1,241 8,493 2,840 4,672 913 44,477 1,444 910 4,540 5,692 1,081 37,484 2,683 836 423 930 1,217 788 999 1,725 865 2,140 1,758 8,884 1,716 5,667 1,504 10,090 15,267 1,376 7,907 2,005 6,548 537 1,379 3,507 405 19,267 336 970 2,517 286 1,502 586 856 1,631 730 5,366 1,270 1,117 3,717 2,146 1,853 2,107 1,650 1,647 12,627 21,157 6,514 2,677 1,666 925 297 8,122 1,972 3,414 1,177 4,348 687 22,715 32,186 26,702 27,471 34,021 25,490 28,138 30,398 34,780 31,164 25,774 27,122 26,621 39,799 29,492 30,819 44,410 34,730 31,823 29,695 38,371 32,623 28,929 45,012 34,013 24,901 42,369 34,222 24,027 25,201 30,656 27,124 25,176 23,658 27,244 23,898 27,739 28,380 35,741 24,752 33,348 29,856 30,971 31,623 31,324 31,130 27,810 36,115 21,717 30,077 32,818 24,709 34,389 21,300 26,067 27,245 18,454 34,690 28,356 22,485 27,738 23,705 32,317 28,433 30,731 28,107 26,058 28,693 24,826 28,019 32,097 31,084 36,669 29,652 27,383 31,605 30,369 20,215 37,040 28,887 28,429 28,687 32,645 28,268 23,987 34,401 28,103 28,808 35,323 26,276 29,257 31,432 35,420 32,691 27,105 27,966 27,533 41,133 30,704 31,909 49,822 35,807 32,424 31,724 38,928 33,582 29,700 46,129 35,357 25,939 43,035 35,472 25,166 26,108 31,814 28,076 26,280 24,069 27,999 24,922 29,431 29,273 37,289 25,987 34,844 31,163 32,213 32,319 32,356 32,542 29,631 37,679 22,225 32,551 34,192 26,379 35,319 22,092 27,397 28,529 19,133 36,122 29,538 23,476 28,898 25,299 33,511 29,623 31,946 28,922 27,165 30,290 26,604 29,001 33,525 32,375 38,154 30,275 28,647 33,520 31,452 21,378 38,509 30,653 29,343 29,637 34,278 29,917 24,957 34,710 29,766 29,509 35,921 26,702 29,885 32,314 35,844 33,552 28,021 28,658 28,467 42,051 31,809 32,224 51,501 36,717 32,834 32,379 39,165 34,023 29,463 45,939 35,720 26,901 43,918 36,081 26,290 27,554 32,259 28,697 27,203 24,090 28,719 25,910 31,355 29,610 37,669 27,367 35,952 32,308 33,123 32,837 32,885 33,138 30,552 38,099 23,613 33,838 34,678 28,533 36,020 23,436 28,046 29,618 20,048 36,646 30,751 24,159 29,891 26,163 34,259 30,492 32,411 29,719 28,195 30,749 27,561 29,171 33,704 33,221 38,940 30,850 29,338 34,455 32,177 22,505 39,156 32,225 29,909 30,875 34,783 30,674 35,969 O klahom a................... 118,747 123,889 131,070 33,222 34,298 M etropolitan p o rtio n ......... 83,112 86,095 90,827 36,620 37,399 39,037 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n . A d a ir..................................... Alfalfa.................................... Atoka .................................... Beaver.................................. 35,635 460 131 297 147 37,795 470 130 317 156 40,243 490 147 330 172 27,312 21,034 23,424 20,784 27,751 28,847 21,420 23,247 21,934 29,215 30,549 22,402 26,492 22,663 32,894 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Personal income Rank in state Area 2008 82 19 54 58 15 77 53 35 16 26 70 65 67 4 41 39 1 10 32 34 5 23 59 2 17 76 3 12 78 73 37 64 75 84 63 80 42 57 9 74 14 36 29 31 30 28 48 8 85 24 20 66 13 86 69 56 88 11 45 83 52 79 22 49 33 55 68 46 72 61 25 27 7 44 60 21 40 87 6 38 51 43 18 47 77 61 76 26 Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 Beckham.......................................... Blaine............................................... Bryan Caddo Canadian......................................... Carter Cherokee Choctaw........................................... C im arron......................................... Cleveland........................................ Coal.................................................. Comanche....................................... Cotton C raig . Creek Custer Delaware.......................................... Dewey.............................................. E llis... G arfield............................................ G arvin.............................................. Grady Grant. Greer. Harmon............................................ Harper.............................................. Haskell............................................. Hughes............................................. Jackson............................................ Jefferson.......................................... Johnston.......................................... Kay................................................... Kingfisher........................................ Kiowa Latimer Le Flore............................................ Lincoln.............................................. Logan Love.. McClain............................................ McC urtain....................................... M cIntosh.......................................... Major. M arshall........................................... Mayes Murray.............................................. Muskogee....................................... Noble................................................ Nowata............................................. Okfuskee.......................................... Oklahoma........................................ Okmulgee........................................ O sage.............................................. Ottawa.............................................. Pawnee............................................ Payne............................................... Pittsburg....................•...................... Pontotoc........................................... Pottawatomie................................... Pushmataha.................................... Roger Mills...................................... Rogers............................................. Seminole.......................................... Sequoyah........................................ Stephens.......................................... Texas. Tillm an............................................. Tulsa.. Wagoner........................................... Washington..................................... W ashita............................................ W oods.............................................. Woodward....................................... 566 268 1029 631 3,312 1,461 1062 358 70 7,778 118 3,547 190 396 1,876 731 1057 126 116 1,940 793 1,308 145 144 73 115 304 296 757 147 235 1,441 480 242 284 1,182 838 1,240 263 1007 800 471 217 355 993 356 1,842 300 240 240 27,515 986 1,360 870 445 2,003 1,204 1031 1,894 261 95 2,535 614 993 1,315 586 182 25,321 1,869 1,792 280 229 595 639 263 1112 673 3,585 1,544 1,154 370 76 8,194 129 3,752 205 421 2,017 773 1,127 128 118 2,044 881 1,383 144 146 75 108 329 303 781 149 251 1,524 505 251 305 1,239 893 1,297 286 1128 820 503 216 381 1076 382 1,934 316 258 252 27,795 1041 1,442 922 473 2,169 1,305 1086 1,991 279 109 2,737 642 1033 1,378 579 192 26,038 2,049 1,949 297 228 642 695 297 1,163 728 3,881 1,645 1,212 385 89 8,567 130 3,959 232 430 2,102 848 1,173 149 128 2,186 893 1,456 175 166 85 118 349 318 811 159 266 1,629 550 296 336 1,297 939 1,425 313 1,229 853 535 233 405 1,120 413 2,017 346 270 263 29,454 1,088 1,523 979 488 2,306 1,404 1,154 2,095 297 114 2,878 684 1,080 1,464 623 209 27,276 2,184 2,058 335 272 702 29,316 21,436 26,415 21,281 32,983 31,090 23,581 23,719 26,241 33,469 21,037 31,590 29,689 26,394 27,504 28,439 26,498 28,914 30,692 33,942 29,425 26,131 32,195 25,104 24,914 34,494 25,212 21,735 28,845 23,386 22,559 31,484 34,036 25,369 27,120 24,015 26,015 34,679 29,066 32,564 23,898 24,184 30,167 24,346 25,228 28,073 26,157 27,197 22,517 21,420 39,704 25,191 30,259 26,544 26,968 25,113 27,205 28,860 27,784 22,622 29,342 31,109 25,461 24,392 30,760 29,144 22,053 43,864 28,722 36,534 24,438 27,247 31,280 30,755 20,887 28,179 23,636 34,485 32,657 25,610 24,662 28,629 34,736 22,731 32,764 32,139 27,816 29,301 29,877 27,823 29,195 30,822 35,597 32,556 27,424 32,179 25,139 26,399 32,637 27,222 22,182 30,350 23,889 23,991 33,171 35,377 26,953 29,222 24,970 27,722 34,744 31,561 35,354 24,493 25,605 30,088 25,622 27,047 30,246 27,354 28,811 24,104 22,558 39,734 26,505 31,859 28,618 28,669 27,687 29,380 29,834 28,786 24,033 33,152 32,898 26,720 25,213 31,929 28,740 23,705 44,479 30,478 39,061 25,525 26,965 32,759 32,357 23,436 28,735 24,826 36,355 34,471 26,542 25,855 34,599 35,613 22,973 35,272 37,090 28,504 30,241 32,272 28,980 33,681 33,044 37,652 32,905 28,494 39,400 28,445 30,106 34,900 28,441 23,367 32,029 25,440 25,470 35,503 38,549 32,005 31,773 26,033 29,274 37,099 34,397 37,816 25,462 27,232 32,613 27,085 27,932 32,262 28,513 31,497 25,142 23,662 41,713 27,837 33,701 30,933 29,904 29,290 31,359 31,220 30,166 25,411 33,726 34,076 28,383 26,280 33,759 30,287 26,367 46,043 31,633 40,704 28,624 32,512 35,607 36,365 O re go n ................................... 127,448 133,405 137,570 34,656 35,737 M etropolitan p o rtio n .................... 104,071 109,050 112,292 36,539 37,612 38,104 N onm etropolitan p o rtio n ............ Baker................................................ Benton.............................................. Clackamas...................................... Clatsop............................................. Columbia.......................................... Coos.. Crook Curry. Deschutes....................................... Douglas............................................ Gilliam.............................................. Grant. Harney............................................. Hood R iver...................................... Jackson............................................ 23,377 410 2,864 15,876 1,146 1,494 1,810 590 665 5,284 3,048 44 200 182 639 6,619 24,355 427 3,013 16,671 1,198 1,572 1,890 602 692 5,566 3,139 54 204 184 675 6,825 25,277 444 3,087 17,080 1,250 1,633 1,953 620 714 5,635 3,221 66 206 186 717 6,911 28,188 25,645 35,732 42,805 31,160 30,971 28,462 26,233 30,478 35,544 29,394 25,895 28,540 26,731 30,285 33,743 29,217 26,669 36,937 44,384 32,293 32,139 29,930 26,429 32,196 36,282 30,273 32,636 29,687 27,242 31,865 34,409 30,237 27,659 37,755 44,803 33,695 33,103 31,022 27,068 33,645 35,728 31,115 38,703 29,957 27,567 33,374 34,506 2008 29 73 48 71 10 17 60 65 16 11 75 14 9 51 41 30 47 23 24 7 25 52 4 53 43 15 54 74 32 68 66 13 5 33 34 64 46 8 18 6 67 58 27 59 56 31 50 36 70 72 2 57 22 39 44 45 37 38 42 69 21 19 55 63 20 40 62 1 35 3 49 28 12 31 6 2 9 15 21 34 10 7 20 5 24 32 13 8 May 2010 Survey of C urrent 51 B u s in e s s Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars Area Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 Jefferson.......................................... Josephine........................................ Klam ath........................................... Lake................................................. L a n e ................................................ Lincoln.. Linn....... Malheur M arion.. M orrow . Multnomah...................................... Polk...... Sherman.......................................... Tillamook......................................... Umatilla Union.... Wallowa Wasco... Washington..................................... Wheeler Yamhill............................................. 519 2,242 1,822 204 11,005 1,438 3,119 669 9,459 294 27,077 2,055 48 756 1,877 701 203 715 19,365 36 2,971 535 2,317 1,883 208 11,353 1,495 3,243 684 9,811 327 28,384 2,175 68 791 2,006 741 210 748 20,561 35 3,120 553 2,377 1,939 217 11,680 1,545 3,377 714 10,215 338 29,372 2,289 75 811 2,132 773 221 793 21,186 35 3,203 26,011 27,802 27,570 28,309 32,437 31,517 28,119 21,669 30,924 25,752 39,661 28,228 28,601 30,293 25,784 28,649 29,931 30,387 37,969 25,582 31,815 26,048 28,712 28,289 28,881 32,924 32,530 28,676 22,084 31,632 28,897 40,720 29,033 40,067 31,625 27,532 29,557 30,750 31,518 39,660 25,108 32,440 27,165 29,287 29,138 30,160 33,522 33,485 29,273 23,150 32,565 29,833 41,222 29,772 45,263 32,554 29,287 30,814 32,344 33,302 40,188 25,431 32,700 39,762 Pennsylvania........................ 462,402 485,103 499,669 37,078 38,738 M etropolitan p o r tio n ................... 406,965 426,673 439,221 38,790 40,479 41,496 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... A dam s............................................. Allegheny......................................... Armstrong........................................ Beaver............................................. Bedford............................................ Berks............................................... B la ir................................................. Bradford........................................... Bucks............................................... Butler............................................... Cambria........................................... Cameron.......................................... Carbon............................................. Centre.............................................. Chester............................................ Clarion............................................. Clearfield......................................... Clinton............................................. Columbia......................................... Crawford.......................................... Cumberland.................................... Dauphin........................................... Delaware......................................... E lk .................................................... E rie.................................................. Fayette............................................. Forest.............................................. Franklin............................................ F ulton.............................................. G reene............................................ Huntingdon..................................... Indiana............................................. Jefferson.......................................... Juniata............................................. Lackawanna................................... Lancaster........................................ Lawrence......................................... Lebanon .......................................... Lehigh.............................................. Luzerne ........................................... Lycoming......................................... McKean ........................................... M ercer............................................. M ifflin............................................... M onroe............................................ M ontgomery................................... Montour........................................... Northampton.................................. Northumberland............................ Perry................................................ Philadelphia.................................... Pike.................................................. Potter............................................... S chuylkill........................................ S nyder............................................. Somerset......................................... Sullivan............................................ Susquehanna................................. T io g a ............................................... Union............................................... Venango.......................................... Warren............................................. Washington..................................... Wayne.............................................. Westmoreland................................ Wyoming......................................... York.................................................. 55,437 3,007 53,230 2,093 5,517 1,311 13,670 3,672 1,676 30,317 6,597 4,083 150 1,804 4,406 26,833 1,118 2,196 978 1,814 2,350 8,519 9,415 25,680 993 8,189 3,939 140 4,385 446 986 1,106 2,557 1,243 653 6,946 16,932 2,597 4,212 12,391 10,054 3,369 1,252 3,411 1,187 4,713 46,129 645 9,994 2,565 1,331 47,551 1,669 527 4,037 1,101 2,025 162 1,172 991 1,176 1,560 1,177 7,595 1,441 12,763 796 13,859 58,430 3,149 55,126 2,161 5,762 1,395 14,306 3,872 1,758 31,468 7,186 4,310 157 1,909 4,675 28,181 1,164 2,300 1034 1,921 2,472 9,024 9,831 26,387 1044 8,689 4,129 143 4,697 450 1044 1,173 2,688 1,307 674 7,320 17,874 2,770 4,477 13,174 10,643 3,529 1,298 3,579 1,244 4,970 48,252 683 10,589 2,733 1,404 50,053 1,802 509 4,284 1,145 2,145 173 1,234 1034 1,241 1,614 1,256 7,966 1,527 13,452 844 14,700 60,448 3,237 56,719 2,273 5,968 1,448 14,675 3,993 1,808 31,791 7,490 4,511 157 1,981 4,852 28,687 1,218 2,385 1,081 1,980 2,587 9,265 10,150 26,986 1,075 9,031 4,273 157 4,831 455 1,119 1,211 2,804 1,354 698 7,550 18,303 2,835 4,640 13,493 11,023 3,657 1,341 3,654 1,283 5,137 49,044 696 10,824 2,852 1,459 52,549 1,877 506 4,456 1,174 2,236 176 1,263 1,061 1,279 1,701 1,277 8,433 1,572 14,016 872 15,179 28,002 29,933 43,515 30,293 31,723 26,385 34,237 29,138 27,275 48,959 36,311 27,997 27,806 29,053 30,588 55,878 27,854 26,565 26,271 28,044 26,411 37,696 36,956 46,382 30,246 29,255 27,268 19,995 31,324 30,276 24,931 24,359 29,138 27,575 28,277 33,252 34,249 28,457 33,271 37,102 32,305 28,747 28,473 29,019 25,838 28,935 59,678 36,208 34,348 28,132 29,676 31,278 29,163 30,171 27,470 28,846 25,912 25,889 28,305 24,340 26,971 28,307 28,611 36,970 27,921 35,096 28,549 33,398 29,480 31,104 45,188 31,402 33,302 28,089 35,545 30,736 28,655 50,645 39,378 29,710 29,371 30,216 32,444 57,800 29,191 27,745 27,864 29,655 27,779 39,622 38,273 47,542 31,995 31,054 28,664 20,676 33,073 30,126 26,539 25,763 30,740 28,995 29,189 34,967 35,794 30,470 34,926 39,012 34,120 30,208 29,741 30,559 27,029 30,183 62,210 38,458 35,917 29,983 31,088 32,713 30,759 29,729 29,098 29,845 27,598 27,759 30,041 25,415 28,463 29,464 30,620 38,715 29,466 37,045 30,221 34,868 30,504 31,750 46,559 33,207 34,617 29,071 36,256 31,709 29,536 50,983 40,780 31,221 29,857 31,136 33,336 58,156 30,651 28,888 29,216 30,432 29,222 40,227 39,308 48,514 33,300 32,294 29,824 23,100 33,595 30,473 28,422 26,596 32,021 30,145 30,207 36,075 36,330 31,303 35,885 39,549 35,316 31,344 30,865 31,321 27,910 31,032 63,002 39,308 36,448 31,268 32,251 34,115 31,294 29,990 30,278 30,523 28,928 28,658 30,876 26,002 29,321 31,214 31,325 40,790 30,657 38,650 31,254 35,651 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Personal income Rank in state Area 2008 33 27 30 23 11 12 29 36 17 25 3 26 1 18 27 22 19 14 4 35 16 29 5 25 20 59 15 30 55 3 7 38 53 40 23 2 45 61 58 48 57 8 10 4 24 26 54 67 22 47 63 65 28 51 50 16 14 34 17 9 19 31 43 33 64 41 1 10 13 36 27 21 35 52 49 46 60 62 42 66 56 39 32 6 44 12 37 18 Per capita personal income ’ Millions of dollars Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 40.657 42.356 42.356 2,678 7,170 4,073 22,633 5,802 43.469 43.469 2,714 7,341 4,134 23,387 5,893 38.349 38.349 50,441 40,656 47,462 34,619 43,018 40.147 40.147 53,580 42,514 50,093 36,023 45,763 41.261 41.261 54,418 43,530 51,224 37,274 46,455 South C a ro lin a ..................... 134,204 141,244 146,335 M etropolitan n .................... 114,757 104,900 p o rtio 110,724 Nonm etropolitan p o rtio n ............ 29,304 30,520 31,578 Abbeville.... 626 634 660 Aiken 4,737 4,947 5,079 Allendale... 240 236 231 5,534 Anderson... 5,090 5,314 B am berg... 359 368 390 507 Barnwell.... 517 543 Beaufort.... 6,324 6,724 6,663 4,567 5,164 Berkeley..., 4,905 479 Calhoun.... 489 501 Charleston 12,855 13,516 13,845 1,321 Cherokee., 1,381 1,420 Chester 912 876 885 Chesterfield 1,104 1010 1058 Clarendon 756 832 786 Colleton . 992 1037 1074 Darlington........................................ 2,017 1,910 1,952 737 Dillon................................................ 696 701 Dorchester...................................... 3,323 3,681 3,933 Edgefield.......................................... 683 715 758 Fairfield............................................ 600 615 640 4,137 Florence........................................... 4,349 4,511 Georgetown.................................... 2,084 2,165 2,230 Greenville......................................... 14,700 15,724 16,336 1,831 Greenwood..................................... 1,909 2,006 Hampton.......................................... 514 489 529 H orry................................................ 7,604 7,098 7,455 Jasper 578 596 613 Kershaw........................................... 1,817 1,886 1,973 Lancaster......................................... 1,637 1,713 1,753 Laurens 1,776 1,899 1,861 444 Lee 484 455 Lexington.......................................... 8,298 8,702 8,981 McCormick...................................... 227 252 242 M arion.............................................. 771 796 829 Marlboro........................................... 624 627 668 Newberry.......................................... 1024 968 1079 O conee............................................ 2,101 2,307 2,219 Orangeburg..................................... 2,357 2,466 2,578 Pickens............................................. 2,976 3,118 3,216 Richland........................................... 12,103 12,679 13,194 Saluda.............................................. 537 592 561 Spartanburg.................................... 7,886 8,619 8,305 S um ter............................................. 3,057 2,825 2,946 Union................................................ 722 771 740 W illiamsburg................................... 763 846 793 York.................................................. 6,502 7,306 7,003 30,927 31,860 27,992 24,588 31,407 22,748 28,718 22,999 22,054 43,856 28,902 32,310 37,651 24,532 26,815 23,687 23,077 25,495 28,551 22,638 28,117 27,109 25,392 31,558 34,831 35,121 26,853 23,400 29,484 26,559 31,738 22,824 25,565 21,953 34,719 22,523 22,583 21,586 25,740 30,042 26,231 25,888 34,413 28,389 29,127 27,091 25,728 21,655 32,579 31,925 32,868 28,915 25,025 32,315 22,215 29,496 23,913 22,493 45,031 30,009 33,076 39,234 25,495 27,106 24,673 24,034 26,484 29,236 22,812 29,678 28,132 26,404 32,882 35,876 36,464 27,895 24,379 29,711 26,846 32,259 23,300 26,735 22,618 35,669 23,985 23,355 21,692 26,887 31,386 27,209 26,856 35,204 29,571 30,012 28,271 26,725 22,493 33,249 32,495 33,371 29,667 26,135 32,855 22,636 30,252 25,698 23,713 44,191 30,449 34,205 39,581 26,002 27,856 25,639 25,134 27,291 30,172 23,957 30,765 29,638 27,263 33,822 36,707 36,905 29,036 25,198 29,383 26,965 33,264 23,102 27,157 24,180 35,960 24,908 24,396 23,284 28,121 32,456 28,452 27,367 36,006 31,220 30,506 29,302 27,874 24,246 33,203 32 11 46 17 34 43 1 16 7 2 33 26 35 37 28 18 42 14 19 29 8 4 3 22 36 20 31 9 45 30 41 6 38 39 44 24 12 23 27 5 13 15 21 25 40 10 South Dakota........................ M etropolitan p o rtio n .................... N onm etropolitan p o rtio n ............ A urora.............................................. Beadle.............................................. Bennett............................................. Bon Homme.................................... Brookings........................................ Brown............................................... Brule................................................. Buffalo.............................................. Butte................................................. Campbell.......................................... Charles M ix..................................... Clark................................................. Clay.................................................. Codington........................................ C orson............................................. C u ster.............................................. Davison............................................ Day Deuel................................................ Dewey.............................................. Douglas............................................ Edmunds.......................................... Fall River.......................................... F aulk................................................ G rant................................................ Gregory............................................ Haakon............................................. Hamlin.............................................. Hand Hanson............................................. Harding............................................ Hughes............................................. 33,718 37,148 30,912 27,738 36,002 25,255 27,921 30,937 40,881 27,856 12,723 30,086 23,643 27,568 26,266 33,553 33,806 20,381 31,700 37,015 26,068 30,402 22,279 31,680 32,763 29,966 23,208 32,050 30,919 40,799 27,253 27,127 32,196 31,441 37,032 36,428 38,652 34,572 34,699 40,692 26,409 30,077 34,138 43,687 33,902 16,375 30,425 40,728 31,589 34,760 35,322 36,368 24,358 32,775 40,073 30,947 37,324 24,670 36,520 43,967 30,743 38,061 36,433 37,256 46,288 32,422 41,026 36,137 34,949 38,795 38,644 39,587 37,840 40,484 44,679 33,728 32,391 35,672 47,631 39,991 12,558 30,334 46,912 34,665 41,309 38,884 37,807 29,773 33,982 41,927 34,502 40,359 27,470 39,032 52,227 32,360 58,692 37,638 42,350 58,419 35,518 52,331 40,463 41,423 41,679 26 15 54 55 43 11 29 66 59 12 50 24 32 37 60 53 20 51 28 61 31 9 56 3 38 19 4 45 8 27 23 21 Rhode Is la n d ........................ M etropolitan p o rtio n .................... Bristol............................................... Kent.................................................. Newport............................................ Providence...................................... Washington..................................... 40.657 2,529 6,888 3,957 21,817 5,467 26,587 13,181 13,406 80 558 86 199 903 1,427 142 27 278 34 249 93 447 883 83 250 705 149 130 135 98 130 218 53 231 127 76 150 89 115 37 622 29,034 14,013 15,021 99 641 90 211 1008 1,532 175 34 288 57 283 122 475 957 102 258 760 175 157 148 111 174 222 87 261 151 84 182 134 130 41 657 31,091 14,662 16,428 117 712 114 227 1065 1,668 208 27 291 64 309 144 529 991 123 269 792 191 171 162 116 207 232 134 268 170 104 201 171 145 47 700 2008 1 4 2 5 3 52 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income May 2010 Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Area Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars 2006 Hutchinson.. Hyde........... Jackson....... Jerauld........ Jones.......... Kingsbury... Lake............ Lawrence.... Lincoln........ Lyman......... M cC ook...... McPherson. Marshall...... Meade......... Mellette....... Miner........... Minnehaha.. Moody......... Pennington.. Perkins.... Potter....... Roberts.... Sanborn... Shannon.. Spink........ Stanley........ Sully............ Todd............ Tripp............ Turner......... Union.......... Walworth.... Yankton....... Ziebach....... 2007 Dollars 2008 248 40 56 65 32 163 362 748 1,433 87 178 71 122 848 49 75 6,471 207 3,322 80 74 242 94 215 228 97 50 163 158 293 635 147 688 39 271 52 62 90 42 206 400 790 1,644 113 194 83 132 870 52 87 6,725 249 3,544 87 105 286 109 222 273 111 91 174 189 324 712 169 725 45 283 60 81 110 51 228 419 817 1,844 147 210 89 151 903 47 86 6,891 264 3,719 99 136 312 107 240 370 129 130 183 216 345 751 185 763 58 2006 2007 2008 33,795 26,563 20,267 32,201 30,261 30,472 32,469 32,587 40,144 22,505 31,298 27,729 28,319 34,922 24,345 29,949 37,549 32,006 35,038 27,155 32,648 24,412 38,279 15,769 33,566 34,969 35,810 16,472 26,786 35,094 46,575 27,254 31,766 14,803 37,109 36,551 22,436 45,795 40,560 38,699 34,840 33,929 43,555 29,198 33,858 33,280 31,194 36,142 25,498 35,777 38,185 38,201 36,718 29,857 48,081 28,738 44,383 16,282 41,168 39,571 64,350 17,270 33,037 38,710 50,890 32,068 33,402 17,402 39,373 42,932 30,398 56,043 50,270 43,011 35,376 34,953 46,463 38,671 37,159 35,635 35,739 37,867 23,439 36,075 38,315 40,940 37,621 34,088 64,239 31,334 43,863 17,603 56,347 46,602 95,764 18,112 38,502 41,498 52,898 35,244 34,845 22,992 34,833 Tennessee.................. 200,169 210,838 217,373 32,871 34,156 M etropolitan p o rtio n ......... 158,032 166,559 171,364 35,452 36,807 37,426 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n . Anderson.............................. Bedford................................. Benton.................................. Bledsoe................................. Blount................................... B radley................................. Cam pbell.............................. Cannon................................. Carroll................................... C a rte r................................... Cheatham............................ Chester................................. Claiborne.............................. C la y ...................................... Cocke.................................... Coffee................................... Crockett................................ Cumberland......................... Davidson............................... Decatur................................. DeKalb.................................. Dickson................................. Dyer...................................... Fayette.................................. Fentress................................ Franklin................................. G ibson.................................. G ile s..................................... Grainger................................ Greene.................................. Grundy.................................. Hamblen.. Ham ilton.. Hancock... Hardeman Hardin...... Hawkins... Haywood.. Henderson........................... Henry.................................... Hickman................................ Houston................................ Humphreys.......................... Jackson................................. Jefferson............................... Johnson................................ K nox..................................... Lake...................................... Lauderdale........................... Lawrence.............................. L ew is.................................... Lincoln.................................. 42,137 2,290 1,199 375 280 3,496 2,712 972 380 740 1,411 1,207 397 761 182 740 1,523 375 1,386 26,191 315 483 1,330 1,078 1,194 415 1031 1,294 749 529 1,958 311 1,639 11,989 112 614 685 1,373 490 657 838 516 195 487 279 1,249 347 14,467 133 553 937 251 883 44,279 2,405 1,259 392 291 3,696 2,866 1032 396 774 1,497 1,266 417 793 186 786 1,602 395 1,494 27,191 330 509 1,413 1,141 1,283 445 1,093 1,352 789 560 2,064 319 1,714 12,556 117 653 722 1,446 495 673 863 551 205 514 292 1,336 379 15,201 142 583 968 262 929 46,009 2,475 1,300 408 300 3,783 2,944 1,069 407 828 1,545 1,288 436 824 188 822 1,661 419 1,549 27,784 341 521 1,447 1,188 1,387 461 1,137 1,414 823 585 2,114 327 1,768 12,850 121 692 758 1,520 536 697 905 567 211 523 303 1,391 391 15,666 152 601 1029 273 967 25,822 31,447 27,607 23,207 21,777 29,615 28,906 23,988 28,610 25,704 23,927 31,255 24,855 24,575 22,751 21,096 29,624 26,169 26,526 42,613 27,685 26,235 28,644 28,609 33,271 23,965 25,224 26,945 25,794 23,587 29,947 21,724 26,926 36,490 16,942 22,119 26,355 24,278 25,375 24,779 26,684 21,952 24,587 26,919 25,760 25,381 19,337 34,675 17,799 20,802 23,071 21,977 27,234 26,874 32,800 28,283 24,265 22,278 30,843 30,016 25,430 29,512 26,900 25,405 32,337 25,959 25,497 23,424 22,219 30,971 27,412 28,045 43,759 28,703 27,385 29,814 30,285 34,482 25,539 26,543 27,919 27,189 24,760 31,345 22,277 27,675 37,919 17,472 23,470 27,599 25,360 25,840 25,159 27,387 23,163 25,482 28,131 26,883 26,507 20,945 35,792 19,091 21,928 23,672 22,769 28,370 27,687 33,367 28,642 25,359 22,849 31,109 30,464 26,223 29,411 28,902 26,119 32,577 26,796 26,336 23,808 22,961 31,828 28,985 28,802 44,228 29,560 27,592 30,204 31,481 36,287 26,154 27,598 28,780 28,195 25,746 31,993 22,980 28,274 38,460 18,365 24,901 28,889 26,445 28,177 25,842 28,490 23,765 26,011 28,727 27,716 27,108 21,646 36,342 20,745 22,581 25,066 23,745 29,156 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Personal income Rank in state Area 13 44 74 89 25 27 65 34 38 67 15 58 63 82 88 20 37 40 2 31 53 28 23 8 66 52 42 48 73 19 87 46 4 95 78 39 61 49 71 45 83 70 43 51 56 92 7 94 90 76 84 36 Millions of dollars Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 Loudon............................................. M cM inn............................................ McNairy............................................ Macon.............................................. M adison........................................... Marion.............................................. M arshall........................................... Maury............................................... Meigs Monroe............................................. Montgomery.................................... Moore............................................... Morgan............................................. Obion Overton............................................ Perry Pickett.............................................. Polk.. Putnam............................................. Rhea Roane.............................................. Robertson....................................... Rutherford....................................... Scott................................................. Sequatchie...................................... Sevier Shelby.............................................. Smith................................................ Stewart............................................. Sullivan............................................ S um ner............................................ Tipton............................................... Trousdale........................................ Unicoi............................................... Union Van Buren....................................... W arren............................................. Washington..................................... W ayne.............................................. W eakley........................................... W hite................................................ Williamson....................................... W ilson.............................................. 1,447 1,331 632 541 2,975 781 729 2,255 286 1028 5,294 166 446 897 469 198 107 397 1,871 720 1,568 1,902 7,035 439 344 2,535 36,054 499 330 4,765 4,885 1,652 188 490 418 137 969 3,493 315 872 540 8,473 3,699 1,580 1,395 660 564 3,126 815 750 2,300 299 1,085 5,639 179 467 948 497 205 115 426 2,010 764 1,665 1,999 7,532 470 366 2,661 37,672 532 348 5,083 5,255 1,771 200 515 434 138 1014 3,755 336 909 572 9,203 3,947 1,643 1,402 688 579 3,231 844 782 2,435 308 1,105 5,951 189 484 1005 519 205 121 439 2,084 783 1,725 2,106 7,837 483 386 2,747 38,234 565 363 5,248 5,413 1,869 215 532 449 146 1,048 3,930 347 961 587 9,601 4,083 32,628 25,713 24,982 25,102 30,926 27,955 25,375 28,957 24,689 23,449 35,689 27,707 23,086 28,367 22,657 26,007 22,228 25,168 27,185 23,809 29,532 30,714 30,388 20,130 26,229 30,886 39,224 26,740 25,593 31,247 32,884 29,267 25,020 27,686 22,253 25,642 24,444 30,402 18,887 26,150 21,973 53,111 35,757 34,835 26,761 25,967 25,993 32,353 29,085 25,518 28,601 25,517 24,207 36,412 29,565 23,850 30,028 23,721 26,750 24,018 27,118 28,738 25,006 31,230 31,399 31,122 21,396 27,197 31,700 40,950 28,216 26,729 33,115 34,442 30,678 25,899 29,117 22,933 25,411 25,413 32,173 20,270 27,346 22,900 55,199 37,047 35,546 26,675 26,840 26,323 33,408 30,050 26,063 29,430 25,839 24,202 38,270 30,969 24,750 31,824 24,809 26,337 25,059 27,810 29,194 25,205 32,260 32,188 31,301 22,000 28,223 32,179 41,598 29,556 27,392 34,068 34,768 31,766 27,473 29,978 23,496 26,534 26,097 33,058 21,024 28,787 23,284 55,717 37,040 T exas...................................... 824,281 878,139 918,921 35,272 36,838 37,809 745,288 792,903 830,112 36,515 37,988 38,921 78,993 1,262 403 2,546 792 310 74 1068 879 196 615 1,784 109 637 8,920 51,729 318 18 467 2,650 9,438 4,266 283 42 161 976 477 1,406 848 544 359 7,299 346 192 769 266 1057 1,219 137 335 99 80 225 32,128 85,236 1,365 444 2,708 863 326 81 1,144 959 204 660 1,912 117 671 9,991 54,954 354 23 511 2,866 10,512 4,585 289 51 167 1039 507 1,507 896 586 390 7,846 361 232 833 274 1,201 1,288 153 352 109 88 240 34,978 88,809 1,427 491 2,798 905 350 82 1,195 987 208 675 2,019 121 700 10,762 56,891 364 20 533 3,011 11,055 4,808 287 44 183 1,074 519 1,545 920 619 409 8,323 381 226 876 268 1,281 1,332 149 370 104 91 250 36,447 26,701 22,379 31,308 31,012 32,491 34,735 35,585 24,838 33,643 30,540 31,047 25,355 28,463 19,668 33,467 33,353 35,414 28,114 26,260 29,087 33,240 25,409 31,071 26,988 21,382 25,357 28,670 33,056 23,383 26,774 27,177 19,366 28,169 30,438 26,221 36,524 37,278 25,495 18,216 29,881 31,319 22,312 26,094 45,918 28,745 24,058 33,809 32,787 35,487 36,652 39,469 26,240 35,964 32,454 32,462 26,481 30,212 20,675 35,893 34,586 39,372 39,990 28,727 31,302 35,865 26,884 31,522 33,831 22,349 27,189 30,603 34,415 24,465 28,854 29,301 20,502 28,860 37,075 28,396 38,221 41,679 26,777 20,324 31,649 35,232 25,954 28,314 47,719 29,843 25,167 35,923 33,775 36,855 39,054 39,111 27,195 36,504 33,094 32,905 27,499 32,417 21,642 37,682 35,090 40,024 33,716 30,261 32,498 36,699 27,495 30,922 29,962 24,667 28,192 31,346 34,664 24,499 30,254 30,692 21,387 30,035 36,599 29,946 37,678 43,605 27,614 19,723 33,840 34,812 27,004 29,191 47,741 2008 30 18 58 6 10 17 46 48 14 33 40 44 42 36 62 41 35 25 39 52 2 57 16 65 5 13 1 64 34 22 7 47 49 63 Per capita personal incom e1 Anderson......................................... Andrews........................................... Angelina........................................... Aransas............................................ A rcher.............................................. A rm strong....................................... Atascosa.......................................... Austin............................................... B ailey............................................... Bandera........................................... Bastrop............................................. Baylor............................................... Bee.................................................... Bell.................................................... Bexar................................................ Blanco.............................................. B orden............................................. Bosque............................................. Bow ie............................................... Brazoria............................................ Brazos.............................................. Brewster........................................... Briscoe............................................. Brooks.............................................. Brown............................................... Burleson........................................... Burnet.............................................. Caldwell........................................... Calhoun............................................ Callahan........................................... Cameron.......................................... C am p............................................... C arson............................................. Cass................................................. C astro.............................................. Cham bers....................................... Cherokee........................................ Childress.......................................... Clay.................................................. Cochran........................................... Coke................................................. Coleman........................................... Collin................................................ 2008 9 59 57 64 12 29 69 33 72 81 5 26 80 21 79 62 77 50 35 75 16 17 24 91 47 18 3 32 55 11 10 22 54 30 85 60 14 93 41 86 1 6 223 60 89 50 32 31 202 53 99 100 197 108 245 44 67 22 90 146 106 51 198 128 151 228 184 125 76 231 147 137 246 149 52 152 45 12 192 249 88 73 207 167 7 May 2010 53 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Area Collingsworth.................................. Colorado.......................................... C om al... Comanche...................................... Concho. Cooke... C oryell.. Cottle............................................... Crane............................................... Crockett Crosby.. Culberson....................................... Dallam .. D allas... Dawson. Deaf Smith...................................... Delta .............................................. Denton.. DeWitt... Dickens. Dimmit.. Donley.. Duval............................................... Eastland.......................................... E ctor................................................ Edw ards.......................................... Ellis El Paso............................................ Erath................................................ Falls................................................. Fannin.............................................. Fayette............................................. F isher.............................................. Floyd................................................ Foard............................................... Fort Bend........................................ Franklin............................................ Freestone....................................... F rio.................................................. Gaines............................................. Galveston....................................... Garza.... Gillespie........................................... Glasscock....................................... Goliad... G onzales........................................ Gray .. Grayson........................................... G re gg .............................................. Grimes Guadalupe...................................... H ale................................................. H a ll.................................................. Hamilton.......................................... Hansford.......................................... Hardeman....................................... Hardin.............................................. Harris.... Harrison Hartley.. Haskell.. Hays .. H em phill.......................................... Henderson...................................... Hidalgo............................................ Hill ........................................... Hockley. Hood .. Hopkins Houston Howard. Hudspeth........................................ Hunt .. Hutchinson..................................... Irion Jack Jackson Jasper... Jeff Davis........................................ Jefferson.......................................... Jim H ogg........................................ Jim W ells......................................... Johnson Jones.... Karnes.. Kaufman.......................................... Kendall.. K enedy. K ent................................................. Kerr.................................................. Millions of dollars Dollars 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 89 630 3,475 384 72 1,318 2,181 52 110 91 188 54 194 101,321 311 443 117 22,119 506 54 201 109 288 571 3,740 46 4,066 18,409 902 388 803 765 101 185 35 19,533 310 497 313 391 10,365 142 842 35 179 486 723 3,262 4,208 596 3,328 833 76 227 197 109 1,591 172,909 1,952 180 155 3,802 155 2,122 12,333 882 640 1,692 873 535 853 66 2,344 712 62 244 382 952 60 7,885 133 1,130 4,211 422 294 2,680 1,291 15 21 1,738 99 684 3,843 398 81 1,433 2,368 57 120 100 206 61 218 105,722 390 510 131 24,086 552 61 215 116 307 605 4,139 45 4,527 19,596 970 413 861 819 128 207 40 22,102 326 518 336 433 11,316 161 932 57 189 508 816 3,509 4,473 648 3,745 884 85 243 208 117 1,722 179,775 2,080 192 172 4,177 173 2,273 13,320 960 720 1,855 923 585 919 76 2,494 758 68 274 402 1011 67 8,304 142 1,235 4,570 485 316 2,932 1,481 16 20 1,867 80 725 4,076 410 79 1,520 2,504 52 131 111 195 67 218 108,125 345 494 142 25,228 569 55 231 114 336 631 4,542 48 4,734 20,728 1,034 420 904 845 116 204 40 23,576 325 548 359 432 11,745 159 952 39 194 530 862 3,625 4,742 690 4,006 898 77 256 207 123 1,831 190,226 2,236 188 174 4,386 209 2,316 14,224 994 744 1,918 990 614 959 77 2,588 825 73 307 421 1053 71 8,736 157 1,370 4,729 483 329 3,094 1,598 18 19 1,915 30,052 30,712 34,668 28,335 20,259 34,362 30,401 32,530 29,410 24,417 29,101 21,158 32,356 43,052 22,353 24,250 21,277 37,498 25,427 21,530 20,294 28,505 23,367 31,247 29,662 24,408 29,568 25,541 25,532 22,373 24,435 34,054 25,169 27,035 23,946 40,314 28,309 26,407 19,375 26,882 37,170 29,202 36,229 29,355 25,600 24,909 33,486 27,875 36,310 23,539 30,910 23,321 21,305 28,117 38,252 25,584 31,298 44,844 30,842 34,679 29,532 28,498 46,570 26,881 18,039 25,183 28,589 34,977 26,075 23,543 26,755 20,479 28,555 32,591 35,351 27,525 27,111 27,847 27,420 32,801 26,851 27,787 28,806 21,721 19,462 29,117 43,246 37,456 29,225 36,915 33,231 33,324 36,522 29,528 22,571 37,307 32,613 36,713 31,094 26,335 32,966 24,358 35,500 44,386 28,215 27,834 24,391 39,153 27,976 24,745 22,050 30,367 25,239 33,014 32,121 23,462 31,699 26,924 27,335 24,498 26,188 36,284 32,386 31,169 28,931 43,486 29,554 27,525 20,853 29,261 39,909 33,946 39,679 49,161 27,061 26,200 37,388 29,687 38,254 25,176 33,266 24,807 24,993 30,139 39,943 28,418 33,278 45,987 32,862 36,890 33,384 29,415 52,273 28,843 18,979 27,264 32,398 37,571 27,133 25,793 28,556 23,629 30,268 34,900 39,535 31,577 28,718 29,440 30,477 34,387 28,908 30,075 30,562 25,302 21,005 30,348 47,412 41,853 28,409 39,319 26,662 35,067 37,017 30,403 21,759 39,549 34,267 33,331 32,696 29,323 31,385 27,531 34,793 44,829 25,088 26,830 26,108 39,572 29,017 22,924 23,726 30,590 27,941 34,644 34,622 24,621 32,009 28,071 28,883 25,013 27,376 37,056 29,690 31,402 29,153 44,265 29,946 28,743 22,230 28,685 40,711 34,162 39,866 32,220 27,540 27,190 39,013 30,516 40,299 26,605 34,143 25,535 22,900 31,717 38,676 30,700 34,932 47,788 35,058 38,290 34,256 29,353 61,169 29,405 19,721 27,849 33,406 37,804 28,983 27,266 29,430 24,844 31,460 38,547 42,951 35,684 29,875 30,713 31,565 36,071 31,682 33,450 30,728 25,342 21,848 30,816 48,535 46,115 27,570 39,957 Per capita personal incom e1 Personal income Rank in state 2006 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Per capita personal incom e' 2008 213 68 48 142 244 28 81 97 103 165 124 196 74 9 224 209 218 27 170 238 233 138 188 78 79 229 113 186 173 225 199 46 158 123 169 11 152 175 242 177 19 84 25 112 195 203 33 139 20 214 86 220 239 117 35 136 71 6 69 39 82 164 2 163 250 189 95 41 172 200 162 226 122 37 15 64 155 135 120 59 118 94 133 222 243 131 5 8 194 23 Millions of dollars Area 2006 Kimble.............................................. King Kinney.............................................. K leberg............................................ Knox................................................. Lamar............................................... Lamb................................................ Lampasas....................................... L aS alle............................................ Lavaca ............................................. Lee.................................................... Leon................................................. Liberty.............................................. Limestone........................................ Lipscomb........................................ Live O ak........................................... Llano................................................ Loving.............................................. Lubbock........................................... Lynn................................................. McCulloch........................................ McLennan....................................... M cM ullen........................................ M adison........................................... Marion.............................................. Martin Mason.............................................. Matagorda....................................... Maverick........................................... Medina Menaid Midland............................................ M ilam ............................................... Mills Mitchell............................................. Montague........................................ Montgomery.................................... Moore............................................... Morris............................................... M otley.............................................. Nacogdoches.................................. Navarro............................................ Newton Nolan Nueces O chiltree.......................................... O ldham ............................................ Orange............................................. Palo Pinto......................................... Panola.............................................. Parker Parmer Pecos Polk P otter............................................... Presidio............................................ Rains Randall............................................. Reagan............................................ R e a l................................................. Red River......................................... Reeves Refugio............................................ Roberts............................................ Robertson....................................... Rockwall.... Runnels.... Rusk.......... Sabine...... San Augustine................................. San Jacinto San Patricio..................................... San Saba.. Schleicher. S curry...... Shackelford..................................... Shelby.............................................. S herm an.......................................... Smith................................................ Somervell......................................... S tarr................................................. Stephens.......................................... Sterling............................................. Stonewall........................................ Sutton Swisher Tarrant.............................................. Taylor Terrell............................................... Terry................................................. 119 8 78 835 107 1,309 348 663 117 567 481 449 2,181 562 102 280 553 5 7,723 132 207 6,449 29 290 252 117 107 954 817 1,112 57 6,068 652 139 175 602 16,134 554 352 36 1,473 1,196 293 381 10,424 349 58 2,469 796 663 3,509 254 299 1,418 3,489 141 263 3,698 87 74 306 235 218 30 447 2,749 247 1,261 285 203 651 1,880 141 71 466 118 644 108 6,576 239 816 268 34 50 152 208 62,323 3,951 27 329 2007 126 9 82 883 116 1,419 380 744 122 613 508 483 2,358 598 110 298 607 5 8,220 198 229 6,809 25 315 270 146 108 1003 879 1,212 58 6,252 692 137 196 660 18,102 604 375 38 1,600 1,287 312 419 11,061 357 67 2,670 859 737 3,825 289 320 1,543 3,650 155 286 4,049 102 79 331 252 230 33 476 3,094 281 1,374 304 217 703 2,057 148 75 514 120 683 130 6,996 268 874 280 36 51 180 207 65,824 4,242 29 376 Rank in state Dollars 2008 130 10 87 944 113 1,451 383 805 134 623 531 511 2,467 641 118 303 625 6 8,617 138 240 7,098 26 310 283 136 109 1074 969 1,260 61 6,970 708 142 196 701 19,235 614 389 36 1,676 1,333 336 441 11,633 381 62 2,836 876 803 4,089 279 331 1,598 3,829 168 294 4,327 105 84 346 272 249 34 509 3,326 283 1,462 315 228 739 2,187 149 81 561 133 715 126 7,333 287 951 311 40 49 224 209 68,106 4,450 32 361 2006 26,505 26,904 23,835 27,384 29,979 26,696 24,919 32,727 19,803 30,349 29,746 27,479 29,316 24,986 34,276 24,709 30,835 94,691 29,722 21,948 26,192 28,593 34,237 22,025 23,469 26,756 27,668 25,796 16,133 25,730 26,775 49,173 26,232 28,053 18,979 30,720 40,991 27,719 27,123 28,105 23,774 24,522 21,207 26,114 32,675 37,638 27,975 30,170 28,869 28,642 33,516 26,920 18,943 30,772 28,906 18,751 23,907 33,389 29,788 24,392 23,148 21,231 29,322 36,566 28,075 40,041 23,709 26,288 27,793 23,106 26,738 27,453 23,811 26,132 29,311 38,274 24,643 37,714 33,825 31,415 13,538 28,575 28,652 36,475 35,527 27,078 37,479 31,338 28,256 26,970 2007 28,463 30,877 24,737 28,808 33,547 28,971 27,514 35,944 20,506 32,857 31,442 29,520 31,519 26,689 36,853 26,420 33,228 100,389 31,267 34,319 29,375 29,830 29,105 23,770 25,345 33,123 27,606 27,314 17,242 27,704 27,482 49,590 27,989 27,494 21,133 33,634 43,869 30,470 28,827 29,726 25,574 26,359 22,719 28,763 34,684 37,679 32,164 32,366 31,412 32,025 35,209 30,761 20,241 33,206 30,222 20,459 25,496 35,907 34,246 26,156 25,333 22,682 31,395 38,587 30,067 41,836 27,233 28,358 29,959 24,933 28,377 30,124 25,059 27,302 32,057 38,632 25,890 45,016 35,329 34,758 14,345 29,628 29,377 36,850 41,848 27,088 38,499 33,519 32,079 30,985 2008 29,283 37,021 26,809 30,714 33,648 29,641 28,271 38,506 22,959 33,622 32,706 30,339 32,753 28,777 39,547 27,079 34,155 140,275 32,472 24,138 30,463 30,748 31,296 23,403 27,171 30,444 27,970 28,986 18,688 28,479 28,520 53,968 28,486 28,467 21,264 35,716 44,603 30,392 30,337 28,171 26,457 27,177 24,500 29,609 36,318 39,728 29,986 34,221 31,832 34,645 36,490 30,056 20,803 34,280 31,608 22,341 26,048 37,856 34,845 28,689 26,821 24,733 34,031 39,902 32,411 42,770 27,651 29,862 31,183 26,368 29,760 31,998 25,508 29,582 35,043 43,563 26,976 42,860 36,456 36,350 15,452 32,624 31,915 35,429 51,928 27,727 38,918 35,136 34,791 29,915 2008 166 47 211 134 91 159 183 38 237 92 102 144 101 174 29 206 85 1 107 232 140 132 126 234 205 141 187 171 252 180 178 3 179 181 247 62 10 143 145 185 216 204 230 160 58 26 150 83 116 77 54 148 248 80 119 241 219 40 72 176 210 227 87 24 109 17 191 156 127 217 157 114 221 161 70 13 208 16 55 57 254 105 115 65 4 190 34 66 75 154 54 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income May 2010 Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Area Per capita personal income 1 Dollars Millions of dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 41,408 29,163 33,518 40,143 26,469 28,346 30,826 38,640 26,724 27,244 31,552 37,788 23,130 32,642 33,337 36,896 22,831 32,249 43,312 35,866 32,347 23,087 36,417 30,890 35,710 33,187 27,583 37,754 39,423 18,849 16,687 Throckmorton................................. Titus.................................................. Tom Green....................................... Travis............................................... Trinity............................................... Tyler................................................. Upshur............................................. Upton............................................... Uvalde............................................. Val V erde........................................ Van Z a nd t....................................... V ictoria ............................................ Walker.............................................. Waller............................................... W ard................................................ Washington..................................... W ebb ............................................... W harton........................................... Wheeler........................................... Wichita............................................. Wilbarger......................................... W illacy............................................. Williamson W ilson.............................................. Winkler............................................. Wise................................................. W ood............................................... Yoakum............................................ Young............................................... Zapata............................................. Zavala.............................................. 60 804 3,250 37,725 330 502 993 95 646 1,160 1,478 2,922 1,309 1064 281 1,081 4,748 1,213 167 4,284 410 398 11,946 1068 195 1,740 1026 266 616 230 172 60 854 3,427 39,272 352 545 1086 108 690 1,238 1,598 3,127 1,397 1,134 314 1,146 5,088 1,255 186 4,372 430 454 13,502 1,174 210 1,886 1,124 287 634 246 185 66 864 3,601 40,086 369 580 1,168 119 711 1,300 1,645 3,279 1,470 1,174 349 1,196 5,387 1,318 207 4,580 437 471 14,390 1,246 240 1,941 1,179 287 695 261 196 35,446 28,121 30,689 40,243 23,470 24,885 26,613 31,259 24,321 24,556 28,436 34,268 20,471 30,470 27,510 33,888 21,012 29,575 35,421 33,130 29,511 19,521 33,990 28,112 30,217 30,635 24,533 36,591 34,488 17,375 14,786 37,034 29,330 32,174 40,466 25,138 26,837 28,938 36,434 26,002 26,045 30,818 36,292 21,935 31,641 30,933 35,737 22,041 30,767 39,064 34,095 31,258 22,295 36,176 29,982 32,152 32,756 26,595 38,695 35,789 18,134 15,931 Personal income Rank in state 2008 18 168 93 21 215 182 130 36 212 201 121 42 235 104 96 49 240 111 14 61 110 236 56 129 63 98 193 43 30 251 253 U ta h ........................................ 78,382 84,709 87,411 30,337 31,800 32,050 M etropolitan p o rtio n .................... 71,317 76,993 79,190 31,000 32,440 32,590 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... B eaver............................................. Box E lder......................................... Cache.............................................. Carbon............................................. Daggett............................................ Davis................................................ Duchesne ........................................ Em ery.............................................. Garfield............................................ Grand............................................... Iro n .................................................. Juab................................................. Kane................................................ Millard.............................................. M organ............................................ P iute................................................ Rich Salt Lake.......................................... San J u a n ......................................... S anpete........................................... Sevier S um m it............................................ Tooele Uintah Utah................................................. Wasatch........................................... Washington..................................... Wayne.............................................. W eber.............................................. 7,066 141 1,200 2,483 591 19 8,776 490 254 113 245 914 216 190 287 228 29 56 35,532 245 454 454 2,041 1,271 798 11,057 529 3,224 56 6,489 7,716 149 1,329 2,729 610 20 9,529 561 255 119 265 984 232 205 323 257 33 59 37,888 264 502 485 2,271 1,392 899 12,137 591 3,473 63 7,085 8,221 157 1,396 2,904 655 22 9,821 646 265 128 279 1023 244 210 348 270 35 65 38,730 278 540 508 2,311 1,463 993 12,610 610 3,512 65 7,326 24,952 23,098 25,681 23,340 30,710 20,938 31,451 31,714 24,766 25,840 26,399 21,916 23,604 29,546 24,174 28,272 21,595 28,571 36,055 17,557 18,932 23,421 58,477 24,281 28,702 22,925 26,595 25,439 22,632 30,019 26,569 24,527 27,764 25,116 31,013 22,300 33,100 34,643 24,681 26,447 28,103 22,734 24,291 31,538 27,175 30,479 24,492 28,969 37,797 18,393 20,432 24,626 64,064 25,431 31,086 23,663 28,996 26,252 25,427 32,053 27,641 25,383 28,449 25,955 33,428 23,825 33,283 38,156 25,345 27,770 29,019 23,147 24,380 32,102 28,796 30,848 24,669 30,224 38,026 18,705 21,162 25,452 63,832 25,731 33,272 23,803 29,060 25,886 25,579 32,244 21 14 16 4 25 5 2 22 15 12 27 24 8 13 9 23 10 3 29 28 20 1 18 6 26 11 17 19 7 V erm o nt................................. M etropolitan p o rtio n .................... Nonm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... Addison............................................ Bennington..................................... Caledonia........................................ Chittenden...................................... Essex............................................... Franklin............................................ Grand Isle........................................ Lam oille........................................... Orange............................................. Orleans............................................ Rutland............................................ Washington..................................... 22,340 23,413 8,258 15,154 1,309 1,485 953 6,363 147 1,626 270 910 941 858 2,300 2,324 1,644 2,282 24,034 8,517 15,517 1,330 1,508 984 6,538 150 1,701 278 945 953 882 2,349 2,425 1,671 2,321 36,033 38,674 34,724 33,648 37,873 29,590 41,224 22,273 31,419 33,781 35,254 30,676 29,684 34,410 37,307 35,967 38,501 37,735 40,059 36,578 35,644 40,759 31,337 42,224 22,700 33,931 35,751 36,027 32,455 31,398 36,332 39,591 37,621 40,080 38,700 41,139 37,480 36,185 41,386 32,512 43,192 23,256 35,446 36,251 36,765 32,930 32,350 37,166 41,329 38,356 40,881 9 2 12 1 14 10 8 7 11 13 6 3 5 4 333,167 343,580 41,267 43,158 301,105 32,062 1030 425 931 417 14,610 310,228 33,352 1074 435 961 433 15,201 43,531 27,776 24,762 32,322 27,376 28,147 67,896 45,528 28,987 26,772 33,594 28,987 29,399 71,650 44,075 46,410 W indsor........................................... 7,948 14,392 1,231 1,384 904 6,194 142 1,500 254 878 893 808 2,184 2,198 1,573 2,196 V irg in ia .................................. M etropolitan p o rtio n .................... 315,565 285,042 Accomack........................................ Amelia.............................................. Amherst........................................... Appomattox.................................... A rlington.......................................... 30,524 955 402 876 394 13,625 See the footnotes at the end of the table. 30,024 27,968 33,903 29,619 29,799 72,317 Area 86 47 78 75 1 Per capita personal in com e 1 Millions of dollars Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 Bath.................................................. Bland Botetourt.......................................... Brunswick........................................ Buchanan........................................ Buckingham.................................... Caroline............................................ Charles C ity .................................... Charlotte......................................... Chesterfield..................................... Clarke............................................... Craig Culpeper.......................................... Cumberland.................................... Dickenson....................................... Essex Fauquier........................................... Floyd Fluvanna.......................................... Franklin............................................ Giles. Gloucester....................................... Goochland....................................... Grayson............................................ Greene............................................. Halifax Hanover............................................ Henrico............................................ Highland........................................... Isle of W ight.................................... King and Q ueen............................. King George.................................... King W illiam .................................... Lancaster........................................ Lee... Loudoun........................................... Louisa.............................................. Lunenburg....................................... M adison........................................... Mathews........................................... Mecklenburg.................................... Middlesex........................................ Nelson.............................................. New Kent.......................................... Northampton................................... Northumberland.............................. Nottoway.......................................... Orange............................................. Page. Patrick.............................................. Powhatan........................................ Prince Edward................................. Pulaski............................................. Rappahannock................................ Richmond........................................ Russell............................................. Scott................................................. Shenandoah.................................... Smyth............................................... Stafford............................................ Surry Sussex............................................. Tazewell........................................... W arren............................................. Westmoreland................................. Wythe............................................... 157 165 1,234 404 622 359 822 236 293 12,128 550 147 1,417 251 364 310 3,256 365 775 1,542 442 1,234 1,164 370 581 915 4,009 12,641 70 1,227 200 750 523 509 572 12,278 1070 295 408 404 847 373 512 550 408 434 427 1006 618 426 1010 431 1044 270 213 684 563 1,218 830 4,302 195 310 1,233 1,270 529 741 174 182 1,321 427 650 374 896 238 314 12,853 559 147 1,487 272 387 328 3,364 385 838 1,675 457 1,308 1,275 371 617 959 4,264 13,347 72 1,304 208 799 561 549 597 13,690 1,141 308 436 434 903 408 547 600 435 476 457 1063 641 456 1090 457 1090 288 226 717 575 1,294 851 4,654 213 330 33,433 24,436 38,355 22,508 25,931 22,661 31,047 33,023 23,689 41,264 38,521 28,955 32,079 26,695 22,722 29,218 49,554 24,920 31,268 30,624 25,730 32,726 58,216 22,920 32,913 25,694 40,878 44,265 28,585 35,971 29,277 34,716 34,574 44,360 22,992 46,290 34,548 22,712 30,208 44,939 26,517 35,110 34,131 33,000 30,388 33,929 27,223 31,951 25,714 22,676 37,012 20,449 29,973 37,510 23,381 23,797 24,583 30,404 25,771 36,318 27,814 25,686 1,331 555 790 175 191 1,367 452 697 386 944 240 330 13,195 567 152 1,541 285 416 352 3,402 396 867 1,729 476 1,364 1,298 377 635 1013 4,325 13,438 75 1,369 216 830 588 552 632 14,702 1,185 320 445 440 954 419 568 619 451 493 465 1,089 662 472 1,122 477 1,114 292 239 762 604 1,327 886 4,813 223 346 1,385 1,390 583 825 35,523 31,105 26,159 37,388 26,684 40,831 24,065 27,638 23,429 32,825 33,364 25,643 42,934 38,907 28,742 32,515 28,450 24,129 30,413 50,655 26,208 33,186 32,620 26,593 34,190 61,792 22,988 34,272 27,064 43,089 46,063 30,059 37,170 30,375 35,432 35,925 47,798 23,900 49,342 35,882 23,774 31,809 48,058 28,198 38,343 35,927 34,813 32,413 36,938 28,974 32,843 26,530 24,239 39,651 21,233 31,142 39,981 24,625 24,706 25,188 31,890 26,618 38,521 30,203 27,281 29,564 36,679 32,006 27,697 38,231 28,008 41,968 25,420 30,204 24,190 34,095 33,275 27,120 43,425 38,909 30,000 33,303 29,562 25,708 31,965 50,597 26,509 33,872 33,420 27,594 35,255 61,801 23,528 34,900 28,651 43,426 45,911 31,497 38,495 31,628 35,829 36,802 48,507 25,208 50,674 36,339 24,852 32,602 48,652 29,781 39,202 37,040 34,927 33,514 37,966 29,350 32,802 27,405 25,225 40,559 21,523 31,813 40,677 26,187 26,260 26,560 32,370 27,818 39,424 31,430 28,525 30,865 37,872 33,193 28,687 29 85 18 98 71 102 46 52 91 16 27 74 51 79 97 62 6 94 48 50 89 41 4 103 43 82 15 12 65 28 64 40 34 9 100 5 35 101 57 8 77 24 33 42 49 31 80 55 90 99 21 105 63 20 96 95 93 59 87 23 66 83 68 32 53 81 Independent cities: Alexandria....................................... Chesapeake.................................... Hampton.......................................... Newport News................................. Norfolk.............................................. Portsmouth...................................... Richmond........................................ Roanoke........................................... Suffolk.............................................. Virginia Beach................................. 9,455 8,070 4,762 5,478 7,938 3,113 8,410 3,118 2,655 18,486 10,036 8,549 5,014 5,746 8,232 3,261 8,865 3,428 2,841 19,165 10,441 8,810 5,215 5,942 8,463 3,395 9,089 3,578 2,980 19,460 68,394 36,910 32,488 28,463 33,239 30,421 42,261 33,681 33,123 42,281 71,565 39,011 34,249 29,762 34,873 32,167 44,180 36,840 35,011 44,145 72,220 39,988 35,903 30,752 36,065 34,102 44,801 38,169 36,157 45,022 2 22 39 69 38 45 14 30 37 13 5,861 646 3,630 2,579 3,674 941 2,386 69,215 3,356 370 1,979 6,224 662 3,791 2,717 3,859 973 2,515 72,330 3,495 390 2,046 6,383 683 3,903 2,847 4,026 1023 2,636 73,716 3,621 405 2,102 44,051 28,558 31,453 35,958 30,014 26,130 31,421 67,033 34,749 21,223 28,115 46,440 29,235 32,418 37,396 31,025 27,066 32,919 69,556 35,482 22,258 29,176 46,969 30,356 33,161 39,114 31,996 28,415 34,187 69,885 36,222 23,026 30,018 10 70 54 26 61 84 44 3 36 104 73 C om bination a re a s 3: Albemarle + Charlottesville........... Alleghany + Covington................... Augusta, Staunton + Waynesboro Bedford + Bedford City................... Campbell + Lynchburg................... Dinwiddie, Col. Hts. + Petersburg Fairfax, Fairfax City + Falls Church Frederick + Winchester.................. Greensville + Em poria.................. Henry + Martinsville....................... 1,299 28,023 2008 May 2010 S urvey of C urrent 55 B u s in e s s Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008—Continues Personal income Area Per capita personal incom e1 Millions of dollars Personal income Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 James City + Williamsburg................. Montgomery + Radford........................ Pittsylvania + Danville.......................... Prince George + Hopewell................. Pr. William, Manassas + Manassas P ark................................................... Roanoke + Salem................................ Rockbridge, Buena Vista + Lexington Rockingham + Harrisonburg............... Southampton + Franklin..................... Spotsylvania + Fredricksburg............ Washington + B risto l.......................... Wise + N o rto n ..................................... York + Poquoson................................. 3,289 2,637 2,922 1,751 3,546 2,804 3,050 1,854 3,706 2,880 3,165 1,957 45,778 25,343 27,544 29,819 48,135 26,591 28,803 31,447 49,520 27,102 29,789 32,791 7 92 76 56 16,057 4,392 1052 3,375 770 5,084 2,081 1,149 3,130 16,933 4,616 1,091 3,577 790 5,375 2,169 1,175 3,319 17,566 4,751 1,119 3,688 826 5,588 2,286 1,259 3,429 40,158 38,338 30,457 28,993 29,108 36,388 29,880 25,345 42,858 41,607 40,095 31,546 30,359 28,964 38,036 30,895 25,873 45,256 42,620 41,019 32,348 31,055 30,123 39,150 32,454 27,707 46,844 17 19 60 67 72 25 58 88 11 W a sh ing ton ................................ M etropolitan p o r tio n ........................ N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ................ Adam s.................................................. A sotin ................................................... Benton.................................................. Chelan.................................................. C lallam ................................................. C lark...................................................... Colum bia.............................................. Cowlitz.................................................. Douglas................................................ Ferry...................................................... Franklin.................................................. Garfield.................................................. G ra nt..................................................... Grays Harbor....................................... Island..................................................... Jefferson............................................... K ing....................................................... K itsap................................................... Kittitas................................................... Klickitat................................................. L ew is.................................................... Lincoln.................................................. Mason................................................... Okanogan............................................. Pacific................................................... Pend Oreille.......................................... Pierce................................................... San Ju a n .............................................. S kagit................................................... Skam ania............................................. Snohomish.......................................... S pokane............................................... Stevens................................................. Thurston............................................... Wahkiakum........................................... Walla Walla........................................... W hatcom.............................................. W hitm an............................................... Yakima.................................................. 252,023 229,231 22,791 428 646 5,228 2,223 2,227 13,708 112 2,741 912 153 1,498 56 2,027 1,875 2,803 1,153 99,608 9,528 1073 579 1,982 271 1,569 1,125 555 297 27,916 791 4,053 304 25,578 14,142 1028 8,697 107 1,612 6,163 970 6,284 271,008 246,495 24,513 473 681 5,683 2,367 2,389 14,694 131 2,933 985 162 1,685 63 2,212 1,960 2,960 1,243 106,638 10,001 1,167 620 2,085 306 1,692 1,195 593 317 29,864 871 4,335 337 28,257 15,133 1095 9,426 117 1,767 6,750 1096 6,726 280,678 255,020 25,658 510 707 6,010 2,494 2,451 15,198 141 3,016 1052 172 1,827 69 2,458 2,037 2,988 1,276 109,551 10,312 1,219 664 2,138 316 1,752 1,287 614 344 31,046 879 4,497 349 29,200 15,727 1,142 9,820 120 1,893 7,010 1,189 7,202 39,550 41,072 28,813 25,763 30,611 33,177 31,788 31,959 33,587 28,485 27,703 25,787 20,337 22,650 26,314 24,907 26,465 34,554 39,553 54,370 39,778 28,184 29,155 27,207 26,517 28,396 28,695 25,971 23,459 36,527 52,174 35,422 28,835 38,542 31,623 24,832 37,274 27,112 28,165 32,639 23,389 27,302 41,919 43,498 30,713 27,908 32,156 35,644 33,493 33,995 35,266 33,234 29,170 27,120 21,993 24,235 30,159 26,613 27,472 36,612 42,462 57,409 42,004 30,400 30,839 28,292 29,774 29,776 30,190 27,628 24,810 38,581 56,976 37,289 31,369 41,813 33,172 26,099 39,485 29,355 30,718 35,004 26,671 28,955 42,747 44,285 31,778 29,529 33,067 36,643 34,969 34,551 35,789 35,614 29,703 28,434 23,241 24,965 32,524 28,707 28,516 36,954 43,105 58,141 42,992 31,142 32,550 28,757 30,615 30,349 32,084 28,761 26,560 39,444 56,879 37,989 32,147 42,610 34,011 27,068 39,988 29,502 32,546 35,592 28,296 30,661 28 17 10 14 15 11 12 27 34 39 38 20 32 33 9 3 1 4 23 18 31 25 26 22 30 37 7 2 8 21 5 16 36 6 29 19 13 35 24 2006 2007 2008 West V irg in ia ............................. 51,894 54,555 57,411 28,714 30,121 31,634 Metropolitan p o r tio n ........................ 30,757 32,319 33,872 30,744 N onm etropolitan p o r tio n ................ Barbour................................................. Berkeley................................................ B oone................................................... Braxton................................................. Brooke.................................................. C abell................................................... Calhoun................................................ C la y ....................................................... Doddridge............................................. Fayette.................................................. Gilmer................................................... G ra nt.................................................... Greenbrier............................................ Hampshire............................................ Hancock................................................ Hardy..................................................... Harrison................................................ Jackson ................................................ Jefferson............................................... Kanawha............................................... Lew is.................................................... Lincoln.................................................. Logan ................................................... McDowell.............................................. M arion.................................................. Marshall................................................ Mason................................................... M ercer.................................................. Mineral.................................................. 21,136 355 2,766 594 303 667 2,826 148 188 152 1,124 163 307 963 518 849 321 2,163 709 1,746 7,258 441 458 961 468 1,673 920 621 1,707 726 22,237 373 2,942 619 323 692 2,986 153 200 153 1,176 171 338 1025 546 886 334 2,259 751 1,861 7,523 462 477 1004 488 1,756 962 650 1,805 766 23,539 393 3,080 654 344 722 3,167 164 208 160 1,244 184 353 1054 548 934 339 2,411 787 1,916 7,876 502 505 1095 530 1,849 1026 682 1,891 799 26,198 23,021 28,569 23,675 20,813 27,887 29,956 20,471 18,731 21,071 24,317 23,596 26,165 27,838 23,277 27,802 23,938 31,713 25,178 35,091 37,867 25,766 20,581 26,997 20,137 29,625 27,438 24,333 27,950 27,139 32,163 27,577 24,114 29,489 24,628 22,190 29,207 31,622 21,217 19,812 21,111 25,398 24,798 28,488 29,535 24,127 29,482 24,649 33,190 26,586 36,472 39,383 26,997 21,485 28,291 21,382 30,949 28,954 25,568 29,368 28,481 29,200 25,193 30,098 26,399 23,645 30,666 33,516 22,723 20,693 22,200 26,877 26,807 29,606 30,372 24,162 31,243 25,074 35,140 27,933 36,889 41,255 29,003 22,807 30,877 23,469 32,709 31,247 26,610 30,680 29,470 See the footnotes at the end of the table. Area 42 21 39 48 17 8 52 55 53 35 37 22 18 47 13 43 6 32 3 1 27 51 14 49 10 12 38 16 25 Millions of dollars Rank in state Dollars 2006 2007 2008 Mingo....................................................... Monongalia............................................. Monroe.................................................... Morgan.................................................... Nicholas.................................................. O hio ......................................................... Pendleton................................................ Pleasants................................................ Pocahontas............................................. P reston................................................... Putnam Raleigh.................................................... Randolph................................................ Ritchie Roane S um mers................................................ Taylor....................................................... Tucker....................................................... Tylei Upshur.................................................... Wayne...................................................... Webster................................................... W etzel...................................................... W irt.......................................................... Wood........................................................ Wyoming................................................. 659 2,821 309 525 658 1,547 214 202 234 752 1,760 2,301 793 262 330 280 374 175 199 571 1001 195 442 109 2,525 559 701 2,964 325 553 713 1,594 228 213 244 807 1,885 2,410 828 272 344 297 394 184 214 602 1066 205 472 115 2,663 581 771 3,127 334 567 750 1,653 230 219 251 854 2,014 2,578 860 289 368 315 418 192 226 636 1,113 217 494 120 2,771 628 24,716 32,475 22,922 32,224 25,237 34,725 27,748 27,020 26,878 24,931 32,312 29,360 27,952 25,226 21,476 21,017 23,188 25,472 21,897 24,321 24,055 20,441 26,576 19,055 29,235 23,458 26,287 33,851 23,929 33,471 27,402 35,958 30,264 28,508 28,393 26,572 34,280 30,653 29,170 26,332 22,776 22,496 24,340 27,008 23,785 25,551 25,705 21,675 28,680 20,017 30,869 24,612 29,255 35,287 24,265 34,381 28,844 37,505 30,770 29,484 29,501 28,154 36,323 32,740 30,290 28,146 24,627 24,187 25,665 28,103 25,428 26,925 26,903 22,847 30,291 21,176 31,985 26,810 W iscon sin ..................................... 198,598 207,201 212,553 35,644 36,990 37,770 152,542 158,792 162,876 37,660 38,929 39,685 46,057 576 462 1,308 432 8,676 474 457 1,686 1,756 876 2,039 453 20,155 2,656 1060 1,197 1,135 3,150 136 3,344 249 1,385 1,200 609 779 167 568 2,651 654 5,298 658 3,617 436 593 863 2,625 4,481 1,224 400 89 33,341 1,179 1,120 1,268 6,139 4,939 214 1,227 1,250 2,162 425 6,931 479 4,909 339 2,816 2,047 489 1,167 48,409 597 486 1,372 457 9,016 515 475 1,763 1,855 940 2,137 472 21,146 2,801 1,109 1,263 1,211 3,275 138 3,538 254 1,475 1,258 646 829 173 606 2,746 49,678 620 499 1,407 466 9,242 513 483 1,817 1,914 953 2,184 483 21,787 2,878 1,144 1,299 1,261 3,347 139 3,649 262 1,504 1,292 655 857 177 621 2,814 719 5,664 720 3,939 494 637 926 2,872 4,788 1,311 431 100 35,182 1,310 1,242 1,319 6,601 5,181 235 1,333 1,350 2,354 455 7,406 521 5,098 366 3,137 2,153 520 1,264 30,276 28,033 28,113 28,641 28,862 36,086 34,388 28,175 38,074 29,580 26,137 37,185 26,748 42,998 30,235 37,831 27,279 26,839 32,638 28,140 33,813 25,344 28,449 33,867 32,500 33,112 26,394 28,856 33,446 24,686 32,845 32,071 32,809 27,221 29,101 29,022 32,443 34,785 28,806 26,769 19,640 35,008 27,662 29,976 34,816 35,694 57,972 29,048 31,058 28,272 31,831 28,695 34,936 26,590 31,064 23,425 35,552 35,447 29,052 28,465 31,795 29,214 29,951 30,109 30,426 37,077 37,493 29,352 39,813 30,933 28,136 38,815 27,946 44,401 31,925 39,910 28,856 28,451 33,617 29,065 35,601 26,097 30,100 35,183 34,671 35,193 27,631 30,562 34,325 25,959 34,027 34,607 34,015 30,394 30,180 30,567 34,096 36,162 30,058 28,186 20,913 36,006 29,045 31,993 36,058 37,017 59,822 30,964 32,477 29,833 33,283 30,532 36,346 27,596 31,730 24,968 37,316 36,385 31,733 30,076 32,611 30,559 30,772 30,813 31,248 37,769 37,767 30,282 40,671 31,755 28,455 39,602 28,774 45,080 32,763 41,069 29,572 29,528 34,076 30,104 36,541 26,908 30,623 35,858 35,339 36,280 28,582 31,220 34,916 27,042 34,465 35,429 35,040 31,241 31,595 31,355 35,598 36,536 31,110 28,950 21,992 36,880 30,153 33,294 36,519 37,693 60,371 31,965 33,151 30,556 34,129 31,721 37,012 28,996 31,826 25,407 38,029 36,604 30,638 30,735 2008 33,578 Per capita personal incom e1 2006 Adams...................................................... Ashland.................................................... Barron...................................................... Bayfield................................................... Brown....................................................... Buffalo...................................................... Burnett.................................................... C alum et.................................................. Chippewa................................................ C la rk........................................................ Columbia................................................. Crawford................................................. Dane........................................................ D odge..................................................... D oor......................................................... Douglas................................................... D unn........................................................ Eau Claire............................................... Florence.................................................. Fond du Lac............................................ Forest....................................................... Grant........................................................ Green....................................................... Green Lake............................................. Iow a......................................................... Iron........................................................... Jackson.................................................... Jefferson................................................. Juneau.................................................... Kewaunee............................................... La C rosse............................................... Lafayette................................................. Langlade................................................. Lincoln..................................................... Manitowoc............................................... Marathon................................................. Marinette................................................. Marquette................................................ Menominee............................................. Milwaukee............................................... Monroe..................................................... O conto.................................................... O neida.................................................... Outagamie.............................................. Ozaukee.................................................. Pepin........................................................ Pierce....................................................... Polk.......................................................... Portage................................................... Price......................................................... Racine...................................................... Richland.................................................. Rock......................................................... Rusk......................................................... St. C roix.................................................. Sauk......................................................... Sawyer..................................................... Shawano................................................. 2007 5,542 706 3,792 480 613 906 2,756 4,701 1,271 419 95 34,285 1,251 1,195 1,305 6,431 5,110 228 1,292 1,318 2,281 442 7,255 502 5,059 360 3,026 2,122 538 1,237 2008 2008 26 5 45 7 28 2 15 24 23 29 4 9 20 30 44 46 40 31 41 33 34 50 19 54 11 36 53 49 48 44 11 12 55 6 40 66 7 63 3 36 5 58 59 31 57 18 70 52 22 25 21 64 46 28 69 29 24 27 45 42 43 23 19 47 61 72 16 56 33 20 13 1 37 35 54 30 41 15 60 39 71 10 17 51 50 56 Comprehensive Revision of Local Area Personal Income May 2010 Table 3. Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 2006-2008— Table Ends Per capita personal income 1 Personal income Area Dollars Millions of dollars Personal income Rank in state 2006 2007 2008 2006 2007 2008 Sheboygan ..................................... Taylor............................................... Trempealeau................................... Vernon ............................................. Vilas................................................. Walworth.......................................... Washburn....................................... Washington..................................... Waukesha........................................ Waupaca.......................................... Waushara....................................... Winnebago..................................... W ood............................................... 4,171 531 811 737 681 3,206 425 5,132 19,315 1,683 629 5,664 2,594 4,365 547 861 786 706 3,345 448 5,395 19,979 1,777 659 5,837 2,734 4,436 555 882 815 720 3,414 473 5,601 20,432 1,820 679 6,020 2,811 36,640 27,392 29,299 25,570 30,923 32,073 25,675 40,537 51,351 32,350 25,473 35,298 35,038 38,247 28,335 31,089 27,107 32,154 33,366 27,041 42,083 52,713 34,143 26,708 36,151 37,038 38,755 28,862 31,854 28,045 33,172 33,958 28,477 43,180 53,636 35,101 27,434 37,139 38,066 W y o m in g ............................... 22,912 24,457 25,892 44,677 46,726 48,580 Metropolitan p o rtio n .................... 7,043 7,296 7,728 45,077 46,054 48,053 Nonm etropolitan p o r tio n ........... Albany.............................................. Big H o rn .......................................... Campbell......................................... 15,870 1079 330 1,729 17,161 1,135 316 1,878 18,164 1,191 340 2,087 44,501 32,927 29,318 44,917 47,018 34,955 27,799 46,412 48,807 35,993 29,724 50,332 2008 8 62 38 67 34 32 65 4 2 26 68 14 9 21 23 5 1. Per capita personal income was computed using Census Bureau midyear population estimates. 2. The personal income level shown for the United States is derived as the sum of the county estimates. It differs from the estimate of personal income in the national income and product accounts because of differences in coverage, in the methodologies used to prepare the estimates, and in the timing of the availability of source data. Area Millions of dollars 2006 Carbon............................................. Converse.......................................... C rook............................................... Fremont............................................ G oshen............................................ Hot S prings..................................... Johnson ........................................... Laramie............................................ Lincoln.............................................. Natrona............................................ Niobrara........................................... Park.. Platte S heridan.......................................... Sublette............................................ Sweetwater..................................... Teton................................................ Uinta................................................. W ashakie........................................ Weston............................................. Per capita personal in com e 1 567 511 262 1,251 387 165 316 3,550 555 3,493 87 1129 291 1,297 394 1,692 2,456 794 305 274 2007 623 528 270 1,341 404 173 338 3,739 661 3,557 86 1,169 303 1,451 495 1,860 2,666 851 331 282 Rank in state Dollars 2008 666 590 290 1,425 431 187 359 3,915 654 3,812 97 1,223 326 1,516 551 1,998 2,669 916 348 300 2006 37,691 40,450 43,066 34,047 32,118 36,552 40,790 41,288 35,298 49,714 38,821 42,138 34,486 47,207 54,962 44,582 124,899 40,470 39,707 41,733 2007 40,475 40,977 42,403 35,887 33,477 38,535 41,714 43,175 40,887 49,526 36,665 42,956 36,174 51,908 63,139 47,315 132,829 42,398 42,387 41,152 2008 42,772 44,458 44,269 37,431 35,412 41,482 42,755 44,613 39,236 52,185 41,066 44,270 39,418 53,020 66,122 50,015 129,956 44,580 44,545 43,239 2008 14 10 12 20 22 16 15 7 19 4 17 11 18 3 2 6 1 8 9 13 3. Virginia combination areas consist of one or two independent cities with populations of less than 100,000 combined with an adjacent county. The county name appears first, followed by the city name(s). Separate estimates for the jurisdictions making up the combination areas are not available. Finding information on BEA’s Web site just got easier... BEA's Web site now includes a powerful new search engine that can help you locate information quickly and efficiently. Its features include the following: Clustered Searching Search Within a Search Advanced Search Search results are automatically grouped into a unique set of meaningful categories that can be further explored. After an initial search, you can locate specific terms within your search results. This feature allows you to search by keywords or exact phrases, sort the results by relevance or by date, and choose the number of results returned. C lu s t e r e d R e s u lts Find in clusters: (Enter Keywords © ► In d u s tr y © .3 ) NIPA. Historical series isi o Find results with all the words with the exact phrase © > Bureau of Economic Analysis iioi with any of the words © » Growth (6) without the words ► Revision. National Income and Product Accounts (8) Language Domains I...................................... | any language [only ► FAQ, National Economic Accounts ( 2 ) Sort ► G lo s s a ry (2 ) Sources ► Expenditures. M easures :■) Return 1200 results ► O th e r T o p ic s i s i Timeout |5 seconds j-j Visit BEA's Web site at www.bea.gov, and find the information you need. jj1 . return results from the domain | by Relevance j I7 BEA Visit BEA’s improved Web site Featuring: • Main pages for the national, industry, regional, and international accounts * Interactive data features * Improved navigation • A -Z index ^ / * J B u rea u of Econom ic A nalysis - M icrosoft I n te r n e t E xplorer Fie Glossary Eek View mm Favorites Took Help '^Search ijJFavotas ^M edla Address "3 iiBEA M H fwi - 4 Links ^C ustom ae Links ^JF ree HotmaS I P K T E v 1^ U .S D epartm ent o f C o m m erce Bureau o f Economic Analysis ■UMAVOf ECONOMICANALYSIS U*. OCMVTMEVTOFC---- ‘------ ■ j i ■ G w e n t re u s e s b Rrisase, date?, far.MRS a Survey of Current GsiSioau Papers mJflterftfifrvg. ,P.$ta U.S. Economic A ccounts S ig n U p f o r E -m ail U p d a te s National International ■ fir g s s .D p m e g lic P /o d jjc t m Balance..of. Payme n ts Personal Incom e and Outlays B T.rattej n .SQflf e .anpl b » QBrisarats.P.rsfits b Fixgri.Ag.sgt; b More ... O.ysryis w. flf.iJis H.5- Econom y; Sum m ary o f m ost popular indicators Service? B M s m a t w nal in vestm e n t Position b Direct In v estm e n t b More ... BftflUafiEl + 3.8% in Q1 2005 (final) [Released: 6 /2 9 /0 5 ] P e r s pnaj, Inc; o m e : + 0.2% in May 2005 [Released-. 6 /3 0 /0 3 ] Regional Industry ! « s.tate.and,local Personal mAimial.ta<Jti5tr.v http:jibes.gov/beahome.html I jqJl'J- X ra.< te. i n . ft p .o r i* . a n d Qftcrftase in thn dftfir.it nf ;.. i 3$ Internet May 2010 D-1 BEA Current and Historical Data A selection of estimates from the national, industry, international, and regional accounts of the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) are presented in this section. BEA’s estimates are not copyrighted and may be reprinted without BEA’s permission. Citing the S urvey of C urrent B usiness and BEA as the source is appreciated. More detailed estimates from BEA’s accounts are available on BEA’s Web site at www.bea.gov. These estimates are available in a variety of formats. In addition, news releases, articles, and other information, including methodologies and working papers, are available. The tables present annual [A], quarterly [Q], and monthly [M] data. National Data A. Selected NIPA tables [A,Q] 1. Domestic product and income.............................. D-2 2. Personal income and outlays................................. D-18 3. Government current receipts and expenditures ...D-22 4. Foreign transactions................................................D-34 5. Saving and investment............................................D-38 6. Income and employment by industry...................D-44 7. Supplemental tables.................................................D-45 B. NIPA-related table B.l Personal income and its disposition [A, M ]......D-48 C. Historical measures [A, Q] C.l GDP and other major NIPA aggregates..............D-49 D. Charts Selected NIPA series.................................................... D-53 Industry Data E. Industry table E. 1 Value added by industry [A]................................ D-59 International Data F. Transactions tables G. Investment tables [A] G.l U.S. international investment position.............. D-66 G.2 USDIA: Selected items...........................................D-67 G.3 Selected financial and operating data of foreign affiliates of U.S. companies............................. D-68 G.4 FDIUS: Selected items............................................D-69 G.5 Selected financial and operating data of U.S. affiliates of foreign companies........................D-70 H. Charts The United States in the international economy..... D-71 Regional Data I. State and regional tables 1.1 Personal income [Q ]................................................ D-72 1.2 Personal income and per capita personal income [A].............................................D-73 1.3 Disposable personal income and per capita disposable personal income [A ]........................ D-74 1.4 Gross domestic product by state [A].....................D-75 J. Local area tables J.l Personal income and per capita personal income by metropolitan area [A] .................................... D—76 J.2 Gross domestic product by metropolitan area for industries [A].................................................. D—81 F.1 U.S. international transactions in goods and services [A, M] ............................................D-60 F.2 U.S. international transactions [A, Q ].................D-61 K. Charts Selected regional estimates............................................D-85 F.3 U.S. international transactions by area [Q]........ D-62 F.4 Private services transactions [A].......................... D-65 Appendixes A. Additional information about the NIPA estimates Statistical conventions................................................... D-87 Reconciliation table [A, Q ]...........................................D-88 B. Suggested reading.................................................. D-89 D-2 May 2010 National Data A. Selected NIPA Tables The selected set of NIPA tables presents the most recent estimates of gross domestic product (GDP) and its components, which were released on April 30, 2010. These estimates include the “advance” estimates for the first quarter of 2010. The selected set presents quarterly estimates that are updated monthly. Annual estimates are presented in most of the tables. The GDP news release is available on BEA’s Web site within minutes after the release. To receive an e-mail noti fication of the release, go to www.bea.gov and subscribe. The “Selected NIPA Tables” are available later that day. 1. Domestic Product and Income Table 1.1.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Gross Domestic Product Table 1.1.2. Contributions to Percent Change in Real Gross Domestic Product [Percent] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 2010 III IV Gross dom estic p ro d u c t........ 1 0.4 -2 .4 -6 .4 -0 .7 2.2 5.6 3.2 Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s................................. Goods.............................................. Durable goods........................... Nondurable goods..................... S ervices.......................................... 2 3 4 5 6 -0.2 -2.1 -4 .5 -0 .8 0.7 -0 .6 -1 .9 -3 .9 -1 .0 0.1 0.6 2.5 3.9 1.9 -0 .3 -0.9 -3.1 -5 .6 -1 .9 0.2 2.8 7.2 20.4 1.5 0.8 1.6 2.8 0.4 4.0 1.0 3.6 6.2 11.3 3.9 2.4 G ross private dom estic investm ent..................................... Fixed investment............................ Nonresidential........................... Structures............................... Equipment and software...... Residential.................................. Change in private inventories....... / 8 9 10 11 12 13 -7 .3 -5.1 1.6 10.3 -2 .6 -22.9 -23 .2 -18 .3 -17 .8 -19 .8 -16.6 -20.5 -50.5 -39.0 -39.2 -43.6 -36.4 -38.2 -23.7 -12.5 -9 .6 -1 7 .3 -4.9 -23.3 5.0 -1 .3 -5 .9 -18.4 1.5 18.9 46.1 5.0 5.3 -18.0 19.0 3.8 14.8 0.7 4.1 -14 .0 13.4 -10.9 Net exports o f goods and services E xports............................................ Goods.......................................... S ervices..................................... Im ports............................................ Goods.......................................... S ervices..................................... 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Government c o nsum ption expenditures and gross investm ent..................................... Federal............................................ National defense........................ Nondefense................................ State and local................................ 21 22 23 24 25 Line .......... .......... ........... .......... .......... ........... .......... -9 .6 -12.2 -13.9 -16 .0 -3 .6 -29.9 -36.9 -13.6 -36.4 -41.0 -11.5 -4.1 -6 .3 0.1 -14.7 -16.5 -7 .5 17.8 24.6 5.6 21.3 25.1 7.0 22.8 34.1 2.6 15.8 20.3 -1.9 5.8 6.7 3.8 8.9 9.0 8.7 3.1 7.7 7.8 7.3 0.5 1.8 5.2 5.4 4.8 -0 .2 -2 .6 -4 .3 -5.1 -2 .5 -1 .5 6.7 11.4 14.0 6.1 3.9 2.6 8.0 8.4 7.0 -0 .6 -1 .3 0.0 -3 .6 8.3 -2.2 -1 .8 1.4 1.2 1.7 -3 .8 -4 A 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Percent change at annual rate: Gross dom estic p ro d u c t........ 5.4 5.9 4.2 -3 .2 -3 .9 0.7 2008 I 1 0.4 -2 .4 -6.4 -0 .7 2.2 5.6 3.2 2 Percentage poin ts at annual rates: Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s ................................. G oods.............................................. Durable goo ds........................... Nondurable g oo d s..................... Services........................................... 3 4 5 6 -0.17 -0.50 -0.36 -0.13 0.32 -0.42 -0.46 -0.30 -0.16 0.04 0.44 0.56 0.28 0.29 -0.13 -0.62 -0.71 -0.41 -0.29 0.09 1.96 1.59 1.36 0.23 0.37 1.16 0.66 0.03 0.63 0.49 2.55 1.40 0.79 0.61 1.15 Gross private dom estic investm en t..................................... Fixed investment............................ Nonresidential............................ Structures............................... Equipment and software...... Residential.................................. Change in private inventories...... 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 -1.18 -0.81 0.19 0.39 -0.20 -1.00 -0.37 -3.45 -2 .74 -2.08 -0.83 -1.25 -0.66 -0.71 -8.98 -6.62 -5.29 -2.28 -3.01 -1.33 -2.36 -3.10 -1.68 -1.01 -0.69 -0.32 -0.67 -1.42 0.54 -0.15 -0.59 -0.68 0.10 0.43 0.69 4.39 0.61 0.51 -0.62 1.13 0.10 3.79 1.67 0.10 0.38 -0.44 0.83 -0.29 1.57 Net e xports o f g oods and services E xports............................................ G oods.......................................... Services...................................... Imports............................................. G oods.......................................... Services...................................... 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 1.20 0.64 0.48 0.16 0.56 0.58 -0.02 1.07 -1.18 -1.02 -0.16 2.24 2.15 0.10 2.64 -3.95 -3.41 -0.54 6.58 6.25 0.34 1.65 -0.45 -0.45 0.00 2.09 1.89 0.21 -0.81 1.78 1.58 0.20 -2.59 -2.41 -0.18 0.27 2.36 2.26 0.10 -2.09 -2.14 0.05 -0.61 0.66 0.53 0.14 -1 .28 -1.05 -0.23 G overnment co nsum ption expenditures and gross in vestm en t..................................... Federal............................................. National defense........................ Nondefense................................ State and local................................ 21 22 23 24 25 0.59 0.53 0.37 0.16 0.06 0.37 0.39 0.28 0.11 -0.02 -0.52 -0.33 -0.27 -0.06 -0.19 1.33 0.85 0.70 0.15 0.48 0.55 0.62 0.45 0.17 -0.08 -0.26 0.01 -0.20 0.21 -0.27 -0.37 0.11 0.07 0.04 -0.48 May 2010 D-3 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Table 1.1.3. Real Gross Domestic Product, Quantity Indexes Table 1.1.4. Price Indexes for Gross Domestic Product [Index numbers, 2005=100] [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Seasonally adjusted Line G ross dom estic product Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s....................... Goods.................................... Durable goods.................. Nondurable goods........... S ervices................................ G ross private d om estic investm ent........................... Fixed investment................... Nonresidential.................. Structures..................... Equipment and software.................... Residential........................ Change in private 1 2008 105.331 2009 102.761 2009 Line 2010 2008 II III IV I 109.745 109.661 109.656 109.763 109.902 110.136 109.031 106.150 95.537 112.188 110.582 109.241 103.540 94.009 108.998 112.252 108.449 102.186 94.326 106.739 111.749 108.814 102.864 94.407 107.736 111.954 109.510 104.216 93.660 110.227 112.312 110.190 104.895 93.642 111.291 112.992 110.607 105.410 92.780 112.566 113.358 7 8 9 10 107.355 107.551 107.897 125.207 106.502 106.132 107.524 122.811 106.245 107.668 109.154 127.092 107.019 106.463 107.993 123.706 105.465 105.265 106.656 120.451 105.278 105.130 106.294 119.994 104.931 104.834 105.826 120.272 11 12 101.455 105.779 102.008 100.716 102.450 101.915 102.304 100.554 101.802 99.863 101.478 100.532 100.724 100.863 112.389 112.366 112.445 119.559 120.323 115.682 106.250 104.916 109.218 107.037 106.172 110.911 105.265 103.588 108.910 103.746 102.402 109.655 105.284 104.076 107.997 104.821 103.777 109.471 106.473 105.261 109.199 107.688 106.974 110.953 107.978 106.740 110.763 111.891 111.537 113.564 108.965 107.835 111.515 114.346 114.402 114.162 114.502 110.938 111.913 108.935 116.642 114.281 111.513 112.086 110.358 115.896 113.924 111.084 111.584 110.085 115.587 114.051 111.214 111.664 110.320 115.713 114.312 111.601 112.195 110.401 115.889 114.837 112.151 112.901 110.625 116.397 115.985 113.319 114.276 111.364 117.529 II III IV I 102.271 102.082 102.648 104.045 104.876 Gross dom estic product 1 108.481 Personal consum ption e x p e n d itu re s ....................... G oods.................................... Durable goods................. Nondurable g oo d s ........... Services................................. 2 3 4 5 6 105.351 104.296 103.692 104.513 105.883 104.718 102.285 99.626 103.482 105.966 104.425 101.817 98.345 103.405 105.761 104.196 101.023 96.947 102.911 105.809 104.917 102.789 101.561 103.295 106.014 105.335 103.512 101.651 104.318 106.281 106.278 105.075 104.405 105.324 106.916 / 8 9 10 91.585 95.106 116.502 138.392 70.326 77.660 95.819 110.966 71.746 79.514 98.061 119.243 67.059 76.895 95.623 113.716 67.874 76.647 94.183 108.074 74.625 77.585 95.410 102.832 77.240 77.730 96.364 99.018 11 12 107.332 58.213 89.462 46.288 89.143 47.478 88.036 44.436 88.370 46.403 92.300 46.833 95.255 45.499 Gross private dom estic in vestm en t........................... Fixed investment................... Nonresidential.................. Structures..................... Equipment and software.................... Residential........................ Change in private 2010 I I 2 3 4 5 6 2009 2009 13 13 Net e xpo rts o f g oods and s e rv ic e s ................................ Exports.................................. Goods................................ S ervices........................... Im ports.................................. Goods................................ S ervices........................... 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 124.842 124.436 125.759 104.721 103.472 111.478 G overnm ent consu m p tion e xpenditures and gross investm ent........................... Federal.................................. National defense.............. Nondefense...................... State and local...................... 21 22 23 24 25 106.252 111.362 111.939 110.153 103.355 Net exports o f goods and 112.823 109.268 120.661 90.146 86.879 107.455 108.215 117.154 117.992 115.394 103.172 109.922 105.520 119.619 89.804 86.326 108.238 106.639 113.693 114.219 112.576 102.660 108.766 103.817 119.649 86.292 82.520 106.160 108.386 116.801 118.014 114.259 103.640 113.315 109.695 121.293 90.554 87.270 107.962 119.289 118.040 122.082 93.933 91.400 107.458 109.097 119.057 120.419 116.203 103.479 108.737 119.067 119.317 118.536 102.909 120.976 119.980 123.217 95.958 93.380 109.718 E xports.................................. G oods................................ Services............................ Imports................................... Goods................................ Services............................ 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 108.245 119.470 119.680 119.025 101.912 G overnment consum ption expenditures and gross in vestm en t........................... Federal................................... National defense.............. Nondefense...................... State and local...................... 21 22 23 24 25 Table 1.1.5. Gross Domestic Product Table 1.1.6. Real Gross Domestic Product, Chained Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I Gross dom estic product Personal consum ption expe nd itu re s....................... G oods.................................... Durable goods.................. Nondurable goods........... S ervices................................ Gross private dom estic investm ent........................... Fixed investment.................. Nonresidential.................. Structures..................... Equipment and software.................... Residential........................ Change in private inventories........................ Net e xpo rts o f g oods and s e rv ic e s ................................ Exports.................................. Goods................................ Services........................... Im ports.................................. Goods................................ Services........................... G overnm ent c o nsum ption expenditures and gross investm ent........................... Federal.................................. National defense.............. Nondefense...................... State and local...................... II 1 14,441.4 14,256.3 14,178.0 14,151.2 14,242.1 2 10,129.9 10,089.1 3 3,403.2 3,255.2 4 1,095.2 1,035.0 5 2,308.0 2,220.2 6 6,726.8 6,833.9 Line 2010 III IV 2008 2009 14,453.8 14,601.4 Gross dom estic product 9,987.7 3,197.7 1,025.2 2,172.4 6,790.0 9,999.3 10,132.9 10,236.4 10,367.1 3,193.8 3,292.3 3,337.1 3,404.1 1,052.0 1,070.6 1,011.5 1,051.3 2,182.2 2,241.0 2,285.1 2,333.5 6,805.6 6,840.6 6,899.3 6,963.0 Personal consum ption e x p e n d itu re s ....................... G oods.................................... Durable goo ds................. Nondurable g oo d s ........... Services................................. 2010 2009 I I II III IV I 1 13,312.2 12,987.4 12,925.4 12,901.5 12,973.0 13,149.5 13,254.7 2 3 4 5 6 9,290.9 3,206.0 1,146.3 2,057.3 6,083.1 9,235.1 3,144.2 1,101.4 2,037.0 6,087.8 9,209.2 3,129.8 1,087.2 2,035.5 6,076.0 9,189.0 3,105.4 1,071.7 2,025.7 6,078.8 9,252.6 3,159.6 1,122.7 2,033.3 6,090.6 9,289.5 3,181.9 1,123.7 2,053.4 6,105.9 9,372.7 3,229.9 1,154.2 2,073.2 6,142.4 7 8 9 10 1,989.4 2,018.4 1,569.7 486.8 1,527.6 1,648.2 1,291.0 390.3 1,558.5 1,687.5 1,321.2 419.4 1,456.7 1,631.9 1,288.4 400.0 1,474.4 1,626.7 1,269.0 380.2 1,621.0 1,646.6 1,285.5 361.7 1,677.8 1,649.6 1,298.3 348.3 11 12 1,068.6 451.1 890.7 358.7 887.5 367.9 876.5 344.4 879.8 359.6 918.9 362.9 948.3 352.6 7 8 9 10 2,136.1 2,170.8 1,693.6 609.5 1,628.8 1,749.7 1,388.8 480.0 1,689.9 1,817.2 1,442.6 533.1 1,561.5 1,737.7 1,391.8 494.8 1,556.1 1,712.6 1,353.9 457.9 1,707.8 1,731.4 1,366.9 434.1 1,762.9 1,729.7 1,374.4 418.9 11 12 1,084.1 477.2 908.8 361.0 909.5 374.6 897.0 345.9 895.9 358.8 932.8 364.5 955.5 355.3 13 -34.8 -120.9 -127.4 -176.2 -156.5 -23.6 33.2 G ross private dom estic in vestm en t........................... Fixed investment................... Nonresidential.................. Structures..................... Equipment and software.................... Residential........................ Change in private inventories........................ 13 -25.9 -108.2 -113.9 -160.2 -139.2 -19.7 31.1 -503.8 1,719.5 1,171.2 548.3 2,223.3 1,822.7 400.6 Net exports o f g oods and s e rv ic e s ................................ E xports.................................. G oods................................ Services............................ Imports................................... Goods................................ Services............................ 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 -494.3 1,629.3 1,127.5 501.7 2,123.5 1,767.3 356.5 -355.6 1,472.4 990.1 481.4 1,828.0 1,483.9 343.7 -386.5 1,434.5 956.1 477.2 1,821.0 1,474.4 346.2 -330.4 1,419.5 940.7 477.4 1,749.8 1,409.4 339.5 -357.4 1,478.8 993.9 483.9 1,836.2 1,490.6 345.3 -348.0 1,556.8 1,069.5 487.1 1,904.8 1,561.1 343.7 -367.0 1,578.8 1,087.1 491.6 1,945.8 1,594.9 350.9 G overnm ent c o nsum ption expenditures and gross in vestm en t........................... Federal................................... National defense.............. Nondefense...................... State and local...................... Residual..................................... 21 22 23 24 25 26 2,518.1 975.9 659.4 316.4 1,543.7 20.0 2,564.6 1,026.6 695.0 331.5 1,541.0 18.3 2,527.2 996.3 672.8 323.4 1,533.3 23.6 2,568.6 1,023.5 695.2 328.2 1,548.0 24.0 2,585.5 1,043.3 709.3 333.8 1,545.5 15.5 2,576.9 1,043.4 702.8 340.5 1,537.0 10.6 2,565.3 1,046.9 705.0 341.9 1,522.1 2.7 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 -707.8 1,831.1 1,266.9 564.2 2,538.9 2,126.4 412.4 2,883.2 1,082.6 737.9 344.7 1,800.6 -392.4 1,564.2 1,038.4 525.9 1,956.6 1,575.4 381.2 2,930.7 1,144.8 779.0 365.8 1,785.9 -378.5 1,509.3 989.5 519.8 1,887.9 1,508.2 379.6 2,879.0 1,106.7 750.7 356.0 1,772.3 -339.1 1,493.7 978.1 515.6 1,832.8 1,461.1 371.7 2,929.4 1,138.3 776.2 362.1 1,791.2 -402.2 1,573.8 1,045.2 528.5 1,976.0 1,592.8 383.1 2,955.4 1,164.3 795.8 368.5 1,791.1 -449.5 1,680.1 1,140.6 539.6 2,129.7 1,739.4 390.3 2,959.2 1,170.1 793.5 376.7 1,789.0 2,975.2 1,186.3 805.6 380.7 1,788.9 Note. Chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 currentdollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines. D-4 National Data Table 1.1.7. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Prices for Gross Domestic Product May 2010 Table 1.1.8. Contributions to Percent Change in the Gross Domestic Product Price Index [Percent] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 2010 III IV Line 2009 I 1 2.1 1.2 1.9 0.0 0.4 0.5 0.9 Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s....................... Goods.................................... Durable goods................. Nondurable goods........... S ervices................................ 2 3 4 5 6 3.3 3.3 -1 .2 5.6 3.4 0.2 -2.5 -1 .6 -2 .8 1.5 -1 .5 -6.0 -1 .7 -7 .9 0.7 1.4 2.7 0.3 3.8 0.7 2.6 5.4 -3.1 9.6 1.3 2.5 2.6 -0.1 3.9 2.4 1.5 2.0 -3 .6 4.7 1.3 7 8 9 10 0.6 0.8 1.6 3.2 -0 .8 -1 .3 -0 .3 -1 .9 -1 .8 -2.0 -1 .3 -3 .5 -4.5 -4 .4 -4.2 -10.2 -5 .7 -4 .4 -4 .9 -10.1 -0 .7 -0 .5 -1 .4 -1 .5 -1 .3 -1.1 -1 .7 0.9 11 12 0.7 -1.6 0.5 -4 .8 0.1 -4 .9 -0 .6 -5.2 -1.9 -2 .7 -1 .3 2.7 -2 .9 1.3 -12.6 -14.8 -8.1 -28 .3 -31.6 -12.1 o .i 1.9 -3 .3 4.2 5.5 -0 .7 4.6 4.6 4.5 11.4 12.9 5.5 5.8 5.7 5.9 16.5 18.2 9.8 3.7 4.2 2.7 9.1 10.7 2.1 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 4.9 5.0 4.8 10.7 11.4 7.2 -5 .5 -6 .6 -2.9 -1 0.5 -11.8 -4.1 G overnment co nsum ption e xpenditures and gross investm ent........................... Federal.................................. National defense.............. Nondefense...................... State and local...................... 21 22 23 24 25 4.5 3.0 3.3 2.1 5.4 -0 .2 0.5 0.2 1.3 -0.6 -1.1 1.7 0.9 3.3 -2.8 0.4 0.5 0.3 0.9 0.4 0.9 1.4 1.9 0.3 0.6 1.8 2.0 2.5 0.8 1.8 Addendum : Gross national product........ 26 2.1 1.2 1.8 0.0 0.4 0.5 4.1 4.2 5.0 2.7 3.9 II 2010 III IV 1 2.1 1.2 1.9 0.0 0.4 0.5 0.9 Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s ................................. G oods.............................................. Durable goods........................... Nondurable g oo ds..................... Services........................................... 2 3 4 5 6 2.33 0.77 -0 .10 0.87 1.55 0.13 -0.57 -0.12 -0.45 0.70 -1.04 -1.40 -0.13 -1.27 0.36 0.95 0.60 0.02 0.57 0.35 1.81 1.19 -0.23 1.42 0.62 1.76 0.60 -0.01 0.61 1.16 1.07 0.45 -0.27 0.73 0.62 G ross private dom estic in vestm en t..................................... Fixed investment............................ Nonresidential............................ Structures............................... Equipment and software...... Residential.................................. Change in private inventories....... 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 0.10 0.12 0.19 0.13 0.06 -0.06 -0.02 -0.04 -0.16 -0.01 -0.06 0.04 -0.15 0.12 -0.22 -0.28 -0.14 -0.15 0.01 -0.14 0.05 -0.52 -0.56 -0.43 -0.39 -0 .04 -0.14 0.04 -0.64 -0.55 -0.48 -0.36 -0.12 -0.07 -0.09 -0.08 -0.06 -0.13 -0.05 -0.08 0.07 -0.02 -0.16 -0.13 -0 .17 0.03 -0.19 0.03 -0.02 Net exports o f goods and services E xports............................................ Goods.......................................... Services...................................... Imports............................................. Goods.......................................... Services...................................... 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 -1.17 0.59 0.42 0.18 -1.76 -1.57 -0.20 1.12 -0.67 -0.56 -0.11 1.79 1.67 0.12 3.35 -1.52 -1.20 -0.32 4.87 4.51 0.35 -0.53 0.01 0.13 -0.12 -0.54 -0.56 0.02 -0.96 0.49 0.32 0.16 -1.45 -1.30 -0.14 -1.56 0.64 0.42 0.21 -2.19 -1.94 -0.25 -0.87 0.43 0.33 0.10 -1.30 -1.24 -0.06 Government consum ption expenditures and gross in vestm en t..................................... Federal............................................. National defense........................ Nondefense................................ State and local................................ 21 22 23 24 25 0.87 0.21 0.16 0.05 0.66 -0.04 0.04 0.01 0.03 -0.08 -0.22 0.13 0.05 0.08 -0.35 0.09 0.04 0.02 0.02 0.05 0.19 0.11 0.11 0.01 0.08 0.38 0.16 0.14 0.02 0.22 0.81 0.34 0.27 0.07 0.48 Percentage p oints at annual rates: Table 1.1.9. Implicit Price Deflators for Gross Domestic Product Table 1.1.10. Percentage Shares of Gross Domestic Product [Index numbers, 2005=100] [Percent] Seasonally adjusted 2009 Line Line 2008 2009 2009 II III IV I Gross dom estic product 1 108.483 109.770 109.691 109.686 109.783 109.919 110.160 Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s ....................... Goods.................................... Durable goods.................. Nondurable goods........... S ervices................................ 2 3 4 5 6 109.031 106.150 95.537 112.188 110.582 109.247 103.532 93.977 108.994 112.254 108.453 102.169 94.301 106.729 111.750 108.818 102.847 94.382 107.726 111.955 109.514 104.199 93.635 110.217 112.314 110.193 104.878 93.617 111.281 112.994 110.610 105.393 92.755 112.556 113.359 7 8 9 10 107.370 107.550 107.897 125.207 106.623 106.163 107.575 122.968 108.430 107.689 109.191 127.097 107.198 106.484 108.030 123.711 105.542 105.285 106.692 120.456 105.353 105.150 106.331 119.999 105.069 104.855 105.862 120.277 11 12 101.455 105.778 102.038 100.626 102.485 101.815 102.339 100.455 101.837 99.765 101.513 100.434 100.758 100.764 G ross private dom estic investm ent........................... Fixed investment.................. Nonresidential................. Structures..................... Equipment and software.................... Residential........................ Change in private 13 Net e xpo rts o f g oods and se rv ic e s ................................ Exports.................................. Goods................................ S ervices........................... Im ports.................................. Goods................................ Services........................... 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 112.389 112.366 112.445 119.559 120.323 115.682 106.237 104.878 109.240 107.036 106.167 110.926 105.213 103.492 108.925 103.669 102.293 109.668 105.231 103.980 108.011 104.744 103.667 109.485 106.420 105.163 109.214 107.609 106.860 110.967 107.923 106.641 110.777 111.808 111.419 113.578 108.911 107.735 111.530 114.261 114.281 114.176 G overnment co nsum ption expenditures and gross investm ent........................... Federal.................................. National defense.............. Nondefense...................... State and local...................... 21 22 23 24 25 114.502 110.938 111.913 108.934 116.642 114.278 111.514 112.086 110.357 115.895 113.919 111.079 111.576 110.080 115.586 114.046 111.209 111.657 110.315 115.712 114.307 111.596 112.188 110.397 115.888 114.832 112.146 112.894 110.620 116.396 115.980 113.314 114.269 111.359 117.528 A ddendum : Gross national product........ 26 108.486 109.764 109.678 109.679 109.780 109.917 2010 2009 2010 I I Percent change at annual rate: G ross dom estic p ro d u c t........ Net exports o f g oods and se rv ic e s ................................ Exports.................................. Goods................................ Services........................... Im ports.................................. Goods................................ S ervices........................... 2009 I G ross dom estic product Gross private dom estic investm ent........................... Fixed investment................... Nonresidential.................. Structures..................... Equipment and software.................... Residential........................ Change in private inventories........................ 2008 I II III IV I Gross dom estic p ro d u c t........ 1 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 Personal consum ption e x p e n d itu re s ................................. G oods.............................................. Durable goo ds........................... Nondurable g oo d s ..................... Services........................................... 2 3 4 5 6 70.1 23.6 7.6 16.0 46.6 70.8 22.8 7.3 15.6 47.9 70.4 22.6 7.2 15.3 47.9 70.7 22.6 7.1 15.4 48.1 71.1 23.1 7.4 15.7 48.0 70.8 23.1 7.3 15.8 47.7 71.0 23.3 7.3 16.0 47.7 Gross private dom estic in vestm en t..................................... Fixed investment............................ Nonresidential............................ Structures............................... Equipment and software...... Residential.................................. Change in private inventories....... 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14.8 15.0 11.7 4.2 7.5 3.3 -0.2 11.4 12.3 9.7 3.4 6.4 2.5 -0.8 11.9 12.8 10.2 3.8 6.4 2.6 -0.9 11.0 12.3 9.8 3.5 6.3 2.4 -1.2 10.9 12.0 9.5 3.2 6.3 2.5 -1.1 11.8 12.0 9.5 3.0 6.5 2.5 -0.2 12.1 11.8 9.4 2.9 6.5 2.4 0.2 Net exports o f goods and services E xports............................................ Goods.......................................... Services...................................... Imports............................................. Goods.......................................... Services...................................... 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 -4 .9 12.7 8.8 3.9 17.6 14.7 2.9 -2 .8 11.0 7.3 3.7 13.7 11.1 2.7 -2.7 10.6 7.0 3.7 13.3 10.6 2.7 -2 .4 10.6 6.9 3.6 13.0 10.3 2.6 -2 .8 11.1 7.3 3.7 13.9 11.2 2.7 -3.1 11.6 7.9 3.7 14.7 12.0 2.7 -3.5 11.8 8.0 3.8 15.2 12.5 2.7 G overnm ent c o nsum ption expenditures and gross in vestm en t..................................... Federal............................................. National defense........................ Nondefense................................ State and local................................ 21 22 23 24 25 20.0 7.5 5.1 2.4 12.5 20.6 8.0 5.5 2.6 12.5 20.3 7.8 5.3 2.5 12.5 20.7 8.0 5.5 2.6 12.7 20.8 8.2 5.6 2.6 12.6 20.5 8.1 5.5 2.6 12.4 20.4 8.1 5.5 2.6 12.3 May 2010 D-5 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin e ss Table 1.2.2. Contributions to Percent Change in Real Gross Domestic Product by Major Type of Product Table 1.2.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Gross Domestic Product by Major Type of Product [Percent] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2010 2009 3.2 G ross dom estic p ro d u c t...... Final sales of domestic product............................. Change in private inventories........................ 1.6 G o o d s ................................................ Final sa les................................ Change in private inventories Durable g oods.............................. Final sa les................................ Change in private inventories Nondurable g oods....................... Final sa les................................ Change in private inventories -3 .2 2.2 23.6 7.0 13.0 6.7 Line 2008 2009 2009 2010 I II III IV -0 .7 2.2 I Percent change at annual rate: 0.4 -2 .4 -6 .4 2 3 0.81 -0.37 -1.73 -0.71 -4.07 -2.36 0.68 -1.42 1.54 0.69 1.77 3.79 1.66 1.57 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 0.11 0.48 -0.37 0.20 0.18 0.02 -0.09 0.30 -0.39 -1.28 -0.56 -0.71 -1.52 -0.81 -0.71 0.24 0.24 0.00 -2.19 0.17 -2.36 -4.55 -0.84 -3.71 2.36 1.01 1.35 -0.84 0.58 -1.42 -0.41 -0.22 -0.19 -0.43 0.80 -1.23 1.60 0.91 0.69 1.64 0.76 0.88 -0.04 0.15 -0.19 5.68 1.89 3.79 2.52 0.34 2.18 3.16 1.55 1.61 3.33 1.75 1.57 2.39 1.31 1.08 0.94 0.44 0.50 G ross dom estic p ro d u c t........ 5.6 3.2 1 Percentage poin ts a t annual rates: Final sales of domestic product................................ Change in private inventories Services 2........................................ 1.5 0.4 -0.9 1.1 1.5 G o o d s ................................................. Final sales................................... Change in private inventories Durable goo ds................................ Final sales................................... Change in private inventories 1 Nondurable goo ds......................... Final sales................................... Change in private inventories 1 S tru c tu re s ....................................... -5.9 -15.1 -34.0 -10.7 -13.7 Services 2 ........................................... 13 0.94 0.28 -0.53 0.96 0.70 0.76 1.02 S tructu re s........................................... 14 -0.61 -1.44 -3.70 -0.86 -0.06 -0.89 -1.11 15 -0.52 -0.53 -1.69 0.19 1.45 0.45 0.52 16 17 0.96 0.12 -1.91 0.01 -4.74 0.06 -0.93 -0.04 0.78 -0.08 5.11 0.01 2.71 0.19 18 0.32 -2.45 -6.49 -0.69 2.32 5.55 3.05 Addenda: Motor vehicle output..................... Gross domestic product excluding motor vehicle output Final sales of computers 3........... Gross domestic product excluding final sales of computers.................................. Gross domestic purchases excluding final sales of computers to domestic purchasers................................. -10.9 -5 .8 -18.4 19 -30.1 -6.5 -3.2 - 1.6 13.8 5.8 20.9 2.3 19.5 10.2 20.5 -3.2 -0.3 8.2 6.2 1.1 26.4 12.0 7.1 3.3 -24.6 13.3 1.0 -4.9 21.3 11.2 131.1 25.2 0.3 -2.5 -6.5 -0.7 - 0.8 -3.4 - 8.6 -2.4 28.5 2.8 0.8 -13.9 44.2 2.3 5.6 3.1 2.9 4.7 3.6 1. Estimates for durable goods and nondurable goods for 1996 and earlier periods are based on the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC); later estimates for these industries are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). 2. Includes government consumption expenditures, which are for services (such as education and national defense) produced by government. In current dollars, these services are valued at their cost of production. 3. Some components of final sales of computers include computer parts. Addenda: Motor vehicle output...................... Gross domestic product excluding motor vehicle output.................. Final sales of computers 3............ Gross domestic product excluding final sales of computers............ 1. Estimates for durable goods and nondurable goods for 1996 and earlier periods are based on the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC); later estimates for these industries are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). 2. Includes government consumption expenditures, which are for services (such as education and national defense) produced by government. In current dollars, these services are valued at their cost of production. 3. Some components of final sales of computers include computer parts. Table 1.2.3. Real Gross Domestic Product by Major Type of Product, Quantity Indexes Table 1.2.4. Price Indexes for Gross Domestic Product by Major Type of Product [Index numbers, 2005=100] [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2009 I G ross dom estic p ro d u c t....... Final sales of domestic product............................. Change in private 1 105.331 102.761 102.271 II Seasonally adjusted 2010 III IV 2 105.980 104.149 103.713 103.888 104.280 104.714 105.142 4 109.567 104.261 102.693 101.854 103.433 109.063 112.457 5 112.169 109.761 108.393 108.981 109.893 111.779 113.597 G o o d s ................................................ Final sa les................................. Change in private inventories Durable goods............................... Final sa les................................. Change in private inventories 1 Nondurable goods........................ Final sa les................................. Change in private inventories 1 7 8 q 10 11 1? Services 2.......................................... 13 106.571 S tru c tu re s ......................................... 14 88.410 75.083 77.143 75.197 75.044 72.949 70.314 15 79.505 59.924 51.533 53.168 65.605 69.391 73.874 fi 111.888 99.733 97.531 96.739 99.908 104.755 109.520 113.514 106.929 106.357 105.925 107.416 108.016 110.671 106.918 108.985 108.081 107.193 107.108 113.559 115.511 110.586 112.697 110.486 112.153 112.458 115.693 116.628 107.035 106.527 106.917 107.198 107.499 107.913 16 106.149 104.081 103.833 103.589 103.790 105.112 105.829 17 185.528 187.474 193.669 190.016 183.043 183.168 200.717 1b 104.959 102.375 101.866 101.688 102.275 103.673 104.458 19 102.808 99.298 99.119 98.511 99.209 100.354 101.236 1. Estimates for durable goods and nondurable goods for 1996 and earlier periods are based on the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC); later estimates for these industries are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). 2. Includes government consumption expenditures, which are for services (such as education and national defense) produced by government. In current dollars, these services are valued at their cost of production. 3. Some components of final sales of computers include computer parts. 2008 2009 I 102.082 102.648 104.045 104.876 '■i Addenda: Motor vehicle output..................... Gross domestic product excluding motor vehicle output Final sales of com puters3........... Gross domestic product excluding final sales of computers.................................. Gross domestic purchases excluding final sales of computers to domestic purchasers................................. Line 2009 I G ross dom estic p ro d u c t........ Final sales of domestic product................................ Change in private inventories II 2010 III IV I 1 108.481 109.745 109.661 109.656 109.763 109.902 110.136 2 108.507 109.655 109.566 109.550 109.681 109.823 110.063 3 G o o d s ................................................. Final sales................................... Change in private inventories... Durable goo ds................................ Final sales................................... Change in private inventories 1 Nondurable goo ds ......................... Final sales................................... Change in private inventories 1 7 96.530 96.268 96.634 96.750 95.907 95.782 94.853 8 96.454 96.214 96.525 96.592 95.908 95.829 94.914 q 10 102.946 109.085 108.950 109.187 110.075 108.130 107.816 11 103.097 108.201 108.073 108.266 109.190 107.277 106.997 1? Services 2........................................... 13 111.432 112.505 112.000 112.187 112.593 113.240 113.864 S tru ctu re s........................................... 14 115.500 113.409 115.965 113.815 111.920 111.938 112.249 Addenda: Motor vehicle o utp ut...................... Gross domestic product excluding motor vehicle output.................. Final sales of computers 3............ Gross domestic product excluding final sales of computers............ 4 5 fi 15 99.432 102.099 102.224 102.397 102.381 101.395 100.758 99.456 101.676 101.781 101.907 101.980 101.038 100.424 96.404 98.632 95.916 98.366 99.455 100.790 100.636 16 108.860 110.123 110.086 110.039 110.127 110.239 110.483 17 59.633 51.304 54.774 52.463 49.218 48.762 47.687 18 108.888 110.260 110.134 110.157 110.303 110.447 110.697 1. Estimates for durable goods and nondurable goods for 1996 and earlier periods are based on the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC); later estimates for these industries are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). 2. Includes government consumption expenditures, which are for services (such as education and national defense) produced by government. In current dollars, these services are valued at their cost of production. 3. Some components of final sales of computers include computer parts. D-6 National Data May 2010 Table 1.2.5. Gross Domestic Product by Major Type of Product Table 1.2.6. Real Gross Domestic Product by Major Type of Product, Chained Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I Gross dom estic product Final sales of domestic product..................... Change in private inventories............... II Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 2010 III IV 2008 2009 2009 I 1 14,441.4 14,256.3 14,178.0 14,151.2 14,242.1 14,453.8 14,601.4 2 14,476.2 14,377.2 14,305.3 14,327.4 14,398.7 14,477.4 14,568.3 G o o d s ....................................... Final sa les........................ Change in private inventories.................... Durable goods...................... Final sa les........................ Change in private inventories 1 ................ Nondurable goods............... Final sa les........................ Change in private inventories 1................ Line I 3 -34.8 -120.9 -127.4 -176.2 -156.5 -23.6 33.2 4 5 3,783.8 3,818.6 3,699.4 3,820.3 3,649.3 3,776.7 3,625.7 3,801.9 3,679.9 3,836.4 3,842.6 3,866.2 3,938.4 3,905.2 6 7 8 -34.8 2,042.3 2,032.0 -120.9 1,815.3 1,909.2 -127.4 1,782.4 1,905.2 -176.2 1,769.8 1,898.8 -156.5 1,811.6 1,911.9 -23.6 1,897.2 1,921.0 33.2 1,964.3 1,949.4 9 10 11 10.3 1,741.5 1,786.6 -93.9 1,884.1 1,911.1 -122.7 1,866.8 1,871.5 -129.0 1,855.9 1,903.1 -100.2 1,868.2 1,924.6 -23.8 1,945.4 1,945.2 14.9 1,974.1 1,955.8 G ross d om estic product Final sales of domestic product...................... Change in private inventories............... Residual........................ II 2010 III IV I 1 13,312.2 12,987.4 12,925.4 12,901.5 12,973.0 13,149.5 13,254.7 2 13,341.2 13,110.7 13,055.8 13,077.8 13,127.2 13,181.9 13,235.7 3 4 -25.9 -3.1 -108.2 -15.1 -113.9 -16.5 -160.2 -16.1 -139.2 -15.0 -19.7 -12.7 31.1 -12.1 5 6 3,805.1 3,839.5 3,620.8 3,757.0 3,566.4 3,710.2 3,537.3 3,730.3 3,592.1 3,761.5 3,787.6 3,826.1 3,905.5 3,888.3 7 8 9 -25.9 2,115.9 2,106.7 -108.2 1,886.1 1,984.5 -113.9 1,844.4 1,973.9 -160.2 1,829.4 1,965.9 -139.2 1,889.4 1,993.5 -19.7 1,981.0 2,004.7 31.1 2,071.1 2,053.9 10 11 12 9.4 1,691.2 1,732.9 -88.0 1,723.9 1,766.0 -115.3 1,709.6 1,731.3 -121.8 1,695.5 1,757.5 -93.1 1,694.2 1,762.2 -21 .8 1,796.2 1,812.9 13.8 1,827.1 1,827.6 12 -45.1 -27.0 -4 .6 -47.2 -56.3 0.2 18.2 S ervices 2................................. 13 9,265.4 9,395.5 9,308.8 9,358.4 9,417.0 9,497.7 9,586.8 G o o d s ....................................... Final sales......................... Change in private inventories.................... Durable g oo d s...................... Final sales......................... Change in private inventories 1.................. Nondurable g oo d s ............... Final sales......................... Change in private inventories1................. 13 -33.7 -22.2 -1 .7 -40.8 -47.6 1.4 17.3 S tru c tu re s ................................ 14 1,392.2 1,161.4 1,219.9 1,167.0 1,145.3 1,113.5 1,076.3 Services 2 ................................. 14 8,314.8 8,351.0 8,311.4 8,341.8 8,363.7 8,387.2 8,419.5 15 321.2 247.8 206.9 218.8 273.0 292.7 311.1 S tru ctu re s................................. Residual..................................... 15 16 1,205.4 -23.3 1,023.7 -27.6 1,051.8 -26.0 1,025.2 -26.3 1,023.1 -28.8 994.6 -29.5 958.7 -36.1 17 333.1 251.0 215.9 222.7 274.8 290.7 309.5 Addenda: Motor vehicle output............ Gross domestic product excluding motor vehicle outp ut................................ Final sales of computers 3 Gross domestic product excluding final sales of computers......................... 16 14,120.2 14,008.4 13,971.0 13,932.4 13,969.1 17 87.4 76.0 83.8 78.7 71.1 14,161.1 14,290.3 70.5 75.6 18 14,354.0 14,180.2 14,094.2 14,072.4 14,171.0 14,383.3 14,525.8 1. Estimates for durable goods and nondurable goods for 1996 and earlier periods are based on the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC); later estimates for these industries are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). 2. Includes government consumption expenditures, which are for services (such as education and national defense) produced by government. In current dollars, these services are valued at their cost of production. 3. Some components of final sales of computers include computer parts. Addenda: Motor vehicle o utp ut............ Gross domestic product excluding motor vehicle output................................. Final sales of computers 3 Gross domestic product excluding final sales of computers......................... 18 12,970.8 12,718.1 19 146.6 148.1 20 13,182.1 12,687.8 12,658.0 12,682.5 12,844.1 12,931.8 153.0 150.1 144.6 144.7 158.6 12,857.7 12,793.7 12,771.3 12,845.1 13,020.7 13,119.2 1. Estimates for durable goods and nondurable goods for 1996 and earlier periods are based on the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC); later estimates for these industries are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). 2. Includes government consumption expenditures, which are for services (such as education and national defense) produced by government. In current dollars, these services are valued at their cost of production. 3. Some components of final sales of computers include computer parts. Note. Chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 currentdollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line following change in private inventories is the difference between gross domestic product and the sum of final sales of domestic product and of change in private inventories; the residual line following structures is the difference between gross domestic product and the sum of the detailed lines of goods, of services, and of structures. Table 1.3.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Gross Value Added by Sector Table 1.3.3. Real Gross Value Added by Sector, Quantity Indexes [Percent] [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II Seasonally adjusted III IV 2008 2009 1 0.4 -2 .4 -6 .4 -0 .7 2.2 5.6 Business 1................................ Nonfarm 2.............................. Farm ...................................... 2 3 4 0.0 -0.1 12.9 -3 .5 -3 .6 7.4 -8 .7 -8 .8 -3 .3 -1 .0 -1.1 4.0 2.2 2.2 9.2 6.9 7.0 0.1 Households and in stitu tio n s Households.......................... Nonprofit institutions serving households 3.................... 5 6 1.6 1.3 0.1 -0 .7 0.4 0.4 -2 .2 -4 .8 3.4 3.8 1.5 1.1 7 2.0 1.3 0.3 1.5 2.8 2.2 General g o v e rn m e n t4........... Federal.................................. State and local...................... 8 9 10 2.2 3.9 1.4 1.8 6.1 0.0 1.2 4.8 -0 .4 2.7 8.2 0.3 1.0 6.9 -1 .6 1.5 4.8 0.0 A ddendum : Gross housing value added 11 1.5 -0 .3 0.7 -3 .6 3.7 1.5 2009 I I G ross dom estic product II 2010 III IV I 3.2 G ross dom estic product 1 105.331 4.1 4.4 -20.3 B usiness 1................................ Nonfarm 2.............................. F a rm ...................................... 2 3 4 105.357 105.376 101.368 0.5 -1 .2 5 6 106.118 107.745 2.8 Households and in stitutio ns Households........................... Nonprofit institutions serving households3..................... 7 103.952 105.347 104.560 104.937 105.655 106.238 106.968 0.9 4.8 -0 .9 General g o v e rn m e n t4........... Federal................................... State and local...................... 8 9 10 104.247 104.664 104.066 106.167 111.052 104.042 105.409 108.183 104.202 106.107 110.327 104.269 106.381 112.191 103.852 106.773 113.506 103.843 107.017 114.847 103.607 -0 .4 Addendum : Gross housing value added 11 109.488 109.150 109.305 108.306 109.294 109.696 109.583 1. Equals gross domestic product excluding gross value added of households and institutions and of general govern ment. 2. Equals gross domestic business value added excluding gross farm value added. 3. Equals compensation of employees of nonprofit institutions, the rental value of nonresidential fixed assets owned and used by nonprofit institutions serving households, and rental income of persons for tenant-occupied housing owned by nonprofit institutions. 4. Equals compensation of general government employees plus general government consumption of fixed capital. Line 2010 102.761 102.271 102.082 102.648 104.045 104.876 101.640 101.534 108.911 101.127 101.035 106.917 100.865 100.760 107.962 101.425 101.303 110.363 103.143 103.036 110.402 104.184 104.150 104.312 106.268 106.975 106.172 107.384 105.575 106.076 106.458 107.079 106.867 107.359 106.993 107.036 1. Equals gross domestic product excluding gross value added of households and institutions and of general govern ment. 2. Equals gross domestic business value added excluding gross farm value added. 3. Equals compensation of employees of nonprofit institutions, the rental value of nonresidential fixed assets owned and used by nonprofit institutions serving households, and rental income of persons for tenant-occupied housing owned by nonprofit institutions. 4. Equals compensation of general government employees plus general government consumption of fixed capital. May 2010 D-7 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin ess Table 1.3.4. Price Indexes for Gross Value Added by Sector Table 1.3.5. Gross Value Added by Sector [Index numbers, 2005=100] [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted Line 2009 2008 Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 2009 2010 I II III IV I Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 IV III I G ross dom estic p roduct 1 108.481 109.745 109.661 109.656 109.763 109.902 110.136 G ross dom estic pro du ct 1 14,441.4 14,256.3 14,178.0 14,151.2 14,242.1 14,453.8 14,601.4 Business 1................................ Nonfarm 2.............................. Farm ...................................... 2 3 4 107.225 107.039 127.716 108.206 108.381 95.201 108.219 108.399 94.830 108.134 108.307 95.362 108.187 108.433 89.179 108.283 108.387 101.433 108.441 108.548 101.282 Business 1................................ Nonfarm 2............................. Fa rm ...................................... 2 10,953.1 10,666.1 10,614.2 10,578.5 10,641.0 10,830.6 10,956.9 3 10,821.0 10,560.2 10,510.4 10,473.0 10,540.6 10,716.9 10,848.9 4 100.4 113.7 132.1 103.8 105.5 108.0 105.8 H ouseholds and in stitutio ns H ouseholds.......................... Nonprofit institutions serving households 3.................... 5 6 112.593 112.599 114.333 114.857 114.035 114.560 114.099 115.000 114.512 115.120 114.685 114.748 114.745 114.600 5 6 7 112.557 113.580 113.284 112.832 113.644 114.559 114.902 Households and in stitu tio n s Households........................... Nonprofit institutions serving households 3 .................... 7 751.2 768.2 760.5 760.1 770.9 781.3 789.1 General g o v e rn m e n t4........... Federal.................................. State and local...................... 8 9 10 112.750 112.192 112.994 115.399 114.660 115.716 114.907 114.569 115.040 115.346 114.501 115.713 115.482 114.488 115.919 115.860 115.083 116.192 116.777 116.892 116.677 General g o v e rn m e n t4 ........... Federal................................... State and local...................... 8 9 10 1,688.4 515.2 1,173.2 1,759.9 558.7 1,201.2 1,739.8 543.8 1,196.0 1,758.0 554.3 1,203.8 1,764.7 563.6 1,201.1 1,776.9 573.1 1,203.8 1,795.1 589.0 1,206.1 Addendum : Gross housing value added 11 113.212 115.709 115.433 115.880 115.937 115.585 115.470 A ddendum : Gross housing value added 11 1,306.5 1,331.3 1,330.0 1,322.9 1,335.6 1,336.5 1,333.8 1,799.9 1,048.7 1,823.9 1,063.4 1,830.3 1,062.1 1,814.7 1,054.5 1,836.5 1,065.6 1,846.3 1,064.9 1,849.4 1,060.4 1. Equals gross domestic product excluding gross value added of households and institutions and of general govern ment. 2. Equals gross domestic business value added excluding gross farm value added. 3. Equals compensation of employees of nonprofit institutions, the rental value of nonresidential fixed assets owned and used by nonprofit institutions serving households, and rental income of persons for tenant-occupied housing owned by nonprofit institutions. 4. Equals compensation of general government employees plus general government consumption of fixed capital. 1. Equals gross domestic product excluding gross value added of households and institutions and of general govern ment. 2. Equals gross domestic business value added excluding gross farm value added. 3. Equals compensation of employees of nonprofit institutions, the rental value of nonresidential fixed assets owned and used by nonprofit institutions serving households, and rental income of persons for tenant-occupied housing owned by nonprofit institutions. 4. Equals compensation of general government employees plus general government consumption of fixed capital. Table 1.3.6. Real Gross Value Added by Sector, Chained Dollars Table 1.4.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Gross Domestic Product, Real Gross Domestic Purchases, and Real Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates [Percent] Line 2008 2009 2009 I Gross dom estic product 2010 III II IV Seasonally adjusted at annual rates I Line 1 13,312.2 12,987.4 12,925.4 12,901.5 12,973.0 13,149.5 13,254.7 2008 2009 2010 2009 Business 1................................ Nonfarm 2............................. Farm ...................................... 2 10,214.8 3 10,109.2 4 103.4 9,854.5 9,740.6 111.1 9,804.7 9,692.7 109.1 9,779.3 9,666.4 110.1 9,833.6 10,000.2 10,101.1 9,718.5 9,884.8 9,991.6 106.4 112.6 112.6 Households and in stitutio ns Households.......................... Nonprofit institutions serving households 3 .................... 5 6 1,598.6 931.3 1,600.8 924.7 1,599.4 928.2 1,590.4 916.9 1,603.7 925.6 1,609.9 928.0 1,611.8 925.2 Gross dom estic p ro d u c t.................. Less: Exports of goods and services Plus: Imports of goods and services 1 2 3 0.4 5.4 -3 .2 -2 .4 -9 .6 -13.9 -6 .4 -29 .9 -36.4 676.4 671.3 673.7 678.3 682.1 686.8 4 5 -3 .4 667.4 Equals: G ross dom estic purchases Less: Change in private inventories -0 .7 7 General g o v e rn m e n t4........... Federal.................................. State and local...................... Residual.................................... 8 9 10 11 1,497.5 459.2 1,038.3 3.4 1,525.1 487.2 1,038.1 9.3 1,514.2 474.6 1,039.7 9.8 1,524.2 484.1 1,040.3 10.0 1,528.1 492.2 1,036.2 9.6 1,533.8 498.0 1,036.1 7.9 1,537.3 503.9 1,033.7 7.1 Equals: Final sales to dom estic purchasers...................................... 6 -0 .4 Addendum : Final sales of domestic product,... 7 0.8 A ddendum : Gross housing value added 12 1,154.0 1,150.5 1,152.1 1,141.6 1,152.0 1,156.2 1,155.0 I III IV -0.7 -4.1 -14.7 2.2 17.8 21.3 5.6 22.8 15.8 3.2 5.8 8.9 -8 .6 -2 .3 3.0 5.2 3.8 -2 .7 -6 .4 -0 .9 2.3 1.4 2.2 -1 .7 -4.1 0.7 1.5 1.7 1.6 II I 1. Equals gross domestic product excluding gross value added of households and institutions and of general govern ment. 2. Equals gross domestic business value added excluding gross farm value added. 3. Equals compensation of employees of nonprofit institutions, the rental value of nonresidential fixed assets owned and used by nonprofit institutions serving households, and rental income of persons for tenant-occupied housing owned by nonprofit institutions. 4. Equals compensation of general government employees plus general government consumption of fixed capital. Note. Chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 currentdollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines. Table 1.4.3. Real Gross Domestic Product, Real Gross Domestic Purchases, and Real Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers, Quantity Indexes Table 1.4.4. Price Indexes for Gross Domestic Product, Gross Domestic Purchases, and Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers [Index numbers, 2005=100] [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2009 I II Seasonally adjusted 2010 III IV Line I 2008 2009 2010 2009 I II III IV I Gross dom estic p ro d u c t.................. Less: Exports of goods and services Plus: Imports of goods and services 1 105.331 102.761 102.271 102.082 102.648 104.045 104.876 2 124.842 112.823 109.922 108.766 113.315 119.289 120.976 3 104.721 90.146 89.804 86.292 90.554 93.933 95.958 G ross dom estic p ro d u c t.................. Less: Exports of goods and services Plus: Imports of goods and services 1 108.481 109.745 109.661 109.656 109.763 109.902 110.136 2 112.389 106.250 105.265 105.284 106.473 107.978 108.965 3 119.559 107.037 103.746 104.821 107.688 111.891 114.346 Equals: Gross dom estic purchases Less: Change in private inventories 4 103.294 S Equals: G ross dom estic purchases Less: Change in private inventories 4 109.765 109.817 109.395 109.533 109.895 110.446 110.908 5 Equals: Final sales to dom estic p urcha sers..................................... 6 103.896 101.110 100.913 100.678 101.247 101.600 102.154 Equals: Final sales to dom estic purchasers...................................... 6 109.792 109.734 109.311 109.437 109.819 110.370 110.838 Addendum : Final sales of domestic product.... 7 105.980 104.149 103.713 103.888 104.280 104.714 105.142 A ddendum : Final sales of domestic product.... 7 108.507 109.655 109.566 109.550 109.681 109.823 110.063 99.814 99.566 98.988 99.721 100.981 101.915 D -8 National Data May 2010 Table 1.4.5. Relation of Gross Domestic Product, Gross Domestic Purchases, and Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers Table 1.5.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Gross Domestic Product, Expanded Detail [Billions of dollars] [Percent] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I Gross dom estic p ro d u c t.......... Less: Exports of goods and services.................................... Plus: Imports of goods and services.................................... Equals: G ross dom estic purchases................................ Less: Change in private inventories................................ II 2 1,831.1 1,564.2 1,509.3 1,493.7 1,573.8 1,680.1 1,719.5 3 2,538.9 1,956.6 1,887.9 1,832.8 1,976.0 2,129.7 2,223.3 4 15,149.2 14,648.6 14,556.5 14,490.3 14,644.3 14,903.3 15,105.2 -34 .8 -120.9 -127.4 -176.2 -156.5 -23.6 33.2 Equals: Final sales to dom estic p u rc h a s e rs ........... 6 15,183.9 14,769.5 14,683.9 14,666.5 14,800.9 14,926.9 15,072.1 Addendum : Final sales of domestic product................................. 7 14,476.2 14,377.2 14,305.3 14,327.4 14,398.7 14,477.4 14,568.3 Table 1.4.6. Relation of Real Gross Domestic Product, Real Gross Domestic Purchases, and Real Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers, Chained Dollars [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I Gross dom estic p ro d u c t......... Less: Exports of goods and services................................... Plus: Imports of goods and services................................... II 2010 III IV I 1 13,312.2 12,987.4 12,925.4 12,901.5 12,973.0 13,149.5 13,254.7 2 3 1,629.3 2,123.5 1,472.4 1,828.0 1,434.5 1,821.0 1,419.5 1,749.8 1,478.8 1,836.2 1,556.8 1,904.8 1,578.8 1,945.8 Equals: G ross dom estic purchases............................... Less: Change in private inventories............................... 5 Equals: Final sales to dom estic p u rc h a s e rs .......... 6 13,829.8 13,458.8 13,432.7 13,401.4 13,477.2 13,524.1 13,597.9 Addendum : Final sales of domestic product................................ 7 13,341.2 13,110.7 13,055.8 13,077.8 13,127.2 13,181.9 13,235.7 4 13,801.2 13,336.2 13,303.1 13,225.9 13,323.8 13,492.1 13,617.0 -25.9 -108.2 -113.9 -160.2 -139.2 -19.7 31.1 Note. Chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 current- dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. 2008 2009 I IV 1 14,441.4 14,256.3 14,178.0 14,151.2 14,242.1 14,453.8 14,601.4 5 Line 2010 III G ross dom estic p ro d u c t........ Personal consum ption e xpe nd itu re s................................. Goods.............................................. Durable goo ds........................... Motor vehicles and p a rts ...... Furnishings and durable household equipment....... Recreational goods and vehicles............................... Other durable goods............. Nondurable goo ds..................... Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption...................... Clothing and footwear........... Gasoline and other energy goods.................................. Other nondurable goods....... Services........................................... Household consumption expenditures (for services)... Housing and utilities............. Health ca re ............................ Transportation se rvice s ........ Recreation services.............. Food services and accommodations.............. Financial services and insurance........................... Other services....................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PISHs)1.............................. Gross output of nonprofit institutions 2....................... Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions3...... Gross private dom estic in vestm en t..................................... Fixed investment............................ Nonresidential............................ Structures............................... Equipment and software....... Information processing equipment and software Computers and peripheral equipment Software 4...................... O th e r.............................. Industrial equipment......... Transportation equipment Other equipment............... Residential.................................. Change in private inventories...... Fa rm ............................................ Nonfarm...................................... 2010 2009 I II IV III I 1 0.4 -2.4 -6.4 -0 .7 2.2 5.6 3.2 2 3 4 5 -0.2 -2.1 -4 .5 -13.6 -0.6 -1.9 -3.9 -8.7 0.6 2.5 3.9 6.7 -0 .9 -3.1 -5 .6 -6 .3 2.8 7.2 20.4 43.6 1.6 2.8 0.4 -20.7 3.6 6.2 11.3 -0.8 6 -2 .9 -5 .9 -7.0 -7 .8 6.8 11.5 14.3 7 8 9 5.4 -4 .8 -0 .8 2.2 -3 .0 -1 .0 9.3 7.2 1.9 -4 .6 -1 .9 -1 .9 17.5 6.6 1.5 16.0 1.8 4.0 14.9 27.1 3.9 10 11 0.0 -0 .3 -0.5 -4.3 0.6 -1.7 3.6 -8 .2 3.8 -0 .3 4.9 7.6 3.2 10.3 12 13 14 -4 .4 -0.1 0.7 1.8 -1.2 0.1 8.6 2.2 -0 .3 1.1 -5 .5 0.2 -1 .8 1.2 0.8 -2.3 4.4 1.0 1.4 3.2 2.4 15 16 17 18 19 0.4 0.9 3.0 -5 .0 0.0 0.2 0.6 2.2 -3 .7 -1.3 0.7 0.1 3.4 -7.0 1.8 0.7 -1.2 3.9 1.0 -1 .6 0.5 0.5 0.1 3.9 -3.0 0.8 2.5 2.2 0.7 -0.2 2.2 2.5 2.3 0.1 3.2 20 -0 .4 -2.9 -1.6 -2 .3 -2.0 -1.0 8.3 21 22 -1 .6 -0 .6 -0.4 0.9 0.4 1.5 2.5 0.1 3.0 1.1 -2.6 -0.3 -0.8 0.7 23 8.9 -3.6 -21.3 -10.9 7.3 6.1 8.1 24 3.5 0.2 -3.0 0.1 -0.5 1.4 2.6 25 1.6 1.5 4.5 4.1 -2 .9 0.0 0.8 26 27 28 29 30 -7.3 -5.1 1.6 10.3 -2 .6 -23.2 -18.3 -17.8 -19.8 -16.6 -50.5 -39 .0 -39.2 -43.6 -36.4 -23.7 -12.5 -9 .6 -17.3 -4 .9 5.0 -1 .3 -5 .9 -18.4 1.5 46.1 5.0 5.3 -18.0 19.0 14.8 0.7 4.1 -14 .0 13.4 31 6.0 -5.4 -19.6 5.5 7.6 27.6 15.6 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 8.4 6.4 4.4 -3 .5 -27.3 -2.1 -22.9 -5.4 -6.4 -4.1 -23.5 -48.7 -19.5 -20.5 -14.7 -24.0 -15.6 -49.7 -81.3 -31.1 -38.2 16.8 1.3 6.9 -15.1 20.7 -29.8 -23.3 9.7 5.2 9.9 -13 .4 22.6 -10.4 18.9 97.1 22.1 14.1 -7.0 77.0 -2.8 3.8 27.6 22.1 3.8 -0.1 1.3 26.0 -10.9 40 41 Net expo rts of goods and services E xports............................................ G oods.......................................... Services...................................... Imports............................................. G oods.......................................... Services...................................... 4? 43 44 45 46 47 48 5.4 5.9 4.2 -3.2 -3 .9 0.7 -9.6 -12.2 -4.1 -13.9 -16.0 -3.6 -29.9 -36.9 -13.6 -36.4 -41.0 -11.5 -4.1 -6 .3 0.1 -14.7 -16.5 -7 .5 17.8 24.6 5.6 21.3 25.1 7.0 22.8 34.1 2.6 15.8 20.3 -1.9 5.8 6.7 3.8 8.9 9.0 8.7 G overnm ent co nsum ption expenditures and gross in vestm en t..................................... Federal............................................. National defense........................ Consumption expenditures... Gross investment................... Nondefense................................ Consumption expenditures... Gross investment................... State and local................................ Consumption expenditures...... Gross investment....................... 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 3.1 7.7 7.8 6.5 16.7 7.3 7.2 8.3 0.5 0.7 -0 .6 1.8 5.2 5.4 4.9 8.4 4.8 4.8 4.3 -0.2 -0.2 -0.3 -2.6 -4.3 -5.1 -4.9 -6.6 -2.5 2.4 -29.6 -1.5 -0.4 -6.1 6.7 11.4 14.0 12.2 24.7 6.1 5.6 9.7 3.9 0.1 20.4 2.6 8.0 8.4 8.0 11.0 7.0 6.3 11.7 -0 .6 -2 .0 4.8 -1.3 0.0 -3 .6 -1.3 -16.4 8.3 8.6 6.4 -2.2 -0.1 -10.0 -1.8 1.4 1.2 0.7 4.7 1.7 1.4 3.5 -3 .8 -1.0 -14.7 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to households. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. May 2010 D -9 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Table 1.5.2. Contributions to Percent Change in Real Gross Domestic Product, Expanded Detail Table 1.5.3. Real Gross Domestic Product, Expanded Detail, Quantity Indexes [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II -6 .4 -0.7 Seasonally adjusted 2010 III IV 0.4 -2 .4 2.2 5.6 3.2 Percentage poin ts at annual rates: Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s ................................... Goods................................................ Durable goods.............................. Motor vehicles and p arts ....... Furnishings and durable household equipment......... Recreational goods and vehicles................................ Other durable goods............... Nondurable goods....................... Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption........................ Clothing and footw ear............ Gasoline and other energy goods ................................... Other nondurable goods......... S ervices............................................ Household consumption expenditures (for services).... Housing and utilities............... Health care............................... Transportation services.......... Recreation services................ Food services and accommodations................ Financial services and insurance............................. Other services......................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PISHs)1.......... Gross output of nonprofit institutions 2 ........................ Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions 3 ....... 2 3 4 5 -0.17 -0.50 -0.36 -0.38 -0.42 -0.46 -0.30 -0.21 0.44 0.56 0.28 0.14 -0.62 -0.71 -0.41 -0.14 1.96 1.59 1.36 0.81 1.16 0.66 0.03 -0.53 2.55 1.40 0.79 -0.02 6 -0.06 -0.11 -0.13 -0.15 0.12 0.19 0.24 7 8 9 0.13 -0.05 -0.13 0.05 -0.03 -0.16 0.20 0.07 0.29 -0.11 -0.02 -0.29 0.37 0.06 0.23 0.35 0.02 0.63 0.32 0.24 0.61 10 11 0.00 -0.01 -0.03 -0.10 0.03 -0.04 0.20 -0.20 0.21 -0.01 0.27 0.17 0.18 0.23 12 13 14 -0.12 -0.01 0.32 0.03 -0.06 0.04 0.17 0.12 -0.13 0.02 -0.32 0.09 -0.04 0.07 0.37 -0.05 0.25 0.49 0.04 0.18 1.15 15 16 17 18 19 0.16 0.12 0.31 -0.11 0.00 0.11 0.07 0.23 -0.08 -0.03 0.34 0.02 0.37 -0.15 0.05 0.30 -0.16 0.44 0.02 -0.04 0.24 0.07 0.02 0.08 -0.08 0.38 0.33 0.25 0.02 0.00 1.00 0.32 0.26 0.00 0.08 20 -0.02 -0.12 -0.07 -0.10 -0.09 -0.04 0.34 21 22 -0.10 -0.04 -0.02 0.06 0.03 0.10 0.14 0.01 0.17 0.07 -0.15 -0.02 -0.04 0.04 23 0.16 -0.07 -0.46 -0.21 0.13 0.11 0.15 24 0.24 0.01 -0.22 0.01 -0.04 0.11 0.19 25 0.09 0.08 0.24 0.22 -0.17 0.00 0.05 26 27 28 29 30 -1.18 -0.81 0.19 0.39 -0.20 -3 .45 -2.74 -2.08 -0.83 -1.25 -8 .98 -6 .62 -5 .29 -2 .28 -3.01 -3 .10 -1.68 -1.01 -0.69 -0.32 0.54 -0.15 -0.59 -0.68 0.10 4.39 0.61 0.51 -0.62 1.13 1.67 0.10 0.38 -0.44 0.83 G ross private dom estic investm ent Fixed investment............................... Nonresidential............................. Structures................................. Equipment and software......... Information processing equipment and software Computers and peripheral equipment S oftw are4 ....................... O ther................................ Industrial equipment........... Transportation equipment Other equipm ent................ Residential.................................... Change in private inventories......... Farm .............................................. Nonfarm........................................ 31 0.22 -0.21 -0.79 0.19 0.27 0.92 0.56 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 0.05 0.11 0.06 -0.05 -0.35 -0.03 -1.00 -0.37 -0.04 -0.33 -0.03 -0.12 -0.06 -0.32 -0.45 -0.27 -0.66 -0.71 0.04 -0.75 -0 .08 -0 .47 -0.24 -0.82 -0.92 -0 .48 -1.33 -2 .36 0.05 -2.41 0.08 0.02 0.09 -0.18 0.09 -0.42 -0.67 -1.42 0.05 -1.47 0.05 0.09 0.13 -0.15 0.10 -0.12 0.43 0.69 -0.01 0.70 0.37 0.35 0.19 -0.07 0.31 -0.03 0.10 3.79 -0.22 4.01 0.15 0.36 0.06 0.00 0.01 0.26 -0.29 1.57 0.06 1.51 Net e xpo rts o f g oods and services Exports.............................................. Goods............................................ S ervices....................................... Im ports.............................................. Goods............................................ S ervices....................................... 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 1.20 0.64 0.48 0.16 0.56 0.58 -0.02 1.07 -1.18 -1.02 -0.16 2.24 2.15 0.10 2.64 -3.95 -3.41 -0.54 6.58 6.25 0.34 1.65 -0.45 -0.45 0.00 2.09 1.89 0.21 -0.81 1.78 1.58 0.20 -2.59 -2.41 -0.18 0.27 2.36 2.26 0.10 -2.09 -2.14 0.05 -0.61 0.66 0.53 0.14 -1.28 -1.05 -0 .23 G overnm ent co nsum ption expenditures and g ross investm ent....................................... Federal.............................................. National defense.......................... Consumption expenditures.... Gross investment..................... Nondefense.................................. Consumption expenditures.... Gross investment..................... State and local.................................. Consumption expenditures......... Gross investment......................... 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 0.59 0.53 0.37 0.27 0.10 0.16 0.14 0.02 0.06 0.07 -0.01 0.37 0.39 0.28 0.22 0.06 0.11 0.10 0.01 -0.02 -0.02 -0.01 -0.52 -0.33 -0.27 -0.22 -0 .05 -0 .06 0.06 -0.11 -0.19 -0.04 -0.15 1.33 0.85 0.70 0.53 0.17 0.15 0.12 0.03 0.48 0.01 0.47 0.55 0.62 0.45 0.36 0.09 0.17 0.14 0.04 -0.08 -0.20 0.12 -0.26 0.01 -0.20 -0.06 -0.14 0.21 0.19 0.02 -0.27 -0.01 -0.26 -0.37 0.11 0.07 0.03 0.04 0.04 0.03 0.01 -0.48 -0.10 -0.38 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to households. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. 2009 2009 I G ross dom estic p ro d u c t.... 1 2008 I Percent change at annual rate: Gross dom estic p ro d u c t.......... Line Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s .............................. G oods........................................... Durable goo ds........................ Motor vehicles and p a rts ... Furnishings and durable household equipment.... Recreational goods and vehicles........................... Other durable goods.......... Nondurable g oo d s ................. Food and beverages purchased for offpremises consumption Clothing and footwear........ Gasoline and other energy goods............................... Other nondurable goods.... Services....................................... Household consumption expenditures (for services) Housing and utilitie s.......... Health ca re ......................... Transportation services..... Recreation services........... Food services and accommodations........... Financial services and insurance........................ Other services.................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PISHs)1..... Gross output of nonprofit institutions 2.................... Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions 3 Gross private dom estic in vestm en t.................................. Fixed investment......................... Nonresidential......................... Structures........................... Equipment and software.... Information processing equipment and software...................... Computers and peripheral equipment.............. Software 4.................. Other........................... Industrial equipment..... Transportation equipment................... Other equipment............ Residential............................... Change in private inventories.... 1 105.331 102.761 102.271 II 2010 III IV I 102.082 102.648 104.045 104.876 2 105.351 104.718 104.425 104.196 104.917 105.335 106.278 3 104.296 102.285 101.817 101.023 102.789 103.512 105.075 4 103.692 98.345 96.947 101.561 101.651 104.405 99.626 5 84.820 77.207 77.049 77.435 75.971 74.745 81.816 6 104.398 98.282 98.300 7 132.849 8 99.569 9 104.513 135.724 96.575 103.482 132.895 96.050 103.405 10 105.371 11 109.341 104.867 103.371 104.606 105.841 12 94.298 96.030 13 106.686 105.420 14 105.883 105.966 1b 16 17 18 19 96.186 106.094 105.761 97.907 100.608 104.017 131.337 136.742 95.579 97.120 102.911 103.295 96.314 141.924 146.940 97.552 103.580 104.318 105.324 104.288 103.610 105.271 106.538 107.382 103.533 105.439 108.050 96.448 104.602 105.809 95.469 96.018 95.813 104.921 106.064 106.897 106.014 106.281 106.916 105.181 104.069 107.635 95.765 107.045 105.425 105.174 105.346 105.484 104.668 104.676 104.354 104.493 109.950 108.993 110.046 110.083 91.592 92.248 91.825 92.705 105.655 106.402 105.964 105.148 105.697 105.150 110.677 92.870 105.107 106.271 105.795 111.296 92.882 105.927 100.833 101.598 100.997 100.247 102.270 20 103.825 21 22 106.615 106.162 105.640 106.611 23 124.554 120.076 121.155 117.721 24 109.383 109.572 109.511 109.550 109.417 109.811 110.514 2b 104.611 106.175 105.775 106.835 106.051 106.041 106.259 26 91.585 27 95.106 28 116.502 29 138.392 30 107.332 70.326 77.660 95.819 110.966 89.462 71.746 67.874 67.059 79.514 76.647 76.895 98.061 95.623 94.183 119.243 113.716 108.074 89.143 88.036 88.370 74.625 77.585 95.410 102.832 92.300 77.240 77.730 96.364 99.018 95.255 31 123.885 117.135 113.092 32 33 34 35 157.032 148.621 117.896 110.362 118.346 113.465 109.426 83.675 36 70.937 37 100.749 38 58.213 3P 40 41 36.396 81.089 46.288 100.488 105.444 106.105 106.896 106.205 106.005 106.472 106.502 106.782 106.689 106.864 119.822 121.604 123.988 114.624 116.748 124.077 128.655 136.221 108.007 109.792 88.186 141.609 108.358 111.640 84.659 144.929 171.726 182.505 109.728 115.355 121.268 114.298 118.131 119.237 80.190 80.161 81.663 32.912 87.888 47.478 34.498 80.453 44.436 36.302 78.284 46.403 41.871 77.731 46.833 42.007 82.356 45.499 Net e xpo rts o f g oods and s e rv ic e s ...................................... E xports... Goods. Services................................... Imports.... G oods. Services................................... 4V 43 44 45 46 47 48 124.842 124.436 125.759 104.721 103.472 111.478 112.823 109.922 109.268 105.520 120.661 119.619 89.804 90.146 86.879 86.326 107.455 108.238 108.766 113.315 119.289 120.976 103.817 109.695 118.040 119.980 119.649 121.293 122.082 123.217 86.292 90.554 93.933 95.958 82.520 91.400 93.380 87.270 106.160 107.962 107.458 109.718 Government consum ption expenditures and gross in vestm en t.................................. Federal.......................................... National defense..................... Consumption expenditures Gross investment............... Nondefense............................ Consumption expenditures Gross investment............... State and local............................ Consumption expenditures.... Gross investment.................... 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 106.252 111.362 111.939 109.088 132.547 110.153 108.959 118.607 103.355 103.255 103.800 108.215 117.154 117.992 114.456 143.626 115.394 114.214 123.687 103.172 103.085 103.477 108.386 116.801 118.014 114.258 145.286 114.259 113.130 122.180 103.640 103.356 104.735 106.639 113.693 114.219 111.005 137.493 112.576 111.598 119.377 102.660 103.323 99.976 109.097 119.057 120.419 116.468 149.128 116.203 114.874 125.617 103.479 102.848 105.975 108.737 119.067 119.317 116.092 142.596 118.536 117.256 127.574 102.909 102.811 103.223 108.245 119.470 119.680 116.283 144.255 119.025 117.664 128.668 101.912 102.546 99.197 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to households. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. D-10 National Data May 2010 Table 1.5.4. Price Indexes for Gross Domestic Product, Expanded Detail Table 1.5.5. Gross Domestic Product, Expanded Detail [Index numbers, 2005=100] [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 Gross dom estic p ro d u c t.... Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s.............................. G oods............ Durable g oods........................ Motor vehicles and p arts... Furnishings and durable household equipment.... Recreational goods and vehicles.......................... Other durable goods.......... Nondurable goods.................. Food and beverages purchased for offpremises consumption Clothing and footwear........ Gasoline and other energy goods............................... Other nondurable goods.... Services....................................... Household consumption expenditures (for services) Housing and utilities.......... Health care......................... Transportation services.... Recreation services........... Food services and accommodations........... Financial services and insurance........................ Other services.................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PISHs)1 .... Gross output of nonprofit institutions 2.................... Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions 3 Gross private dom estic investm ent.................................. Fixed investment......................... Nonresidential........................ Structures........................... Equipment and software.... Information processing equipment and software...................... Computers and peripheral equipm ent............. Software 4 .................. O ther.......................... Industrial equipment...... Transportation equipm ent.................. Other equipment............ Residential............................... Change in private inventories.... 1 108.481 109.745 109.661 2 109.031 109.241 3 106.150 103.540 4 95.537 94.009 5 98.523 98.708 2010 2009 I II III 109.656 109.763 IV 109.902 110.136 108.449 108.814 109.510 110.190 110.607 102.186 102.864 104.216 104.895 105.410 94.407 93.642 94.326 93.660 92.780 97.904 96.689 99.073 101.164 102.098 98.049 97.735 98.574 97.362 96.124 95.304 7 84.337 8 111.534 9 112.188 79.697 113.348 108.998 81.789 112.707 106.739 80.666 78.794 113.380 113.035 107.736 110.227 77.539 114.268 111.291 76.360 110.108 112.566 10 111.926 11 97.823 113.289 98.714 114.382 98.186 113.339 112.730 98.361 99.431 112.702 98.876 113.235 98.559 94.966 111.264 111.954 118.130 124.750 112.266 112.855 112.992 113.358 6 92.354 12 143.694 104.053 13 106.098 111.020 108.596 14 110.582 112.252 111.749 98.882 110.761 111.954 112.312 113.412 113.345 113.598 116.573 111.380 15 16 17 18 19 110.838 111.926 109.726 112.403 109.517 112.643 113.310 112.447 115.461 110.785 112.113 112.341 112.705 113.400 113.283 113.213 111.416 112.045 112.730 115.115 114.643 115.515 110.270 110.165 111.325 20 111.599 114.315 113.783 114.201 21 109.986 109.444 22 110.819 113.229 108.695 112.478 109.100 109.270 110.710 111.797 112.771 113.259 114.410 115.079 113.826 113.444 114.098 117.105 111.298 114.358 114.917 114.987 23 104.531 103.250 103.349 103.043 103.269 103.337 102.626 24 109.691 111.610 110.752 111.236 111.885 112.568 112.928 25 111.530 114.665 113.457 114.230 115.031 115.941 116.702 26 107.355 106.502 27 107.551 106.132 28 107.897 107.524 29 125.207 122.811 30 101.455 102.008 31 95.600 93.913 64.239 32 69.960 33 102.748 101.494 34 100.487 100.542 35 110.942 112.322 108.245 107.019 105.465 107.668 106.463 105.265 109.154 107.993 106.656 127.092 123.706 120.451 102.450 102.304 101.802 94.578 94.033 93.545 105.278 105.130 106.294 119.994 101.478 104.931 104.834 105.826 120.272 100.724 93.497 93.138 66.328 64.563 62.558 62.151 63.508 102.145 101.674 100.928 101.229 100.880 100.416 100.465 100.603 100.683 100.359 112.055 112.003 112.327 112.904 113.113 36 102.641 37 108.231 38 105.779 ■w 40 41 109.493 109.015 112.335 110.666 112.578 113.120 112.916 112.161 99.863 100.716 101.915 100.554 43 112.389 44 112.366 45 112.445 46 119.559 47 120.323 48 115.682 106.250 105.265 104.916 103.588 109.218 108.910 107.037 103.746 106.172 102.402 110.911 109.655 105.957 101.077 112.116 111.125 100.532 100.863 G overnment consum ption expenditures and gross investm ent.................................. Federal......................................... National defense..................... Consumption expenditures Gross investment............... Nondefense............................ Consumption expenditures Gross investment............... State and local............................ Consumption expenditures.... Gross investment.................... 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 114.502 110.938 111.913 112.891 105.630 108.935 109.848 102.951 116.642 116.057 119.132 114.281 111.513 112.086 113.126 105.478 110.358 111.531 102.746 115.896 114.498 121.960 113.924 111.084 111.584 112.502 105.650 110.085 111.136 103.258 115.587 113.738 123.579 105.284 104.076 107.997 104.821 103.777 109.471 114.051 111.214 111.664 112.653 105.338 110.320 111.432 103.093 115.713 114.145 122.481 106.473 105.261 109.199 107.688 106.974 110.953 114.312 111.601 112.195 113.288 105.300 110.401 111.656 102.267 115.889 114.702 121.054 2009 2009 I G ross dom estic product Personal consum ption e x p e n d itu re s ............................. G oods.......................................... Durable g oo d s........................ Motor vehicles and p a rts ... Furnishings and durable household equipment.... Recreational goods and vehicles........................... Other durable goods Nondurable g oo d s.................. Food and beverages purchased for offpremises consumption Clothing and footwear Gasoline and other energy goods............................... Other nondurable goods.... Services....................................... Household consumption expenditures (for services) Housing and utilities........... Health c a re ......................... Transportation services Recreation services........... Food services and accommodations........... Financial services and insurance........................ Other services.................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PIS Hs)1 Gross output of nonprofit institutions 2.................... Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions 3 Gross private dom estic investm ent Fixed investment......................... Nonresidential......................... Structures........................... Equipment and software.... Information processing equipment and software...................... Computers and peripheral equipment.............. Software 4................... Other........................... Industrial equipment Transportation equipment................... Other equipment............ Residential............................... Change in private inventories.... Fa rm ........................................ Nonfarm................................... II 2010 III IV I 1 14,441.4 14,256.3 14,178.0 14,151.2 14,242.1 14,453.8 14,601.4 2 10,129.9 10,089.1 3 3,403.2 3,255.2 4 1,095.2 1,035.0 312.8 5 342.3 9,987.7 3,197.7 1,025.2 300.6 9,999.3 10,132.9 10,236.4 10,367.1 3,193.8 3,292.3 3,337.1 3,404.1 1,011.5 1,051.3 1,052.0 1,070.6 331.7 299.5 321.9 319.6 6 270.1 253.5 255.7 251.3 251.6 255.2 261.6 7 8 9 339.9 142.8 2,308.0 327.9 140.9 2,220.2 329.6 139.3 2,172.4 321.3 139.4 2,182.2 326.8 141.3 2,241.0 333.8 143.4 2,285.1 340.3 146.7 2,333.5 10 11 784.3 337.5 790.2 325.8 786.5 327.9 786.3 321.6 789.4 324.8 798.7 329.0 808.9 336.0 12 13 14 413.0 773.2 6,726.8 304.7 799.4 6,833.9 271.0 787.0 6,790.0 279.4 795.0 6,805.6 324.4 802.3 6,840.6 344.0 813.3 6,899.3 364.6 824.0 6,963.0 15 16 17 18 19 6,448.0 1,843.7 1,554.2 307.8 383.1 6,568.5 1,877.2 1,627.0 304.6 382.5 6,522.0 1,878.8 1,598.0 301.6 383.4 6,545.9 1,871.1 1,622.6 301.1 381.5 6,575.7 1,872.5 1,633.0 306.3 382.5 6,630.3 1,886.4 1,654.5 309.6 382.6 6,690.6 1,899.7 1,671.1 311.1 385.3 20 608.7 605.6 607.3 606.0 603.7 605.2 617.8 21 22 835.6 915.0 828.0 943.5 816.7 936.0 824.9 938.7 832.4 945.3 837.9 954.0 844.5 961.2 23 278.7 265.4 268.0 259.7 264.9 269.0 272.4 24 1,049.4 1,069.6 1,060.8 1,065.8 1,070.7 1,081.1 1,091.5 25 770.7 804.2 792.7 806.1 805.8 812.1 819.1 26 27 28 29 30 2,136.1 2,170.8 1,693.6 609.5 1,084.1 1,628.8 1,749.7 1,388.8 480.0 908.8 1,689.9 1,817.2 1,442.6 533.1 909.5 1,561.5 1,737.7 1,391.8 494.8 897.0 1,556.1 1,712.6 1,353.9 457.9 895.9 1,707.8 1,731.4 1,366.9 434.1 932.8 1,762.9 1,729.7 1,374.4 418.9 955.5 31 562.9 522.7 508.3 512.2 519.0 551.3 569.4 32 33 34 35 86.7 264.1 212.1 193.8 75.0 244.2 203.5 150.1 71.1 240.5 196.7 157.8 72.0 240.2 200.1 151.4 72.5 241.4 205.1 146.5 84.6 254.6 212.2 144.6 89.3 266.7 213.5 144.8 36 37 38 39 40 41 132.3 195.1 477.2 -34.8 -7.1 -27.7 72.5 163.5 361.0 -120.9 -2.4 -118.5 65.4 178.0 374.6 -127.4 -1 .3 -126.1 70.6 162.7 345.9 -176.2 0.6 -176.8 73.2 157.2 358.8 -156.5 0.0 -156.5 80.9 156.0 364.5 -23.6 -8.9 -14.7 77.4 163.9 355.3 33.2 -5.8 38.9 Net exports o f g oods and s e rv ic e s ...................................... Exports........................................ G oods...................................... Services................................... Imports.......................................... G oods...................................... Services................................... 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 -707.8 1,831.1 1,266.9 564.2 2,538.9 2,126.4 412.4 -392.4 1,564.2 1,038.4 525.9 1,956.6 1,575.4 381.2 -378.5 1,509.3 989.5 519.8 1,887.9 1,508.2 379.6 -339.1 1,493.7 978.1 515.6 1,832.8 1,461.1 371.7 -402.2 1,573.8 1,045.2 528.5 1,976.0 1,592.8 383.1 -449.5 1,680.1 1,140.6 539.6 2,129.7 1,739.4 390.3 -503.8 1,719.5 1,171.2 548.3 2,223.3 1,822.7 400.6 114.837 115.985 112.151 113.319 112.901 114.276 114.062 115.616 105.623 105.986 110.625 111.364 111.899 112.755 102.367 102.363 116.397 117.529 115.407 116.741 120.726 120.978 G overnment consum ption expenditures and gross in vestm en t.................................. Federal.......................................... National defense..................... Consumption expenditures Gross investment............... Nondefense............................ Consumption expenditures Gross investment............... State and local............................ Consumption expenditures.... Gross investment.................... 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 2,883.2 1,082.6 737.9 634.0 103.9 344.7 300.4 44.3 1,800.6 1,452.4 348.2 2,930.7 1,144.8 779.0 666.6 112.4 365.8 319.7 46.1 1,785.9 1,430.5 355.4 2,879.0 1,106.7 750.7 642.9 107.8 356.0 311.3 44.7 1,772.3 1,424.4 347.9 2,929.4 1,138.3 776.2 662.7 113.5 362.1 316.4 45.7 1,791.2 1,429.9 361.3 2,955.4 1,164.3 795.8 679.3 116.5 368.5 321.9 46.6 1,791.1 1,429.8 361.3 2,959.2 1,170.1 793.5 681.7 111.7 376.7 329.3 47.3 1,789.0 1,438.1 350.9 2,975.2 1,186.3 805.6 692.1 113.4 380.7 333.0 47.7 1,788.9 1,451.0 338.0 107.978 106.740 110.763 111.891 111.537 113.564 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to households. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. 2008 108.965 107.835 111.515 114.346 114.402 114.162 Net expo rts o f g oods and Exports......................................... Goods...................................... S ervices.................................. Im ports......................................... Goods...................................... S ervices.................................. Line I 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to households. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. M ay 2 0 1 0 S urvey of C urrent B usiness D -1 1 Table 1.5.6. Real Gross Domestic Product, Expanded Detail, Chained Dollars [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Gross d om estic p ro d u ct....................................................................................................................... 1 13,312.2 12,987.4 12,925.4 12,901.5 12,973.0 13,149.5 13,254.7 Personal co nsum ption e xp e n d itu re s......................................................................................................... G oo d s............................................................................................................................................................. Durable goods........................................................................................................................................... Motor vehicles and parts......................... Furnishings and durable household equipment............................................................................... Recreational goods and vehicles....................................................................................................... Other durable goods................................ Nondurable goods........................................ Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption..................................................... Clothing and footwear.............................. Gasoline and other energy goods...................................................................................................... Other nondurable g oo ds..................................................................................................................... Services......................................................................................................................................................... Household consumption expenditures (for services).......................................................................... Housing and utilities............................................................................................................................. Health care.......... Transportation services....................................................................................................................... Recreation services Food services and accommodations................................................................................................ Financial services and insurance....................................................................................................... Other services....................................................................................................................................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PISHs)1............. Gross output of nonprofit institutions 2.............................................................................................. Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions 3............................... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 9,290.9 3,206.0 1,146.3 347.5 275.5 403.0 128.0 2,057.3 700.7 345.0 287.4 728.7 6,083.1 5,817.6 1,647.2 1,416.4 273.8 349.8 545.4 759.8 825.7 266.6 956.7 691.0 9,235.1 3,144.2 1,101.4 317.2 259.4 411.7 124.2 2,037.0 697.4 330.1 292.7 720.1 6,087.8 5,831.1 1,656.7 1,446.9 263.7 345.3 529.7 756.5 833.3 257.1 958.4 701.3 9,209.2 3,129.8 1,087.2 311.2 259.4 403.1 123.5 2,035.5 687.4 334.0 293.2 724.7 6,076.0 5,817.2 1,656.9 1,434.3 261.9 347.7 533.7 751.4 832.2 259.4 957.8 698.7 9,189.0 3,105.4 1,071.7 306.2 254.2 398.4 122.9 2,025.7 693.5 326.9 294.0 714.5 6,078.8 5,826.7 1,651.8 1,448.2 262.5 346.3 530.5 756.1 832.4 252.0 958.2 705.7 9,252.6 3,159.6 1,122.7 335.2 258.4 414.8 124.9 2,033.3 700.1 326.7 292.7 716.7 6,090.6 5,834.3 1,654.0 1,448.6 265.0 343.6 527.9 761.8 834.6 256.5 957.0 700.5 9,289.5 3,181.9 1,123.7 316.3 265.5 430.5 125.5 2,053.4 708.5 332.7 291.0 724.5 6,105.9 5,846.1 1,664.4 1,456.5 265.5 343.5 526.6 756.8 833.9 260.3 960.4 700.5 9,372.7 3,229.9 1,154.2 315.6 274.5 445.7 133.2 2,073.2 714.1 340.9 292.1 730.2 6,142.4 5,877.9 1,674.6 1,464.6 265.5 346.2 537.2 755.4 835.2 265.4 966.6 701.9 G ross private d om estic investm ent............................................................................................................ Fixed investment..................... Nonresidential..................... S tructures....................... Equipment and software Information processing equipment and software........................................................................ Computers and peripheral equipm ent4................................................................................... Software s .................................................................................................................................... O ther........... Industrial equipm ent....................................................................................................................... Transportation equipment............................................................................................................... Other equipment.............................................................................................................................. Residential.............. Change in private inventories...................................................................................................................... Farm......................... Nonfarm..................................................................................................................................................... 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 1,989.4 2,018.4 1,569.7 486.8 1,068.6 588.8 1,527.6 1,648.2 1,291.0 390.3 890.7 556.7 1,558.5 1,687.5 1,321.2 419.4 887.5 537.5 1,456.7 1,631.9 1,288.4 400.0 876.5 544.8 1,474.4 1,626.7 1,269.0 380.2 879.8 554.9 1,621.0 1,646.6 1,285.5 361.7 918.9 589.7 1,677.8 1,649.6 1,298.3 348.3 948.3 611.5 257.0 211.1 174.7 128.9 180.3 451.1 -25.9 -5.3 -20.4 240.6 202.4 133.6 66.1 145.1 358.7 -108.2 -0.4 -108.3 235.5 195.8 140.8 59.8 157.3 367.9 -113.9 0.3 -114.9 236.2 199.1 135.2 62.7 144.0 344.4 -160.2 2.2 -163.1 239.2 203.9 130.4 66.0 140.1 359.6 -139.2 1.9 -141.4 251.5 210.7 128.0 76.1 139.1 362.9 -19.7 -5 .9 -13.7 264.4 212.7 128.0 76.3 147.4 352.6 31.1 -3 .7 34.9 Net exports o f goods and services Exports..................................... G oo d s.................................. Services............................... Imports............................................................................................................................................................ G oods..................................................................................... Services.................................................................................. 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 -494.3 1,629.3 1,127.5 501.7 2,123.5 1,767.3 356.5 -355.6 1,472.4 990.1 481.4 1,828.0 1,483.9 343.7 -386.5 1,434.5 956.1 477.2 1,821.0 1,474.4 346.2 -330.4 1,419.5 940.7 477.4 1,749.8 1,409.4 339.5 -357.4 1,478.8 993.9 483.9 1,836.2 1,490.6 345.3 -348.0 1,556.8 1,069.5 487.1 1,904.8 1,561.1 343.7 -367.0 1,578.8 1,087.1 491.6 1,945.8 1,594.9 350.9 G overnment consum ption expenditures and gross investm ent Federal......................................................................................... National defense....................................................................................................................................... Consumption expenditures................................................................................................................. Gross investment Nondefense............. Consumption expenditures................................................................................................................. Gross investment State and local............ Consumption expenditures..................................................................................................................... Gross investment... Residual.............................................................................................................................................................. 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 2,518.1 975.9 659.4 561.6 98.4 316.4 273.5 43.0 1,543.7 1,251.5 292.3 -1.2 2,564.6 1,026.6 695.0 589.3 106.6 331.5 286.7 44.8 1,541.0 1,249.4 291.3 -11.9 2,527.2 996.3 672.8 571.5 102.0 323.4 280.1 43.3 1,533.3 1,252.3 281.5 -1.1 2,568.6 1,023.5 695.2 588.2 107.8 328.2 284.0 44.3 1,548.0 1,252.7 294.9 -2.9 2,585.5 1,043.3 709.3 599.6 110.7 333.8 288.3 45.5 1,545.5 1,246.6 298.4 -13.7 2,576.9 1,043.4 702.8 597.7 105.8 340.5 294.3 46.2 1,537.0 1,246.1 290.6 -30.5 2,565.3 1,046.9 705.0 598.7 107.1 341.9 295.3 46.6 1,522.1 1,242.9 279.3 -42.7 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to house holds. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. The quantity index for computers can be used to accurately measure the real growth of this compo nent. However, because computers exhibit rapid changes in prices relative to other prices in the economy, the chained-dollar estimates should not be used to measure the component’s relative importance or its contribution to the growth rate of more aggregate series; accurate estimates of these contributions are shown in table 1.5.2, and real growth rates are shown in table 1.5.1. 5. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. Note. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines. D -12 National Data May 2010 Table 1.6.4. Price Indexes for Gross Domestic Purchases Table 1.6.7. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Prices for Gross Domestic Purchases [Index numbers, 2005=100] [Percent] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2009 I G ross dom estic purchases.......... Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s................................... Goods................................................ Durable g oods.............................. Motor vehicles and p arts........ Furnishings and durable household equipment......... Recreational goods and vehicles................................ Other durable goods................ Nondurable goods....................... Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption........................ Clothing and footwear............. Gasoline and other energy goods.................................... Other nondurable goods......... Services............................................. Household consumption expenditures............................. Housing and utilities............... H ealthcare............................... Transportation services.......... Recreation services................ Food services and accommodations................ Financial services and insurance.............................. Other services......................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (NPISHs)............. Gross private dom estic investm ent Fixed investment............................... Nonresidential.............................. Structures................................. Equipment and software......... Information processing equipment and software Computers and peripheral equipment Software 1....................... O the r................................ Industrial equipment........... Transportation equipment Other equipment.................. Residential.................................... Change in private inventories......... Farm.............................................. G overnm ent consu m p tion expenditures and g ross investm ent........................................ Federal.............................................. National defense.......................... Consumption expenditures.... Gross investment..................... Nondefense.................................. Consumption expenditures.... Gross investment..................... State and local.................................. Consumption expenditures.... Gross investment..................... Addenda: Final sales of computers to domestic purchasers 2 ............... Gross domestic purchases excluding final sales of computers to domestic purchasers.................................... Food 3................................................ Energy goods and services............ Gross domestic purchases excluding food and energy.......... Gross domestic pro du ct.................. Gross domestic product excluding final sales of computers............................. Food 3........................................ Energy goods and services.... Gross domestic product excluding food and energy Final sales of domestic product..... Final sales to domestic purchasers II Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 2010 III IV 2 109.031 109.241 108.449 108.814 109.510 110.190 110.607 3 106.150 103.540 102.186 102.864 104.216 104.895 105.410 4 95.537 94.009 94.326 94.407 93.660 93.642 92.780 5 98.523 98.708 96.689 97.904 99.073 101.164 102.098 98.049 97.735 98.574 98.882 97.362 96.124 95.304 7 84.337 79.697 81.789 80.666 78.794 77.539 76.360 8 111.534 113.348 112.707 113.380 113.035 114.268 110.108 9 112.188 108.998 106.739 107.736 110.227 111.291 112.566 10 111.926 113.289 114.382 113.339 112.730 112.702 113.235 11 97.823 98.714 98.186 98.361 99.431 98.876 98.559 12 143.694 104.053 92.354 94.966 110.761 118.130 124.750 13 106.098 111.020 108.596 111.264 111.954 112.266 112.855 14 110.582 112.252 111.749 111.954 112.312 112.992 113.358 15 16 17 18 19 110.838 111.926 109.726 112.403 109.517 112.643 113.310 112.447 115.461 110.785 112.113 113.400 111.416 115.115 110.270 112.341 113.283 112.045 114.643 110.165 112.705 113.213 112.730 115.515 111.325 113.412 113.345 113.598 116.573 111.380 113.826 113.444 114.098 117.105 111.298 20 111.599 114.315 113.783 114.201 114.358 114.917 114.987 21 109.986 109.444 108.695 109.100 109.270 110.710 111.797 22 110.819 113.229 112.478 112.771 113.259 114.410 115.079 23 104.531 103.250 103.349 103.043 103.269 103.337 102.626 24 25 26 27 28 106.502 106.132 107.524 122.811 102.008 108.245 107.668 109.154 127.092 102.450 107.019 106.463 107.993 123.706 102.304 105.465 105.265 106.656 120.451 101.802 105.278 105.130 106.294 119.994 101.478 104.931 104.834 105.826 120.272 100.724 G ross dom estic purcha ses.......... Personal consum ption e x p e n d itu re s ................................... G oods................................................ Durable goo ds.............................. Motor vehicles and p a rts ........ Furnishings and durable household equipment......... Recreational goods and vehicles................................. Other durable goods............... Nondurable g oo d s ....................... Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption........................ Clothing and footwear............. Gasoline and other energy goods.................................... Other nondurable goods......... Services............................................. Household consumption expenditures............................. Housing and utilities................ Health c a re ............................... Transportation services........... Recreation services................ Food services and accommodations................ Financial services and insurance.............................. Other s e rvices......................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (NPISHs)............. 29 95.600 93.913 94.578 94.033 93.545 93.497 93.138 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 69.960 102.748 100.487 110.942 102.641 108.231 105.779 64.239 101.494 100.542 112.322 109.493 112.578 100.716 66.328 102.145 100.416 112.055 109.015 113.120 101.915 64.563 101.674 100.465 112.003 112.335 112.916 100.554 63.508 100.928 100.603 112.327 110.666 112.161 99.863 62.558 101.229 100.683 112.904 105.957 112.116 100.532 62.151 100.880 100.359 113.113 101.077 111.125 100.863 G overnm ent consum ption expenditures and gross in vestm en t....................................... Federal............................................... National defense.......................... Consumption expenditures.... Gross investment..................... Nondefense.................................. Consumption expenditures.... Gross investment..................... State and local.................................. Consumption expenditures.... Gross investment..................... F a rm .............................................. 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 114.502 110.938 111.913 112.891 105.630 108.935 109.848 102.951 116.642 116.057 119.132 114.281 111.513 112.086 113.126 105.478 110.358 111.531 102.746 115.896 114.498 121.960 113.924 111.084 111.584 112.502 105.650 110.085 111.136 103.258 115.587 113.738 123.579 114.051 111.214 111.664 112.653 105.338 110.320 111.432 103.093 115.713 114.145 122.481 114.312 111.601 112.195 113.288 105.300 110.401 111.656 102.267 115.889 114.702 121.054 114.837 112.151 112.901 114.062 105.623 110.625 111.899 102.367 116.397 115.407 120.726 115.985 113.319 114.276 115.616 105.986 111.364 112.755 102.363 117.529 116.741 120.978 S1 68.284 61.277 64.021 62.093 59.980 59.015 58.499 52 110.279 110.441 109.969 110.139 110.540 111.115 111.595 53 111.710 113.429 114.498 113.469 112.883 112.867 113.269 54 134.804 110.506 104.867 104.515 113.640 119.002 123.507 bb 108.689 109.523 109.215 109.439 109.521 109.919 110.226 56 108.481 109.745 109.661 109.656 109.763 109.902 110.136 b / 108.888 110.260 110.134 110.157 110.303 110.447 110.697 58 113.980 114.477 115.433 114.864 113.982 113.627 113.867 59 84.554 112.910 121.249 112.724 114.089 103.577 100.945 60 108.640 109.478 109.144 109.362 109.500 109.905 110.212 61 108.507 109.655 109.566 109.550 109.681 109.823 110.063 62 109.792 109.734 109.311 109.437 109.819 110.370 110.838 1. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. 2. Some components of final sales of computers include computer parts. 3. Food excludes personal consumption expenditures for purchased meals and beverages, which are classified in food services. 2009 2009 I G ross private dom estic investm ent Fixed investment............................... Nonresidential............................... S tructures................................. Equipment and software......... Information processing equipment and software Computers and peripheral equipment Software 1........................ Other................................. Industrial equipment........... Transportation equipment Other equipment.................. Residential.................................... 107.355 107.551 107.897 125.207 101.455 2008 I 1 109.765 109.817 109.395 109.533 109.895 110.446 110.908 6 Line Addenda: Final sales of computers to domestic purchasers 2................ Gross domestic purchases excluding final sales of computers to domestic purchasers.................................... Food 3................................................ Energy goods and services............ Gross domestic purchases excluding food and energy.......... Gross domestic product................... Gross domestic product excluding final sales of computers............................. Food 3....................................... Energy goods and services.... Gross domestic product excluding food and energy Final sales of domestic product..... Final sales to domestic purchasers II 2010 III IV I 1 3.2 0.0 -1 .4 0.5 1.3 2.0 1.7 2 3 4 5 3.3 3.3 -1.2 -1 .0 0.2 -2.5 -1.6 0.2 -1 .5 -6.0 -1.7 -0 .9 1.4 2.7 0.3 5.1 2.6 5.4 -3.1 4.9 2.5 2.6 -0.1 8.7 1.5 2.0 -3.6 3.7 6 -0 .6 -0 .3 2.0 1.3 -6.0 -5 .0 -3 .4 7 8 9 -4.5 5.1 5.6 -5.5 1.6 -2 .8 -5.8 -0.5 -7.9 -5.4 2.4 3.8 -9.0 -1.2 9.6 -6 .2 4.4 3.9 -5.9 -13 .8 4.7 10 11 6.0 -0.8 1.2 0.9 -1.1 3.5 -3 .6 0.7 -2.1 4.4 -0.1 -2 .2 1.9 -1 .3 12 13 14 17.4 2.5 3.4 -27.6 4.6 1.5 -53.3 5.4 0.7 11.8 10.2 0.7 85.0 2.5 1.3 29.4 1.1 2.4 24.4 2.1 1.3 15 16 17 18 19 3.5 3.6 2.7 5.4 3.1 1.6 1.2 2.5 2.7 1.2 1.0 1.3 2.5 1.9 0.8 0.8 -0.4 2.3 -1.6 -0.4 1.3 -0.2 2.5 3.1 4.3 2.5 0.5 3.1 3.7 0.2 1.5 0.3 1.8 1.8 -0 .3 20 4.0 2.4 1.7 1.5 0.6 2.0 0.2 21 22 3.1 4.2 -0 .5 2.2 -3 .7 1.2 1.5 1.0 0.6 1.7 5.4 4.1 4.0 2.4 23 1.0 -1 .2 -4 .8 -1.2 0.9 0.3 -2 .7 24 25 26 27 28 0.6 0.8 1.6 3.2 0.7 -0 .8 -1 .3 -0 .3 -1.9 0.5 -1 .8 -2 .0 -1 .3 -3.5 0.1 -4.5 -4 .4 -4 .2 -10.2 -0 .6 -5 .7 -4 .4 -4.9 -10.1 -1 .9 -0 .7 -0 .5 -1 .4 -1.5 -1 .3 -1 .3 -1.1 -1 .7 0.9 -2 .9 29 -1.1 -1 .8 -2 .5 -2.3 -2.1 -0 .2 -1 .5 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 -10.4 1.0 0.4 3.9 0.2 3.5 -1.6 -8 .2 -1 .2 0.1 1.2 6.7 4.0 -4 .8 -9.1 -1 .7 -0.8 -1 .0 18.6 1.5 -4 .9 -10.2 -1.8 0.2 -0.2 12.7 -0.7 -5 .2 -6.4 -2.9 0.6 1.2 -5 .8 -2 .6 -2 .7 -5 .9 1.2 0.3 2.1 -16.0 -0 .2 2.7 -2 .6 -1 .4 -1.3 0.7 -17.2 -3 .5 1.3 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 4/ 48 49 bO 4.5 3.0 3.3 3.6 2.0 2.1 2.3 0.6 5.4 5.6 5.0 -0 .2 0.5 0.2 0.2 -0.1 1.3 1.5 -0.2 -0.6 -1 .3 2.4 -1.1 1.7 0.9 1.4 -1 .8 3.3 3.8 0.1 -2.8 -4 .3 4.0 0.4 0.5 0.3 0.5 -1.2 0.9 1.1 -0.6 0.4 1.4 -3.5 0.9 1.4 1.9 2.3 -0.1 0.3 0.8 -3.2 0.6 2.0 -4.6 1.8 2.0 2.5 2.8 1.2 0.8 0.9 0.4 1.8 2.5 -1.1 4.1 4.2 5.0 5.6 1.4 2.7 3.1 0.0 3.9 4.7 0.8 b1 -11.2 -10.3 -8 .9 -11.5 -12.9 -6 .3 -3.5 52 53 54 3.3 5.8 14.1 0.1 1.5 -18.0 -1 .4 -1.1 -36.1 0.6 -3.5 -1 .3 1.5 -2.0 39.8 2.1 -0.1 20.3 1.7 1.4 16.0 55 56 2.6 2.1 0.8 1.2 0.2 1.9 0.8 0.0 0.3 0.4 1.5 0.5 1.1 0.9 6/ 58 59 2.2 7.0 -20.1 1.3 0.4 33.5 1.9 -0 .9 122.2 0.1 -2.0 -25.3 0.5 -3.0 4.9 0.5 -1.2 -32.1 0.9 0.8 -9 .8 60 61 62 2.3 2.1 3.2 0.8 1.1 -0.1 0.5 1.8 -1 .5 0.8 -0.1 0.5 0.5 0.5 1.4 1.5 0.5 2.0 1.1 0.9 1.7 1. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. 2. Some components of final sales of computers include computer parts. 3. Food excludes personal consumption expenditures for purchased meals and beverages, which are classified in food services. May 2010 D-13 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin e ss Table 1.6.8. Contributions to Percent Change in the Gross Domestic Purchases Price Index Table 1.7.1. Percent Change from Preceding Period in Real Gross Domestic Product, Real Gross National Product, and Real Net National Product [Percent] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates ine 2008 2009 2009 I III II Seasonally adjusted at annual rates IV 1 3.2 0.0 -1.4 0.5 1.3 0.93 0.58 0.02 0.10 1.77 1.17 -0.22 0.10 2.0 1.7 Percentage poin ts at annual rates: Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s................................. G oods.............................................. Durable g oods........................... Motor vehicles and p arts..... Furnishings and durable household equipment....... Recreational goods and vehicles.............................. Other durable goods............. Nondurable goods..................... Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption...................... Clothing and footw ear.......... Gasoline and other energy g o o d s................................. Other nondurable goods....... S ervices.......................................... Household consumption expenditures.......................... Housing and utilities............. Health care............................. Transportation services........ Recreation services.............. Food services and accommodations.............. Financial services and insurance........................... Other services....................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PISHs)................................ G ross private d om estic investm ent..................................... Fixed investment............................ Nonresidential........................... Structures. Equipment and software....... Information processing equipment and software Computers and peripheral equipment Software 1..................... O ther.............................. Industrial equipment......... Transportation equipment Other equipment.............. Residential.................................. Change in private inventories....... Farm............................................ Nonfarm...................................... G overnment consum ption expenditures and gross investm ent..................................... Federal............................................ National defense........................ Consumption expenditures Gross investment.................. Nondefense................................ Consumption expenditures Gross investment.................. State and local................................ Consumption expenditures Gross investment................... Addenda: Final sales of computers to domestic purchasers 2 ............. Gross domestic purchases excluding final sales of computers to domestic purchasers.................................. Food 3.............................................. Energy goods and services.......... Gross domestic purchases excluding food and energy........ 2009 Gross dom estic p ro d u c t............ Plus: Income receipts from the 2009 2010 I II 1 0.4 -2.4 -6 .4 -0 .7 2.2 IV 5.6 ? -8 .9 -27.3 -56.2 -6.2 12.6 16.2 III I 3.2 Less: Income payments to the rest 2 3 4 5 2.23 0.74 -0.09 -0.02 0.13 -0.55 -0.11 0.00 -1.01 -1.35 -0.12 -0.02 1.72 0.59 0.00 0.19 1.05 0.44 -0.26 0.08 6 -0.01 -0.01 0.03 0.02 -0.11 -0.09 -0.06 7 8 9 -0.11 0.05 0.83 -0.13 0.02 -0.43 -0.13 0.00 -1.23 -0.12 0.02 0.56 -0.21 -0.01 1.39 -0.14 0.04 0.59 -0.14 -0.14 0.71 10 11 0.30 -0.02 0.06 0.02 -0.06 0.08 -0.20 0.02 -0.12 0.10 0.00 -0.05 0.10 -0.03 12 13 14 0.43 0.13 1.49 -0.75 0.24 0.67 -1.52 0.28 0.34 0.21 0.53 0.34 1.28 0.14 0.60 0.59 0.06 1.13 0.52 0.11 0.60 15 16 17 18 19 1.47 0.43 0.27 0.11 0.08 0.70 0.15 0.26 0.05 0.03 0.44 0.17 0.27 0.04 0.02 0.37 -0.05 0.25 -0 .03 -0.01 0.59 -0.03 0.27 0.06 0.11 1.13 0.06 0.34 0.08 0.01 0.65 0.04 0.20 0.04 -0.01 20 0.16 0.10 0.07 0.06 0.02 0.08 0.01 21 22 0.17 0.25 -0.03 0.13 -0.21 0.08 0.08 0.07 0.04 0.11 0.30 0.26 0.22 0.15 S -13 .4 -27.5 -60.8 -0.9 -8 .8 37.2 Equals: G ross national product Less: Consumption of fixed capital P rivate........................... Government................... General government Government enterprises........... 4 5 6 7 8 0.6 3.3 3.3 3.3 3.5 -2.7 1.3 0.9 3.5 3.9 -6 .6 1.5 1.1 3.6 4.0 -1.0 0.5 -0.2 4.1 4.5 3.0 0.7 0.0 4.5 5.1 5.0 1.6 0.6 6.5 7.3 1.8 1.4 4.0 4.4 9 2.0 1.8 1.7 1.9 1.7 2.2 1.8 Equals: Net national p ro d u c t.... 10 0.2 -3.3 -7 .7 -1.2 3.4 5.6 11 1? 13 14 -0.4 -0 .2 0.0 -0 .9 -3.2 -3.4 -3.0 -3.9 -7 .7 -7 .8 -7 .6 -9 .0 -0 1 -0 .3 -0.9 -0.2 -0 .4 0.4 2.5 -0 .5 6.2 5.6 6.2 6.9 Addenda: Net domestic product................ Net domestic income 3 ............. 3.4 1. Gross domestic income deflated by the implicit price deflator for gross domestic product. 2. Gross national income deflated by the implicit price deflator for gross national product. 3. Net domestic income deflated by the implicit price deflator for net domestic product. Table 1.7.3. Real Gross Domestic Product, Real Gross National Product, and Real Net National Product, Quantity Indexes [Index numbers, 2005=100] 23 0.02 -0.02 -0.09 -0.02 0.02 0.01 Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2010 2009 I II III IV I 102.271 102.082 102.648 104.045 104.876 -0.05 24 25 26 27 28 0.10 0.12 0.18 0.12 0.05 -0.04 -0.15 -0.01 -0.06 0.04 -0.22 -0.27 -0.13 -0.14 0.01 -0.51 -0 .55 -0.42 -0 .38 -0 .04 -0.63 -0.54 -0.47 -0.35 -0.12 -0.07 -0.06 -0.12 -0.05 -0.08 -0.15 -0.13 -0.16 0.03 -0.19 29 -0.04 -0.07 -0.09 -0 .08 -0.07 -0.01 -0.06 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 -0.07 0.02 0.01 0.05 0.00 0.04 -0.06 -0.02 -0.01 -0.02 -0.05 -0.02 0.00 0.02 0.04 0.05 -0.14 0.11 0.00 0.11 -0.05 -0.03 -0.01 -0.01 0.09 0.02 -0.14 0.05 0.00 0.05 -0.05 -0.03 0.00 0.00 0.06 -0.01 -0.13 0.04 0.00 0.04 -0.03 -0.05 0.01 0.01 -0.03 -0.03 -0.07 -0.09 0.00 -0.09 -0.03 0.02 0.00 0.02 -0.09 0.00 0.07 -0.01 0.00 -0.01 -0.02 -0.02 -0.02 0.01 -0.10 -0 .04 0.03 -0.02 0.00 -0.02 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 0.83 0.20 0.16 0.14 0.01 0.05 0.05 0.00 0.63 0.52 0.11 -0.04 0.04 0.01 0.01 0.00 0.03 0.03 0.00 -0 .08 -0.13 0.05 -0.21 0.12 0.05 0.06 -0.01 0.08 0.08 0.00 -0.34 -0 .43 0.09 0.09 0.04 0.02 0.02 -0.01 0.02 0.02 0.00 0.05 0.14 -0.09 0.19 0.11 0.10 0.10 0.00 0.01 0.02 -0.01 0.08 0.19 -0.12 0.37 0.16 0.14 0.13 0.01 0.02 0.02 0.00 0.21 0.24 -0.03 0.79 0.33 0.26 0.25 0.01 0.07 0.07 0.00 0.46 0.44 0.02 51 -0.12 -0.10 -0.08 -0.11 -0.12 -0.06 -0.03 52 53 54 3.27 0.29 0.54 0.15 0.08 -0.71 -1.35 -0.06 -1.59 0.61 -0.20 -0.05 1.45 -0.11 1.16 2.08 0.00 0.69 1.72 0.08 0.59 55 2.33 0.68 0.22 0.75 0.28 1.33 1.02 1. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. 2. Some components of final sales of computers include computer parts. 3. Food excludes personal consumption expenditures for purchased meals and beverages, which are classified in food services. 2008 I Percent change at annual rate: Gross dom estic p u rc h a s e s ...... Line 2010 G ross dom estic p ro d u c t............ Plus: Income receipts from the rest of the w o rld ......................... Less: Income payments to the rest Equals: Gross national product Less: Consumption of fixed capital P rivate........................... Government.................. General government Government enterprises........... 1 105.331 102.761 2 129.019 93.814 92.642 91.175 93.920 97.519 U 127.986 92.777 92.143 91.928 89.823 97.214 105.552 102.734 111.279 112.749 111.656 112.627 109.363 113.217 109.980 114.243 102.219 112.421 112.631 111.308 112.094 101.973 112.573 112.581 112.422 113.336 102.737 104.008 112.781 113.223 112.570 112.727 113.673 115.466 114.750 116.791 113.743 113.118 116.594 118.048 9 106.309 108.176 107.431 107.927 109.462 4 5 6 7 8 108.383 108.964 Equals: Net national p ro d u c t.... 10 104.764 101.358 100.819 100.520 101.357 102.738 A ddendum : Net domestic product................ 11 102.769 104.506 101.378 100.867 100.631 101.245 103.642 Table 1.7.4. Price Indexes for Gross Domestic Product, Gross National Product, and Net National Product [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line G ross dom estic p ro d u c t............ Plus: Income receipts from the rest of the w o rld ......................... Less: Income payments to the rest of the w o rld ................................. Equals: Gross national product Less: Consumption of fixed capital Private........................... Government................... General government Government enterprises........... 2008 1 108.481 2009 109.745 2010 2009 I II III 109.661 109.656 109.763 IV I 109.902 110.136 2 109.452 109.601 109.151 109.309 109.704 110.239 109.561 109.707 109.378 109.395 109.720 110.333 108.484 107.688 106.585 113.465 113.077 109.738 109.647 109.648 109.760 109.898 107.263 108.706 107.430 106.468 106.450 106.206 105.848 107.396 106.012 104.991 104.993 104.644 114.666 115.561 114.844 114.188 114.069 114.349 114.197 115.012 114.338 113.744 113.694 113.973 4 5 6 7 8 9 115.441 117.054 117.427 116.449 115.968 Equals: Net national p ro d u c t.... 10 108.599 110.114 109.787 109.984 110.261 110.423 A ddendum : Net domestic product................ 11 110.269 110.431 108.597 110.125 118.373 109.804 109.996 116.248 110.739 D -1 4 National Data May 2010 Table 1.7.5. Relation of Gross Domestic Product, Gross National Product, Net National Product, National Income, and Personal Income [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I G ross dom estic p ro d u c t................................................................................................................................ Plus: Income receipts from the rest of the w orld........................................................................................... Less: income payments to the rest of the world............................................................................................ 1 2 3 14,441.4 809.2 667.3 14,256.3 589.4 484.5 14,178.0 579.6 479.7 14,151.2 571.3 478.6 14,242.1 590.6 469.1 14,453.8 616.2 510.5 Equals: Gross national product Less: Consumption of fixed ca p ita l................................................................................................................. Private............................................. Domestic business.................... Capital consumption allowances........................................................................................... Less: Capital consumption adjustment................................................................................ Households and institutions....................................................................................................... Government...................................................................................................................................... General government Government enterprises............................................................................................................. 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14,583.3 1,847.1 1,536.2 1,252.3 1,340.2 87.8 283.9 310.9 259.5 51.4 14,361.2 1,864.0 1,538.8 1,257.7 1,269.6 11.9 281.0 325.2 272.2 53.0 14,277.9 1,883.6 1,561.3 1,277.0 1,267.6 -9.3 284.4 322.3 269.0 53.2 14,243.8 1,864.0 1,540.5 1,259.4 1,270.1 10.6 281.1 323.5 270.4 53.1 14,363.7 1,850.7 1,525.5 1,246.9 1,269.7 22.8 278.6 325.2 272.4 52.8 14,559.5 1,857.7 1,527.7 1,247.6 1,271.1 23.5 280.1 330.0 277.1 52.9 Equals: Net national p ro d u c t........................................................................................................................ 14 12,736.2 12,497.2 12,394.3 12,379.8 12,512.9 12,701.8 Less: Sta tistical discre pa n cy........................................................................................................................ 15 101.0 209.2 185.4 161.7 253.3 236.2 Equals: National in c o m e ............................................................................................................................... Less: Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments......................... Taxes on production and imports less subsidies Contributions for government social insurance, domestic............................................................... Net interest and miscellaneous payments on assets...................................................................... Business current transfer payments (n e t)......................................................................................... Current surplus of government enterprises Wage accruals less disbursements.................................................................................................... Plus: Personal income receipts on assets...................................................................................................... Personal current transfer receipts...................................................................................................... 1fi 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 12,635.2 1,360.4 993.8 990.6 815.1 118.8 -6.9 -5.0 1,994.4 1,875.9 12,288.1 1,308.9 964.3 966.9 788.2 134.1 -8.1 5.0 1,792.6 2,104.8 12,208.9 1,182.7 963.2 969.7 826.2 137.9 -10.7 20.0 1,845.5 1,987.3 12,218.1 1,226.5 964.6 970.9 784.4 145.4 -8.8 0.0 1,773.4 2,140.3 12,259.7 1,358.9 955.4 962.5 759.7 124.8 -6.3 0.0 1,763.1 2,137.5 12,465.6 1,467.6 973.8 964.7 782.6 128.2 -6.5 0.0 1,788.5 2,153.9 984.3 984.7 777.8 127.7 -5.3 0.0 1,784.1 2,215.4 Equals: Personal incom e............................................................................................................................... 26 12,238.8 12,026.1 11,952.7 12,048.8 12,005.2 12,097.7 12,212.8 ?7 28 29 30 31 32 14,340.4 14,482.3 13,376.7 12,594.3 12,493.3 11,529.6 14.047.1 14.152.1 13,061.8 12,392.3 12,183.1 11,197.8 13.992.5 14.092.5 13,002.0 12,294.4 12,108.9 11,118.5 13,989.5 14,082.1 12,980.8 12,287.2 12,125.5 11,116.9 13,988.9 14.110.4 13.036.5 12,391.4 12,138.2 11,185.8 14,217.6 14,323.3 13,227.8 12,596.1 12,359.9 11,370.2 Addenda: Gross domestic incom e............................................................................................................................... Gross national incom e.................................................................................................................................. Gross national factor income 1 Net domestic product.................................................................................................................................... 14,601.4 1,861.9 1,527.9 1,246.1 1,069.0 -177.0 281.8 334.0 280.8 53.3 12,739.5 1. Consists of compensation of employees, proprietors’ income with inventory valuation adjustment (IVA) and capital consumption adjustment (CCAdj), rental income of persons with CCAdj, corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj, net interest and miscellaneous payments, and consumption of fixed capital. 2. Consists of gross national factor income less consumption of fixed capital. Table 1.7.6. Relation of Real Gross Domestic Product, Real Gross National Product, and Real Net National Product, Chained Dollars [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV G ross dom estic p ro d u c t................................................................................................................................ Plus: Income receipts from the rest of the w orld........................................................................................... Less: Income payments to the rest of the world............................................................................................ 1 2 3 13,312.2 739.3 609.1 12,987.4 537.6 441.5 12,925.4 530.9 438.5 12,901.5 522.5 437.5 12,973.0 538.2 427.5 13,149.5 558.8 462.6 Equals: Gross national p ro d u c t................. Less: Consumption of fixed ca p ita l............... Private.............................................. Government...................................................................................................................................... General government Government enterprises............................................................................................................. 4 5 6 7 8 9 13,442.6 1,715.2 1,441.3 274.0 229.5 44.5 13,083.7 1,737.9 1,453.8 283.7 238.4 45.3 13,018.1 1,732.8 1,453.9 278.9 233.9 45.0 12,986.8 1,735.2 1,453.2 281.7 236.5 45.2 13,084.0 1,738.4 1,453.1 284.8 239.5 45.4 13,246.0 1,745.2 1,455.1 289.3 243.7 45.6 m 11,727.5 11,346.2 11,285.8 11,252.3 11,346.1 11,500.7 11 12 13 14 13,219.0 13,349.5 11,597.1 11,504.1 12,796.9 12,893.2 11,249.9 11,060.0 12,756.3 12,848.9 11,193.2 11,024.4 12,754.1 12,839.4 11,167.0 11,020.0 12,742.3 12,853.3 11,235.2 11,005.6 12,934.6 13,031.0 11,404.2 11,190.4 A ddenda: Gross domestic income 1............................................................................................................................. Gross national income 2............................................................................................................................... Net domestic product.................................................................................................................................... Net domestic income 3................................................................................................................................. I 13,254.7 1,753.2 1,460.1 292.1 246.4 45.8 11,501.1 1. Gross domestic income deflated by the implicit price deflator for gross domestic product. 2. Gross national income deflated by the implicit price deflator for gross national product. 3. Net domestic income deflated by the implicit price deflator for net domestic product. Note. Except as noted in footnotes 1, 2 and 3, chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. May 2010 D -1 5 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin e ss Table 1.8.3. Command-Basis Real Gross National Product, Quantity Indexes [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Gross national p ro d u c t.................................................................................................................................. Less: Exports of goods and services and income receipts from the rest of the w orld............................. Plus: Command-basis exports of goods and services and income receipts from the rest of the world 1 1 2 3 105.552 126.175 119.893 102.734 107.052 106.755 102.219 104.687 106.266 101.973 103.431 104.185 102.737 107.423 106.803 104.008 112.665 109.748 Equals: Com m and-basis g ross national p ro d u c t................................................................................... 4 104.625 102.690 102.452 102.084 102.645 103.578 A ddendum : Percent change from preceding period in command-basis real gross national product...................... 5 -0.2 -1 .8 -4.0 -1 .4 2.2 3.7 1. Exports of goods and services and income receipts deflated by the implicit price deflator for imports of goods and services and income payments. Table 1.8.6. Command-Basis Real Gross National Product, Chained Dollars [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Gross national p ro d u c t.................................................................................................................................. Less: Exports of goods and services and income receipts from the rest of the w orld............................. Plus: Command-basis exports of goods and services and income receipts from the rest of the world 1 1 2 3 13.442.6 2.369.7 2.251.7 13,083.7 2,010.5 2,005.0 13.018.1 1.966.1 1.996.2 12,986.8 1,942.5 1,957.1 13,084.0 2,017.5 2,006.3 13,246.0 2,116.0 2,061.6 Equals: Com m and-basis gross national p ro d u c t................................................................................... 4 13.324.6 13,078.1 13.048.2 13,001.4 13,072.8 13,191.6 Addendum : Terms of trade 2 ............................................................................................................................................ 5 95.021 99.723 101.531 100.752 99.445 97.433 1. Exports of goods and services and income receipts deflated by the implicit price deflator for imports of goods and services and income payments. 2. Ratio of the implicit price deflator for exports of goods and services and income receipts to the corresponding implicit price deflator for imports divided by 100. Note. Chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. Table 1.10. Gross Domestic Income by Type of Income [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I G ross dom estic in c o m e ....................................................................................................................... 1 14,340.4 14,047.1 13,992.5 13,989.5 13,988.9 14,217.6 C om pensation of employees, paid Wage and salary accruals............................................................................................................................ Disbursements....... To persons......... S To the rest of the world......................................................................................................................... Wage accruals less disbursements........................................................................................................ Supplements to wages and salaries.......................................................................................................... 2 3 4 7,798.6 6,296.2 6,291.2 6,281.1 10.1 5.0 1,502.5 7,833.0 6,335.0 6,315.0 6,304.8 10.2 20.0 1,498.0 7,823.0 6,320.2 6,320.2 6,310.2 10.0 0.0 1,502.8 7,758.5 6,256.2 6,256.2 6,246.2 10.0 0.0 1,502.3 7,780.1 6,273.3 6,273.3 6,263.3 10.0 0.0 1,506.8 7,848.3 6,322.5 6,322.5 6 7 8 8,044.8 6,548.2 6,553.2 6,542.8 10.4 -5.0 1,496.6 Taxes on pro du ction and im p o rts ................................................................................................................ 9 1,047.3 1,023.9 1,018.8 1,019.6 1,023.1 1,034.1 1,044.3 Less: S u b sid ie s............................................................................................................................................... 10 53.5 59.6 55.5 54.9 67.7 60.3 60.1 Net operating s u rp lu s .................................................................. Private enterprises..................................................................... Net interest and miscellaneous payments, domestic industries......................................................... Business current transfer payments (n e t).......................... Proprietors’ income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments....................... Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustm ent....................................................... Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments, domestic industries............................................................................................................................................... Taxes on corporate incom e................................................................................................................. Profits after tax with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments......................... Net dividends.................................................................................................................................... Undistributed corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustm ents................................................................................................................................. Current surplus of government enterprises.............................................................................................. 11 1? 13 14 15 16 3,454.8 3,461.7 1,043.1 118.8 1,106.3 210.4 3.420.2 3.428.3 988.0 134.1 1,041.0 268.1 3.312.7 3,323.4 1.034.8 137.9 1,037.8 245.9 3,337.9 3,346.7 986.0 145.4 1,028.0 262.0 3,424.3 3,430.6 954.3 124.8 1,037.9 277.9 3,606.1 3 612 6 977.0 128.2 1,060.3 286.7 127.7 1,064.8 292.0 17 18 19 ?n 983.2 292.2 691.0 543.3 997.1 314.8 682.3 458.9 867.0 270.3 596.6 515.3 925.3 305.9 619.4 455.5 1,035.7 321.0 714.7 397.0 1,160.4 361.9 798.5 467 6 ?1 22 147.7 -6.9 223 4 -8.1 81 3 -10.7 163.8 -8 .8 317 7 -6 .3 331 0 -6 .5 -5 .3 Consum ption of fixed c a p ita l.............. Private................................................... Government......................................... 23 24 25 1,847.1 1,536.2 310.9 1,864.0 1,538.8 325.2 1,883.6 1,561.3 322.3 1,864.0 1,540.5 323.5 1,850.7 1,525.5 325.2 1,857.7 1,527.7 330.0 1,861.9 1,527.9 334.0 26 101.0 209.2 185.4 161.7 253.3 236.2 Addendum : 0.0 1,525.8 D-16 National Data May 2010 Table 1.12. National Income by Type of Income [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I National in c o m e ............................................................................................................................. 1 12,635.2 12,288.1 12,208.9 12,218.1 12,259.7 12,465.6 C om pensation o f e m p lo ye e s............................................................................................................... Wage and salary accruals. G overnment.................. O ther............................... Supplements to wages and salaries.................................................................................................. Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance fun d s......................................... Employer contributions for government social insurance........................................................... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 8,037.4 6,540.8 1,141.3 5,399.6 1,496.6 1,023.9 472.7 7,791.6 6,289.1 1,182.4 5,106.7 1,502.5 1,043.9 458.5 7,825.8 6,327.8 1,171.8 5,156.0 1,498.0 1,037.8 460.2 7,815.9 6,313.1 1,184.4 5,128.8 1,502.8 1,042.0 460.8 7,751.5 6,249.2 1,184.8 5,064.3 1,502.3 1,046.1 456.2 7,773.1 6,266.3 1,188.6 5,077.8 1,506.8 1,049.8 457.0 7,841.2 6,315.5 1,199.1 5,116.4 1,525.8 1,055.7 470.1 P roprietors’ incom e w ith IVA and C C A d j.......................................................................................... Farm........................................................................................................................................................ Nonfarm.......................................... 9 10 11 1,106.3 48.7 1,057.5 1,041.0 29.3 1,011.7 1,037.8 27.3 1,010.5 1,028.0 28.9 999.1 1,037.9 25.8 1,012.0 1,060.3 35.2 1,025.1 1,064.8 30.7 1,034.1 ............... ............... .... 562.8 ............... Rental incom e o f persons w ith CCAdj 12 210.4 268.1 245.9 262.0 277.9 286.7 Corporate p ro fits w ith IVA and CCAdj Taxes on corporate incom e.......... Profits after tax with IVA and CCAdj................................................................................................... Net dividends.................................................................................................................................... Undistributed profits with IVA and CCAdj...................................................................................... 13 14 15 16 17 1,360.4 292.2 1,068.2 689.9 378.3 1,308.9 314.8 994.1 575.8 418.4 1,182.7 270.3 912.4 618.1 294.2 1,226.5 305.9 920.6 556.0 364.5 1,358.9 321.0 1,037.9 549.9 488.0 1,467.6 361.9 1,105.7 579.0 526.7 Net interest and m iscellaneous paym ents 18 815.1 788.2 826.2 784.4 759.7 782.6 777.8 Taxes on pro du ction and im p o rts ............. 19 1,047.3 1,023.9 1,018.8 1,019.6 1,023.1 1,034.1 1,044.3 292.0 Less: S u b sid ie s ............................................. 20 53.5 59.6 55.5 54.9 67.7 60.3 60.1 Business current transfer paym ents (net) To persons (net).................................................................................................................................... To government (net)............................................................................................................................. To the rest of the world (n e t)............................................................................................................... 21 22 23 24 118.8 32.6 78.8 7.3 134.1 32.7 96.8 4.6 137.9 32.5 100.3 5.0 145.4 32.7 107.9 4.8 124.8 32.8 87.5 4.5 128.2 32.9 91.4 3.9 127.7 33.3 90.4 3.9 Current su rplus of governm ent ente rp rise s.................................................................................... 25 -6.9 -8.1 -10.7 -8 .8 -6.3 -6.5 -5 .3 Addenda fo r corporate cash flow : Net cash flow with IVA.......................................................................................................................... Undistributed profits with IVA and CCAdj...................................................................................... Consumption of fixed capital.......................................................................................................... Less: Capital transfers paid (n e t)................................................................................................... ?6 27 28 29 1,478.4 378.3 1,036.8 -63.3 1,584.0 418.4 1,041.7 -123.9 1,575.4 294.2 1,058.2 -223.0 1,544.9 364.5 1,043.0 -137.3 1,573.3 488.0 1,032.5 -52.9 1,642.4 526.7 1,033.1 -82.6 Addenda: Proprietors’ income with IVA and CCAdj........................................................................................... Farm................................................................................................................................................... Proprietors’ income with IVA Capital consumption adjustment............................................................................................... Nonfarm..................................... Proprietors’ income (without IVA and C C A dj)......................................................................... Inventory valuation adjustment.................................................................................................. Capital consumption adjustment............................................................................................... Rental income of persons with CCAdj...... Rental income of persons (without CCAdj).................................................................................. Capital consumption adjustment.................................................................................................... Corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj...... Corporate profits with IV A ..................... Profits before tax (without IVA and C C A dj).............................................................................. Taxes on corporate incom e.................................................................................................... Profits after tax (without IVA and CCAdj) Net dividends......................................... Undistributed profits (without IVA and C C A dj)................................................................ Inventory valuation adjustm ent.................................................................................................. Capital consumption adjustment.................................................................................................... 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 1,106.3 48.7 55.6 -6.8 1,057.5 888.0 -5.1 174.6 210.4 226.2 -15.8 1,360.4 1,424.5 1,462.7 292.2 1,170.6 689.9 480.7 -38.2 -64.1 1,041.0 29.3 35.9 -6.6 1,011.7 850.1 0.7 160.8 268.1 282.6 -14.5 1,308.9 1,436.7 1,427.6 314.8 1,112.8 575.8 537.1 9.1 -127.8 1,037.8 27.3 34.4 -7.1 1,010.5 842.7 10.0 157.7 245.9 261.0 -15.1 1,182.7 1,327.6 1,246.5 270.3 976.1 618.1 358.0 81.1 -144.9 1,028.0 28.9 35.5 -6.6 999.1 836.3 2.3 160.5 262.0 276.6 -14.6 1,226.5 1,355.1 1,337.1 305.9 1,031.1 556.0 475.1 18.1 -128.6 1,037.9 25.8 32.3 -6 .4 1,012.0 852.2 -2 .6 162.4 277.9 292.1 -14.2 1,358.9 1,477.8 1,495.0 321.0 1,173.9 549.9 624.1 -17.1 -118.9 1,060.3 35.2 41.5 -6 .3 1,025.1 869.2 -6.9 162.7 286.7 300.8 -14.2 1,467.6 1,586.3 1,632.0 361.9 1,270.1 579.0 691.1 -45 .6 -118.8 IVA Inventory valuation adjustment CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment 1,031.7 1,064.8 30.7 36.7 -6.0 1,034.1 924.5 -4.9 114.5 292.0 306.2 -14.2 ............... ............... ............... ............... 562.8 ............... ............... -271.3 May 2010 D -17 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin e ss Table 1.14. Gross Value Added of Domestic Corporate Business in Current Dollars and Gross Value Added of Nonfinancial Domestic Corporate Business in Current and Chained Dollars [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Gross value added of corporate business 1...................... Consumption of fixed capital.......................................................... Net value added........................... Compensation of employees.... Wage and salary accruals.... Supplements to wages and salaries...................................... Taxes on production and imports less subsidies........................ Net operating surplus................................................................. Net interest and miscellaneous payments............................. Business current transfer payments (net).............................. Corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj.................................... Taxes on corporate income................................................ Profits after tax with IVA and CCAdj................................... Net dividends........................... Undistributed profits with IVA and CCAdj....................... 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Gross value added of financial corporate business 1....... 16 1,140.6 1,207.3 1,136.1 1,172.2 1,225.1 1,295.7 Gross value added of nonfinancial corporate business '.. Consumption of fixed capital.......................................................... Net value added............... Compensation of employees...................................................... Wage and salary accruals...................................................... Supplements to wages and salaries..................................... Taxes on production and imports less subsidies........................ Net operating surplus................................................................. Net interest and miscellaneous payments............................. Business current transfer payments (net).............................. Corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj.................................... Taxes on corporate income................................................ Profits after tax with IVA and CCAdj.:................................ Net dividends.......................... Undistributed profits with IVA and CCAdj....................... 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 6,971.5 898.4 6,073.0 4,427.9 3,677.2 750.7 621.0 1,024.1 242.1 70.4 711.6 237.8 473.8 409.3 64.5 6,672.2 902.0 5,770.2 4,182.9 3,439.8 743.1 601.9 985.5 227.4 77.8 680.3 222.1 458.2 361.0 97.3 6,703.8 916.7 5,787.1 4,238.5 3,494.7 743.8 602.7 945.8 237.4 79.2 629.2 197.9 431.3 373.1 58.1 6,671.9 903.0 5,768.9 4,194.4 3,450.0 744.3 603.1 971.4 229.2 83.2 659.0 217.0 442.1 362.7 79.3 6,613.6 894.0 5,719.6 4,146.7 3,405.0 741.6 593.9 979.0 219.2 73.1 686.6 227.0 459.6 332.7 126.9 6,699.6 894.2 5,805.4 4,152.0 3,409.5 742.5 607.7 1,045.7 223.8 75.5 746.4 246.3 500.1 375.3 124.7 Corporate business: Profits before tax (without IVA and CCAdj)............................ Profits after tax (without IVA and CCAdj).............................. Inventory valuation adjustment............................................. Capital consumption adjustment............................................ 32 33 34 35 1,085.5 793.4 -38.2 -64.1 1,115.8 801.0 9.1 -127.8 930.7 660.4 81.1 -144.9 1,035.9 729.9 18.1 -128.6 1,171.8 850.7 -17.1 -118.9 1,324.8 962.9 -45 .6 -118.8 -271.3 Nonfinancial corporate business: Profits before tax (without IVA and CCAdj)............................ Profits after tax (without IVA and CCAdj).............................. Inventory valuation adjustment............................................. Capital consumption adjustment........................................... 36 37 38 39 806.7 568.8 -38.2 -56.8 784.6 562.5 9.1 -113.4 676.9 478.9 81.1 -128.7 755.2 538.2 18.1 -114.2 809.4 582.4 -17.1 -105.7 897.0 650.7 -45 .6 -105.0 -241.2 8,112.1 1,036.8 7,075.2 5,005.9 4,162.9 843.0 665.4 1,404.0 334.0 86.8 983.2 292.2 691.0 543.3 147.7 7,879.5 1,041.7 6,837.8 4,727.5 3,893.1 834.4 645.2 1,465.0 367.9 100.0 997.1 314.8 682.3 458.9 223.4 7,839.9 1,058.2 6,781.7 4,781.3 3,946.1 835.3 645.8 1,354.5 384.3 103.2 867.0 270.3 596.6 515.3 81.3 7,844.0 1,043.0 6,801.0 4,749.8 3,914.0 835.8 646.3 1,405.0 370.5 109.2 925.3 305.9 619.4 455.5 163.8 7,838.6 1,032.5 6,806.2 4,686.2 3,853.4 832.8 637.3 1,482.7 354.5 92.5 1,035.7 321.0 714.7 397.0 317.7 7,995.3 1,033.1 6,962.2 4,692.7 3,859.0 833.8 651.5 1,617.9 362.4 95.1 1,160.4 361.9 798.5 467.6 331.0 1,031.7 4,734.0 3,887.4 846.6 657.4 94.5 892.8 4,190.0 3,436.1 753.9 613.4 75.3 Addenda: Value added, in billions of chained (2005) dollars Gross value added of nonfinancial corporate business : Consumption of fixed ca p ita l3 ............................................. Net value added 4 .................................................................. 40 41 42 6,675.5 837.3 5,838.2 6,290.6 842.5 5,448.1 6,278.8 844.0 5,434.8 6,269.8 842.6 5,427.1 6,242.7 841.6 5,401.2 6,371.2 841.9 5,529.2 844.4 1. Estimates for financial corporate business and nonfinancial corporate business for 2000 and earlier periods are based on the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC); later estimates for these industries are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). 2. The current-dollar gross value added is deflated using the gross value added chain-type price index for nonfinancial industries from the GDP-by-industry accounts. For periods when this price index is not available, the chain-type price index for GDP goods and structures is used. 3. Chained-dollar consumption of fixed capital of nonfinancial corporate business is calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. 4. Chained-dollar net value added of nonfinancial corporate business is the difference between the gross product and the consumption of fixed capital. IVA Inventory valuation adjustment CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment Table 1.15. Price, Costs, and Profit Per Unit of Real Gross Value Added of Nonfinancial Domestic Corporate Business [Dollars] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2010 2009 IV Price per u nit o f real gross value added of nonfinancial corporate business 1...................... 1.044 1.061 1.068 1.064 1.059 1.052 Com pensation o f em ployees (unit labor c o s t)................................................................................ 0.663 0.665 0.675 0.669 0.664 0.652 Unit nonlabor c o s t ................................................................................................................................. Consumption of fixed capital............................................................................................................... Taxes on production and imports less subsidies plus business current transfer payments (net) Net interest and miscellaneous paym ents........................................................................................ 0.275 0.135 0.104 0.036 0.287 0.143 0.108 0.036 0.293 0.146 0.109 0.038 0.290 0.144 0.109 0.037 0.285 0.143 0.107 0.035 0.282 0.140 0.107 0.035 Corporate pro fits w ith IVA and CCAdj (unit p ro fits from cu rre nt p ro d u ctio n )......................... Taxes on corporate incom e................................................................................................................. Profits after tax with IVA and CCAdj................................................................................................... 0.107 0.036 0.071 0.108 0.035 0.073 0.032 0.069 0.105 0.035 0.071 0.036 0.074 0.117 0.039 0.078 0.100 0.110 1. The implicit price deflator for gross value added of nonfinancial corporate business divided by 100. Estimates for nonfinancial corporate business for 2000 and earlier periods are based on the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC); later estimates for these industries are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). Note. The current-dollar gross value added is deflated using the gross value added chain-type price index for nonfinancial industries from the GDP-by-industry accounts. For periods when this price index is not avail able, the chain-type price index for GDP goods and structures is used. IVA Inventory valuation adjustment CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment D -1 8 National Data May 2010 2. Personal Income and Outlays Table 2.1. Personal Income and Its Disposition [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Personal in com e ...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of employees, received............................................................................................. Wage and salary disbursements.................................................................................................... Private industries................... Government.................................................................................................................................. Supplements to wages and salaries............................................................................................. Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance fu n d s .................................... Employer contributions for government social insurance....................................................... Proprietors’ income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments................... Farm................................................................................................................................................... Nonfarm ............................................................................................................................................. Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment.................................................... Personal income receipts on assets................................................................................................... Personal interest income Personal dividend income Personal current transfer receipts ............................................................... Government social benefits to persons......................................................................................... Old-age, survivors, disability, and health insurance benefits................................................. Government unemployment insurance benefits....... Veterans benefits......................................................... Family assistance 1..................................................................................................................... O ther.............................................................................. Other current transfer receipts, from business (net).... Less: Contributions for government social insurance, dom estic.................................................... 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Less: Personal cu rre nt ta x e s ............................................... 25 1,432.4 1,102.5 1,187.3 1,082.6 1,071.0 1,069.1 1,142.4 Equals: D isposable personal in c o m e ................................................................................................ 26 10,806.4 10,923.6 10,765.4 10,966.2 10,934.3 11,028.7 11,070.4 Less: Personal o u tla y s .......................................................................................................................... Personal consumption expenditures.................................................................................................. Personal interest payments 2........ Personal current transfer paym ents................................................................................................... To government........................... To the rest of the world (n e t).... 27 28 29 30 31 32 10,520.0 10,129.9 237.7 152.3 87,9 64.5 10,458.7 10,089.1 213.9 155.7 92.2 63.5 10,362.3 9,987.7 220.4 154.2 90.4 63.8 10,370.5 9,999.3 216.7 154.5 91.4 63.1 10,502.8 10,132.9 215.5 154.4 92.5 61.9 10,599.3 10,236.4 203.1 159.8 94.5 65.3 10,729.7 10,367.1 199.5 163.0 96.5 66.5 Equals: Personal sa vin g ........................................................................................................................ 33 286.4 464.9 403.1 595.7 431.5 429.3 340.8 Personal saving as a percentage o f disposable personal in c o m e ......................................... 34 2.7 4.3 3.7 5.4 3.9 3.9 3.1 35 9,504.6 9,081.6 9,188.7 9,105.5 9,010.5 9,024.0 9,038.5 36 9,911.3 9,999.0 9,926.4 10,077.5 9,984.4 10,008.5 10,008.5 3/ 38 39 35,450 32,514 304,831 35,526 32,519 307,483 35,124 32,387 306,496 35,709 32,815 307,101 35,522 32,436 307,815 35,747 32,440 308,521 35,813 32,378 309,119 12,238.8 8,042.4 6,545.9 5,404.6 1,141.3 1,496.6 1,023.9 472.7 1,106.3 48.7 1,057.5 210.4 1,994.4 1,308.0 686.4 1,875.9 1,843.2 1,070.3 50.6 45.6 18.9 657.9 32.6 990.6 12,026.1 7,786.6 6,284.1 5,101.7 1,182.4 1,502.5 1,043.9 458.5 1,041.0 29.3 1,011.7 268.1 1,792.6 1,238.5 554.2 2,104.8 2,072.0 1,156.7 122.0 52.0 19.8 721.6 32.7 966.9 11,952.7 7,805.8 6,307.8 5,136.0 1,171.8 1,498.0 1,037.8 460.2 1,037.8 27.3 1,010.5 245.9 1,845.5 1,243.4 602.1 1,987.3 1,954.7 1,128.5 96.2 50.3 19.5 660.4 32.5 969.7 12,048.8 7,815.9 6,313.1 5,128.8 1,184.4 1,502.8 1,042.0 460.8 1,028.0 28.9 999.1 262.0 1,773.4 1,241.1 532.3 2,140.3 2,107.7 1,151.1 122.5 50.5 19.7 763.9 32.7 970.9 12,005.2 7,751.4 6,249.2 5,064.3 1,184.8 1,502.3 1,046.1 456.2 1,037.9 25.8 1,012.0 277.9 1,763.1 1,234.9 528.2 2,137.5 2,104.7 1,165.8 135.7 52.0 19.9 731.2 32.8 962.5 12,097.7 7,773.1 6,266.3 5,077.8 1,188.6 1,506.8 1,049.8 457.0 1,060.3 35.2 1,025.1 286.7 1,788.5 1,234.4 554.1 2,153.9 2,121.0 1,181.4 133.6 55.1 20.1 730.8 32.9 964.7 12,212.8 7,841.2 6,315.5 5,116.4 1,199.1 1,525.8 1,055.7 470.1 1,064.8 30.7 1,034.1 292.0 1,784.1 1,238.9 545.2 2,215.4 2,182.1 1,189.3 139.6 57.4 20.2 775.6 33.3 984.7 Addenda: Personal incom e excluding c u rre nt tra nsfe r receipts, b illio n s o f chained (2005) d o lla r s 3 Disposable personal incom e: Total, billions of chained (2005) dollars 3...................................................................................... Per capita: Current d ollars............................................................................................................................. Chained (2005) dollars................................................................................................................ Population (midperiod, thousands).................................................................................................... Percent change from preceding period: Disposable personal in com e, cu rre nt d o lla rs ........................................................................ 40 3.9 1.1 -1 .2 7.7 -1.2 3.5 1.5 Disposable personal incom e, chained (2005) d ollars........................................................... 41 0.5 0.9 0.2 6.2 -3.6 1.0 0.0 1. Consists of aid to families with dependent children and, beginning with 1996, assistance programs operating under the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996. 2. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households. 3. The current-dollar measure is deflated by the implicit price deflator for personal consumption expenditures. Table 2.2B. Wage and Salary Disbursements by Industry [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Wage and salary d isbu rse m e n ts............................................................................................... 1 6,545.9 6,284.1 6,307.8 6,313.1 6,249.2 6,266.3 6,315.5 Private in d u s trie s .................................................................................................................................... Goods-producing industries................................................................................................................ Manufacturing................................................................................................................................... Services-producing industries....... Trade, transportation, and utilities.................................................................................................. Other services-producing industries 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 5,404.6 1,206.5 742.0 4,198.1 1,048.3 3,149.8 5,101.7 1,063.1 658.1 4,038.6 986.5 3,052.1 5,136.0 1,107.3 681.0 4,028.8 1,002.3 3,026.5 5,128.8 1,067.8 662.0 4,061.0 989.3 3,071.7 5,064.3 1,042.1 644.9 4,022.2 977.0 3,045.2 5,077.8 1,035.3 644.7 4,042.5 977.4 3,065.1 5,116.4 1,039.5 649.3 4,076.9 984.9 3,092.0 G overnm ent........................................ 8 1,141.3 1,182.4 1,171.8 1,184.4 1,184.8 1,188.6 1,199.1 1. Other services-producing industries consists of information; finance and insurance; real estate and rental and leasing; professional, scientific, and technical services; management of companies and enterprises, administrative and support and waste management and remediation services; educational services; health care and social assistance; arts, entertainment, and recreation; accommodation and food services; and other services. Note. Estimates in this table are based on the 2002 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). May 2010 D-19 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin e ss Table 2.3.2. Contributions to Percent Change in Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product Table 2.3.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product [Percent] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I Personal consu m p tion e xp e n d itu re s ................................... G o o d s ............................................................ Durable g oods........................................... Motor vehicles and p a rts ..................... Furnishings and durable household equipment.......................................... Recreational goods and vehicles........ Other durable goods............................. Nondurable g oo ds.................................... Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption.............. Clothing and footwear.......................... Gasoline and other energy g oo ds...... Other nondurable goods...................... S ervices......................................................... Household consumption expenditures (for services).......................................... Housing and utilities............................. H ealthcare............................................ Transportation services....................... Recreation services.............................. Food services and accommodations Financial services and insurance....... Other services...................................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PIS Hs)1........................ Gross output of nonprofit institutions 2 Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions 3...................................... Addenda: Energy goods and services 4 .................. Personal consumption expenditures excluding food and e ne rg y5............... II Line IV III I -0 .6 0.6 -0 .9 2.8 1.6 3.6 2 3 4 -2.1 -4 .5 -13.6 -1 .9 -3 .9 -8 .7 2.5 3.9 6.7 -3.1 -5 .6 -6 .3 7.2 20.4 43.6 2.8 0.4 -20.7 6.2 11.3 -0 .8 5 6 7 8 -2 .9 5.4 -4 .8 -0.8 -5 .9 2.2 -3 .0 -1.0 -7.0 9.3 7.2 1.9 -7 .8 -4 .6 -1 .9 -1.9 6.8 17.5 6.6 1.5 11.5 16.0 1.8 4.0 14.3 14.9 27.1 3.9 9 10 11 12 0.0 -0 .3 -4 .4 -0.1 -0 .5 -4 .3 1.8 -1 .2 0.6 -1.7 8.6 2.2 3.6 -8 .2 1.1 -5 .5 3.8 -0.3 -1.8 1.2 4.9 7.6 -2 .3 4.4 3.2 10.3 1.4 3.2 13 0.7 0.1 -0 .3 0.2 0.8 1.0 2.4 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 0.4 0.9 3.0 -5 .0 0.0 -0 .4 -1.6 -0 .6 0.2 0.6 2.2 -3 .7 -1 .3 -2 .9 -0.4 0.9 0.7 0.1 3.4 -7.0 1.8 -1 .6 0.4 1.5 0.7 -1 .2 3.9 1.0 -1 .6 -2 .3 2.5 0.1 0.5 0.5 0.1 3.9 -3 .0 -2.0 3.0 1.1 0.8 2.5 2.2 0.7 -0 .2 -1 .0 -2.6 -0 .3 2.2 2.5 2.3 0.1 3.2 8.3 -0.8 0.7 22 23 8.9 3.5 -3 .6 0.2 -21.3 -3 .0 -10.9 0.1 7.3 -0.5 6.1 1.4 8.1 2.6 24 1.6 1.5 4.5 4.1 -2.9 0.0 0.8 25 -3 .5 0.5 3.3 -6 .0 -1.1 5.6 7.6 -0 .7 0.4 -1 .0 2.9 1.1 I II 2010 III 3.4 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to households. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. Consists of gasoline and other energy goods and of electricity and gas. 5. Food consists of food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption; food services, which include purchased meals and beverages, are not classified as food. Personal co nsum ption e xp e n d itu re s ................................... I 1 -0.2 -0.6 0.6 -0.9 2.8 1.6 3.6 2 3 4 -0.71 -0.52 -0.54 -0.65 -0.42 -0.29 0.80 0.40 0.19 -1.00 -0.58 -0.19 2.26 1.92 1.14 0.92 0.04 -0.74 1.99 1.12 -0.02 5 6 7 8 -0.08 0.18 -0.07 -0.19 -0.16 0.07 -0 .04 -0.23 -0.19 0.29 0.10 0.41 -0.21 -0.15 -0 .03 -0.42 0.17 0.52 0.09 0.33 0.27 0.48 0.03 0.88 0.34 0.46 0.34 0.88 9 10 11 12 0.00 -0.01 -0.18 -0.01 -0.04 -0.14 0.04 -0.09 0.05 -0.06 0.24 0.17 0.28 -0.28 0.03 -0.45 0.30 -0.01 -0.05 0.10 0.37 0.24 -0.08 0.35 0.25 0.32 0.05 0.25 13 0.46 0.05 -0 .19 0.13 0.54 0.68 1.64 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 0.23 0.17 0.44 -0.16 0.00 -0.02 -0.14 -0.06 0.15 0.10 0.34 -0.11 -0.05 -0 .17 -0 .03 0.08 0.47 0.03 0.53 -0.22 0.07 -0.10 0.03 0.14 0.43 -0 .23 0.62 0.03 -0.06 -0.14 0.21 0.01 0.35 0.10 0.02 0.12 -0.12 -0.12 0.25 0.10 0.53 0.46 0.35 0.02 -0.01 -0.06 -0.21 -0 .03 1.43 0.46 0.36 0.00 0.12 0.48 -0.06 0.06 22 23 0.23 0.35 -0 .10 0.02 -0.67 -0.32 -0.30 0.02 0.19 -0.05 0.16 0.15 0.21 0.27 24 0.12 0.12 0.35 0.32 -0.24 0.00 0.07 25 -0.22 0.02 0.17 -0.31 -0.05 0.29 0.41 26 -0.03 -0.59 0.39 -0.85 2.55 0.94 2.97 Percentage points at annual rates: G o o d s ............................................................ Durable goo ds........................................... Motor vehicles and p a rts ..................... Furnishings and durable household equipment.......................................... Recreational goods and vehicles........ Other durable goods............................ Nondurable g o o d s .................................... Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption.............. Clothing and footwear.......................... Gasoline and other energy goods...... Other nondurable goods...................... S e rvice s......................................................... Household consumption expenditures (for services).......................................... Housing and utilities.............................. Health ca re ............................................ Transportation services........................ Recreation services.............................. Food services and accommodations Financial services and insurance....... Other services...................................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PIS Hs)1........................ Gross output of nonprofit in stitutions2 Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions 3...................................... Addenda: Energy goods and services 4................... Personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy 5............... 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to households. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. Consists of gasoline and other energy goods and of electricity and gas. 5. Food consists of food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption; food services, which include purchased meals and beverages, are not classified as food. Table 2.3.3. Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product, Quantity Indexes [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2010 2009 I II III IV I Personal co nsum ption e xp e n d itu re s ................................................................................................ 1 105.351 104.718 104.425 104.196 104.917 105.335 106.278 G oo d s................................................................................................................................................................. Durable goods............................................................................................................................................... Motor vehicles and parts.......................................................................................................................... Furnishings and durable household equipment................................................................................... Recreational goods and vehicles............... Other durable goo ds.................................... Nondurable goods............................................ Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption......................................................... Clothing and footwear.............................................................................................................................. Gasoline and other energy g oods............. Other nondurable goo ds.......................................................................................................................... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 104.296 103.692 84.820 104.398 132.849 99.569 104.513 105.371 109.341 94.298 106.686 102.285 99.626 77.435 98.282 135.724 96.575 103.482 104.867 104.606 96.030 105.420 101.817 98.345 75.971 98.300 132.895 96.050 103.405 103.371 105.841 96.186 106.094 101.023 96.947 74.745 96.314 131.337 95.579 102.911 104.288 103.610 96.448 104.602 102.789 101.561 81.816 97.907 136.742 97.120 103.295 105.271 103.533 96.018 104.921 103.512 101.651 77.207 100.608 141.924 97.552 104.318 106.538 105.439 95.469 106.064 105.075 104.405 77.049 104.017 146.940 103.580 105.324 107.382 108.050 95.813 106.897 S e rv ic e s ................................................................ Household consumption expenditures (for services)............................................................................... Housing and utilities................................................................................................................................. Health care.................................................... Transportation services............................................................................................................................ Recreation services........................ Food services and accommodations..................................................................................................... Financial services and insurance... Other services.................................. Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PISHs)1.................. Gross output of nonprofit institutions 2................................................................................................... Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions 3 ................................... 13 14 1b 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 105.883 105.181 104.069 107.635 95.765 107.045 103.825 106.615 105.640 124.554 109.383 104.611 105.966 105.425 104.668 109.950 92.248 105.655 100.833 106.162 106.611 120.076 109.572 106.175 105.761 105.174 104.676 108.993 91.592 106.402 101.598 105.444 106.472 121.155 109.511 105.775 105.809 105.346 104.354 110.046 91.825 105.964 100.997 106.105 106.502 117.721 109.550 106.835 106.014 105.484 104.493 110.083 92.705 105.148 100.488 106.896 106.782 119.822 109.417 106.051 106.281 105.697 105.150 110.677 92.870 105.107 100.247 106.205 106.689 121.604 109.811 106.041 106.916 106.271 105.795 111.296 92.882 105.927 102.270 106.005 106.864 123.988 110.514 106.259 Addenda: Energy goods and services 4...................................................................................................................... Personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy 5......................................................... 25 26 95.235 106.069 95.668 105.337 96.591 105.078 95.096 104.823 94.843 105.582 96.142 105.864 97.910 106.759 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to house holds. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of IV Percent change at annual rate: -0 .2 0.0 2009 2009 2010 1 26 2008 the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. Consists of gasoline and other energy goods and of electricity and gas. 5. Food consists of food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption; food services, which include purchased meals and beverages, are not classified as food. D-20 National Data May 2010 Table 2.3.4. Price Indexes for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Personal consu m p tion e xp e n d itu re s................................................................................................ 1 109.031 109.241 108.449 108.814 109.510 110.190 110.607 G o o d s................................................................................................................................................................. Durable goods................................................................................................................................................ Motor vehicles and parts.......................................................................................................................... Furnishings and durable household equipment................................................................................... Recreational goods and vehicles............................................................................................................ Other durable goo ds.......................................... Nondurable goods................................................... Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption......................................................... Clothing and footwear.............................................................................................................................. Gasoline and other energy goods.................... Other nondurable goods................................... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 106.150 95.537 98.523 98.049 84.337 111.534 112.188 111.926 97.823 143.694 106.098 103.540 94.009 98.708 97.735 79.697 113.348 108.998 113.289 98.714 104.053 111.020 102.186 94.326 96.689 98.574 81.789 112.707 106.739 114.382 98.186 92.354 108.596 102.864 94.407 97.904 98.882 80.666 113.380 107.736 113.339 98.361 94.966 111.264 104.216 93.660 99.073 97.362 78.794 113.035 110.227 112.730 99.431 110.761 111.954 104.895 93.642 101.164 96.124 77.539 114.268 111.291 112.702 98.876 118.130 112.266 105.410 92.780 102.098 95.304 76.360 110.108 112.566 113.235 98.559 124.750 112.855 S e rv ic e s ...................................................................... Household consumption expenditures (for services)............................................................................... Housing and utilities................................................................................................................................. Health care.................... Transportation services Recreation services.... Food services and accommodations..................................................................................................... Financial services and insurance............................................................................................................ Other services........................................................................................................................................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PIS Hs)1................. Gross output of nonprofit institutions 2................................................................................................... Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions 3 ................................... 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 110.582 110.838 111.926 109.726 112.403 109.517 111.599 109.986 110.819 104.531 109.691 111.530 112.252 112.643 113.310 112.447 115.461 110.785 114.315 109.444 113.229 103.250 111.610 114.665 111.749 112.113 113.400 111.416 115.115 110.270 113.783 108.695 112.478 103.349 110.752 113.457 111.954 112.341 113.283 112.045 114.643 110.165 114.201 109.100 112.771 103.043 111.236 114.230 112.312 112.705 113.213 112.730 115.515 111.325 114.358 109.270 113.259 103.269 111.885 115.031 112.992 113.412 113.345 113.598 116.573 111.380 114.917 110.710 114.410 103.337 112.568 115.941 113.358 113.826 113.444 114.098 117.105 111.298 114.987 111.797 115.079 102.626 112.928 116.702 Addenda: Energy goods and services 4...................................................................................................................... Personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy 5......................................................... Market-based personal consumption expenditures6............................................................................... Market-based personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy 6................................ 25 26 27 28 134.981 107.207 108.954 106.811 108.904 108.854 109.276 108.832 103.432 108.173 108.452 108.133 102.900 108.712 108.848 108.737 112.040 109.027 109.606 109.060 117.245 109.503 110.198 109.400 121.698 109.671 110.579 109.484 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to households. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. Consists of gasoline and other energy goods and of electricity and gas. 5. Food consists of food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption; food services, which include purchased meals and beverages, are not classified as food. 6. This index is a supplemental measure that is based on household expenditures for which there are observable price measures. It excludes most implicit prices (for example, financial services furnished without payment) and the final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households. Table 2.3.5. Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s ................................................................................................ 1 10,129.9 10,089.1 9,987.7 9,999.3 10,132.9 10,236.4 10,367.1 G oods................................................................................................................................................................. Durable goods................................................................................................................................................ Motor vehicles and parts................................... Furnishings and durable household equipment................................................................................... Recreational goods and vehicles..................... Other durable goods.......................................... Nondurable goods......................................................................................................................................... Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption......................................................... Clothing and footwear.............................................................................................................................. Gasoline and other energy goods....... Other nondurable goo ds....................... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 3,403.2 1,095.2 342.3 270.1 339.9 142.8 2,308.0 784.3 337.5 413.0 773.2 3,255.2 1,035.0 312.8 253.5 327.9 140.9 2,220.2 790.2 325.8 304.7 799.4 3,197.7 1,025.2 300.6 255.7 329.6 139.3 2,172.4 786.5 327.9 271.0 787.0 3,193.8 1,011.5 299.5 251.3 321.3 139.4 2,182.2 786.3 321.6 279.4 795.0 3,292.3 1,051.3 331.7 251.6 326.8 141.3 2,241.0 789.4 324.8 324.4 802.3 3,337.1 1,052.0 319.6 255.2 333.8 143.4 2,285.1 798.7 329.0 344.0 813.3 3,404.1 1,070.6 321.9 261.6 340.3 146.7 2,333.5 808.9 336.0 364.6 824.0 S e rv ic e s .......................................................... Household consumption expenditures (for services)............................................................................... Housing and utilities.................................................................................................................................. Health care.............................................. Transportation services......................... Recreation services.............................. Food services and accommodations... Financial services and insurance........ Other services........................................ Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PIS Hs)1................. Gross output of nonprofit institutions 2.................................................................................................. Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions3 ................................... 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 6,726.8 6,448.0 1,843.7 1,554.2 307.8 383.1 608.7 835.6 915.0 278.7 1,049.4 770.7 6,833.9 6,568.5 1,877.2 1,627.0 304.6 382.5 605.6 828.0 943.5 265.4 1,069.6 804.2 6,790.0 6,522.0 1,878.8 1,598.0 301.6 383.4 607.3 816.7 936.0 268.0 1,060.8 792.7 6,805.6 6,545.9 1,871.1 1,622.6 301.1 381.5 606.0 824.9 938.7 259.7 1,065.8 806.1 6,840.6 6,575.7 1,872.5 1,633.0 306.3 382.5 603.7 832.4 945.3 264.9 1,070.7 805.8 6,899.3 6,630.3 1,886.4 1,654.5 309.6 382.6 605.2 837.9 954.0 269.0 1,081.1 812.1 6,963.0 6,690.6 1,899.7 1,671.1 311.1 385.3 617.8 844.5 961.2 272.4 1,091.5 819.1 Addenda: Energy goods and services 4...................................................................................................................... Personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy 5......................................................... 25 26 636.6 8,709.1 516.5 8,782.3 495.3 8,705.8 485.1 8,727.9 526.8 8,816.6 558.8 8,878.8 590.7 8,967.5 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to households. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. Consists of gasoline and other energy goods and of electricity and gas. 5. Food consists of food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption; food services, which include purchased meals and beverages, are not classified as food. May 2010 D-21 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin ess Table 2.3.6. Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product, Chained Dollars [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2010 2009 I III II IV I Personal co nsum ption e xp e n d itu re s................................................................................................ 1 9,290.9 9,235.1 9,209.2 9,189.0 9,252.6 9,289.5 9,372.7 G o o d s................................................................................................................................................................. Durable goods................................................................................................................................................ Motor vehicles and parts.......................................................................................................................... Furnishings and durable household equipment................................................................................... Recreational goods and vehicles............... Other durable g oo ds.................................... Nondurable goods............................................ Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption......................................................... Clothing and footwear.............................................................................................................................. Gasoline and other energy goods............. Other nondurable goo ds......................................................................................................................... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 3,206.0 1,146.3 347.5 275.5 403.0 128.0 2,057.3 700.7 345.0 287.4 728.7 3,144.2 1,101.4 317.2 259.4 411.7 124.2 2,037.0 697.4 330.1 292.7 720.1 3,129.8 1,087.2 311.2 259.4 403.1 123.5 2,035.5 687.4 334.0 293.2 724.7 3,105.4 1,071.7 306.2 254.2 398.4 122.9 2,025.7 693.5 326.9 294.0 714.5 3,159.6 1,122.7 335.2 258.4 414.8 124.9 2,033.3 700.1 326.7 292.7 716.7 3,181.9 1,123.7 316.3 265.5 430.5 125.5 2,053.4 708.5 332.7 291.0 724.5 3,229.9 1,154.2 315.6 274.5 445.7 133.2 2,073.2 714.1 340.9 292.1 730.2 S e rv ic e s ............................................................... Household consumption expenditures (for services)............................................................................... Housing and utilities................................................................................................................................. Health care................................................... Transportation services............................................................................................................................ Recreation services........................ Food services and accommodations..................................................................................................... Financial services and insurance... Other services........................................................................................................................................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PISHs)1................. Gross output of nonprofit institutions 2.................................................................................................. Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions 3 ................................... Residual.............................................................................................................................................................. 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 6,083.1 5,817.6 1,647.2 1,416.4 273.8 349.8 545.4 759.8 825.7 266.6 956.7 691.0 -8.7 6,087.8 5,831.1 1,656.7 1,446.9 263.7 345.3 529.7 756.5 833.3 257.1 958.4 701.3 -6 .9 6,076.0 5,817.2 1,656.9 1,434.3 261.9 347.7 533.7 751.4 832.2 259.4 957.8 698.7 -4.5 6,078.8 5,826.7 1,651.8 1,448.2 262.5 346.3 530.5 756.1 832.4 252.0 958.2 705.7 -1.9 6,090.6 5,834.3 1,654.0 1,448.6 265.0 343.6 527.9 761.8 834.6 256.5 957.0 700.5 -8.9 6,105.9 5,846.1 1,664.4 1,456.5 265.5 343.5 526.6 756.8 833.9 260.3 960.4 700.5 -12.1 6,142.4 5,877.9 1,674.6 1,464.6 265.5 346.2 537.2 755.4 835.2 265.4 966.6 701.9 -17.0 Addenda: Energy goods and services 4...................................................................................................................... Personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy 5......................................................... 26 27 471.6 8,123.6 473.7 8,067.5 478.3 8,047.7 470.9 8,028.2 469.7 8,086.3 476.1 8,107.9 484.8 8,176.4 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to households. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. Consists of gasoline and other energy goods and of electricity and gas. 5. Food consists of food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption; food services, which include purchased meals and beverages, are not classified as food. Note. Chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines. Table 2.3.7. Percent Change from Preceding Period in Prices for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2009 2008 2010 2009 I II III I IV Personal consum ption expe nd itu re s................................................................................................ 1 3.3 0.2 -1.5 1.4 2.6 2.5 1.5 G oods................................................................................................................................................................. Durable goods............................................................................................................................................... Motor vehicles and parts.......................................................................................................................... Furnishings and durable household equipment................................................................................... Recreational goods and vehicles........................................................................................................... Other durable goods................................................................................................................................ Nondurable goods......................................................................................................................................... Food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption......................................................... Clothing and footwear.............................................................................................................................. Gasoline and other energy goods.......................................................................................................... Other nondurable goods.......................................................................................................................... 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 3.3 -1.2 -1.0 -0.6 -4.5 5.1 5.6 6.0 -0.8 17.4 2.5 -2.5 -1.6 0.2 -0 .3 -5.5 1.6 -2.8 1.2 0.9 -27.6 4.6 -6.0 -1.7 -0.9 2.0 -5.8 -0.5 -7.9 -1.1 3.5 -53.3 5.4 2.7 0.3 5.1 1.3 -5.4 2.4 3.8 -3.6 0.7 11.8 10.2 5.4 -3.1 4.9 -6.0 -9.0 -1.2 9.6 -2.1 4.4 85.0 2.5 2.6 -0.1 8.7 -5.0 -6.2 4.4 3.9 -0.1 -2.2 29.4 1.1 2.0 -3.6 3.7 -3.4 -5 .9 -13.8 4.7 1.9 -1.3 24.4 2.1 S e rv ic e s ............................................................................................................................................................ Household consumption expenditures (for services)............................................................................... Housing and utilities................................................................................................................................. Health care................................................................................................................................................. Transportation services............................................................................................................................ Recreation services................................................................................................................................. Food services and accommodations..................................................................................................... Financial services and insurance........................................................................................................... Other services........................................................................................................................................... Final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (N PIS H s)1 ................ Gross output of nonprofit institutions 2................................................................................................... Less: Receipts from sales of goods and services by nonprofit institutions 3 ................................... 13 14 1b 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 3.4 3.5 3.6 2.7 5.4 3.1 4.0 3.1 4.2 1.0 2.7 3.3 1.5 1.6 1.2 2.5 2.7 1.2 2.4 -0.5 2.2 -1.2 1.7 2.8 0.7 1.0 1.3 2.5 1.9 0.8 1.7 -3.7 1.2 -4.8 1.0 3.1 0.7 0.8 -0.4 2.3 -1.6 -0.4 1.5 1.5 1.0 -1 .2 1.8 2.8 1.3 1.3 -0.2 2.5 3.1 4.3 0.6 0.6 1.7 0.9 2.4 2.8 2.4 2.5 0.5 3.1 3.7 0.2 2.0 5.4 4.1 0.3 2.5 3.2 1.3 1.5 0.3 1.8 1.8 -0.3 0.2 4.0 2.4 -2 .7 1.3 2.7 Addenda: Energy goods and services 4...................................................................................................................... Personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy 5......................................................... Market-based personal consumption expenditures 6............................................................................... Market-based personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy 6................................ 25 26 2/ 28 14.1 2.4 3.4 2.3 -19.3 1.5 0.3 1.9 -36.7 1.1 -1.2 1.9 -2.0 2.0 1.5 2.3 40.6 1.2 2.8 1.2 19.9 1.8 2.2 1.3 16.1 0.6 1.4 0.3 1. Net expenses of NPISHs, defined as their gross operating expenses less primary sales to households. 2. Gross output is net of unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, government, and the rest of the world; excludes own-account investment (construction and software). 3. Excludes unrelated sales, secondary sales, and sales to business, to government, and to the rest of the world; includes membership dues and fees. 4. Consists of gasoline and other energy goods and of electricity and gas. 5. Food consists of food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption; food services, which include purchased meals and beverages, are not classified as food. 6. This index is a supplemental measure that is based on household expenditures for which there are observable price measures. It excludes most implicit prices (for example, financial services furnished without payment) and the final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households. D-22 National Data May 2010 3. Government Current Receipts and Expenditures Table 3.1. Government Current Receipts and Expenditures [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I C urrent re c e ip ts ...................................................................................................................................... Current tax receipts... Personal current taxes Taxes on production and im ports................................................................................................................ Taxes on corporate incom e.......................................................................................................................... Taxes from the rest of the w o rld ... Contributions for government social insurance............................................................................................. Income receipts on a ssets................ Interest and miscellaneous receipts........................................................................................................... Dividends........................................ Current transfer receipts..................... From business (n e t)....................... From persons................................................................................................................................................. Current surplus of government enterprises.................................................................................................... 1 2 3 4 S 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 4,057.6 2,758.0 1,432.4 1,047.3 263.3 15.0 995.6 144.2 140.7 3.5 166.7 78.8 87.9 -6.9 3,745.5 2,428.2 1,102.5 1,023.9 289.5 12.3 972.0 164.3 142.8 21.6 189.0 96.8 92.2 -8.1 3,775.0 2,463.7 1,187.3 1,018.8 244.2 13.5 974.8 156.5 140.5 16.0 190.7 100.3 90.4 -10.7 3,728.4 2,395.4 1,082.6 1,019.6 281.2 12.1 976.0 166.5 142.8 23.7 199.3 107.9 91.4 -8 .8 3,708.5 2,401.5 1,071.0 1,023.1 296.7 10.8 967.6 165.7 144.0 21.7 180.0 87.5 92.5 -6.3 3,770.1 2,452.2 1,069.1 1,034.1 336.0 13.1 969.7 168.6 143.7 24.9 186.0 91.4 94.5 -6 .5 Current e xpe nd itu re s............. Consumption expenditures.............. Current transfer payments................. Government social benefits.......................................................................................................................... To persons......................................................................... To the rest of the world............................................................................................................................. Other current transfer payments to the rest of the world (n e t)................................................................ Interest payments............................................................................................................................................... To persons and business.............................................................................................................................. To the rest of the world................................................................................................................................. Subsidies.................... Less: Wage accruals less disbursements...................................................................................................... 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 4,740.3 2,386.9 1,904.0 1,859.2 1,843.2 16.0 44.8 395.9 230.6 165.3 53.5 0.0 4,989.3 2,416.9 2,133.7 2,087.7 2,072.0 15.7 46.0 379.1 242.8 136.2 59.6 0.0 4,780.6 2,378.6 2,009.2 1,969.7 1,954.7 15.0 39.5 337.3 191.3 146.0 55.5 0.0 5,021.9 2,409.0 2,175.2 2,123.5 2,107.7 15.9 51.7 382.8 243.9 138.8 54.9 0.0 5,077.0 2,431.0 2,174.4 2,120.8 2,104.7 16.1 53.7 403.8 272.4 131.4 67.7 0.0 5,077.8 2,449.1 2,175.9 2,136.8 2,121.0 15.9 39.0 392.4 263.7 128.7 60.3 0.0 Net g overnm ent saving Social insurance funds.......... 27 28 99 -682.7 -53.2 -629.5 -1,243.8 -230.0 -1,013.9 -1,005.7 -175.6 -830.1 -1,293.5 -222.0 -1,071.5 -1,368.5 -256.3 -1,112.3 -1,307.7 -266.0 -1,041.7 Capital transfer receipts........................................................................................................................... 30 31 32 4,091.4 4,057.6 33.9 3,775.7 3,745.5 30.2 3,805.8 3,775.0 30.8 3,759.7 3 728 4 31.3 3,740.0 3,708 5 31.5 3,797.3 3 770 1 27.2 27.4 Total expenditures........... Current expenditures.... Gross government investment................................................................................................................ Capital transfer paym ents........................................................................................................................ Net purchases of nonproducea a ssets.................................................................................................. Less: Consumption of fixed capita l........................................................................................................ 33 34 35 36 37 38 5,025.0 4,740.3 496.3 105.5 -6.2 310.9 5,349.8 4,989.3 513.8 165.5 6.3 325.2 5,205.5 4,780.6 500.4 260.6 -13.9 322.3 5,408.2 5,021.9 520.4 178.7 10.6 323.5 5,385.3 5,077.0 524.3 94.0 15.3 325.2 5,400.1 5,077.8 510.0 129.0 13.3 330.0 5,483.2 5,193.4 499.1 110.8 13.8 334.0 Net lending o r net borrow ing ( - ) ............................................................................................................. 39 -933.6 -1,574.1 -1,399.7 -1,648.5 -1,645.4 -1,602.8 1,142.4 1,044.3 13.1 989.9 159.4 141.7 17.7 187.0 90.4 96.5 -5 .3 5,193.4 2,476.1 2,253.8 2,198.0 2,182.1 15.9 55.9 403.4 60.1 0.0 -258.5 Addenda: Total re c e ip ts ................................................................................................................................................ May 2010 D-23 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin e ss Table 3.2. Federal Government Current Receipts and Expenditures Table 3.3. State and Local Government Current Receipts and Expenditures [Billions of dollars] [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I Current re ce ip ts .......... Personal current taxes...... Taxes on production and im po rts.......................... Excise taxe s.................. Customs duties............. Taxes on corporate O th e r.............................. Taxes from the rest of the world............................... Contributions for government social insurance................ Income receipts on assets.... Interest receipts................ Dividends........................... Rents and royalties........... Current transfer receipts....... From business................... From persons.................... Current surplus of government enterprises.... C urrent e xpenditures Consumption expenditures ... Current transfer payments.... Government social benefits.......................... To persons..................... To the rest of the world Other current transfer payments....................... Grants-in-aid to state and local governments............. Interest payments.................. To persons and business To the rest of the w o rld .... Subsidies................................ Less: Wage accruals less disbursements................... Net federal governm ent saving Social insurance fu n d s ......... Other........................................ II 2010 III IV 1 ? 3 2,475.0 1,421.7 1,102.5 2,226.6 1,165.1 829.5 2,251.3 1,191.5 900.3 2,237.0 1,157.4 829.9 4 5 6 92.0 62.7 29.2 92.3 69.5 22.8 85.7 62.2 23.6 91.6 70.0 21.6 7 8 9 212.3 31.7 180.6 231.0 44.5 186.5 192.0 25.6 166.4 223.8 40.9 182.9 10 15.0 12.3 13.5 12.1 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 974.5 30.3 19.7 0.6 10.0 52.3 33.2 19.1 950.1 48.2 23.9 18.8 5.5 68.1 48.9 19.1 953.0 40.7 21.9 12.8 6.1 72.7 53.5 19.2 954.3 50.8 23.7 21.0 6.2 79.8 60.6 19.2 19 -3.8 -4.9 -6 .7 -5 .3 -3 .5 -4.2 -3 .3 20 21 22 3,117.6 934.4 1,840.6 3,451.3 986.4 2,134.4 3,220.3 954.2 1,981.2 3,505.9 979.1 2,195.6 3,542.1 1,001.2 2,178.1 3,537.0 1,011.0 2,182.7 3,651.2 1,025.1 2,272.8 23 24 25 1,404.1 1,388.2 16.0 1,611.8 1,596.1 15.7 1,504.1 1,489.1 15.0 1,646.1 1,630.2 15.9 1,640.7 1,624.6 16.1 1,656.4 1,640.6 15.9 1,713.9 1,698.0 15.9 26 436.5 522.6 477.2 549.6 537.3 526.2 558.9 Net state and local governm ent s a v in g ............. Social insurance funds....................... 27 391.7 476.6 437.7 497.9 483.7 487.2 503.0 Addenda: ?R 29 30 31 32 4 48 292.0 126.6 165.3 50.6 46.0 272.3 136.0 136.2 58.2 39 5 231.3 85.3 146.0 53.6 51 7 277.4 138.6 138.8 53.7 53 7 296.3 164.9 131.4 66.5 39 0 284.1 155.4 128.7 59.1 55 9 294.2 33 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 34 35 ,16 -642.6 -55.2 -587.4 -1,224.7 -231.9 -992.8 -969.1 -177.7 -791.3 -1,268.9 -223.9 -1,045.0 -1,353.6 -258.1 -1,095.5 -1,307.2 -267.8 -1,039.4 17 18 39 2,503.3 2,475.0 28.3 2,251.4 2,226.6 24.8 2,276.4 2,251.3 25.1 2,262.6 2,237.0 25.6 2,214.6 2,188.5 26.1 2,251.9 2,229.8 22.1 22.3 40 41 3,288.4 3,117.6 3,700.5 3,451.3 3,534.5 3,220.3 3,772.9 3,505.9 3,743.2 3,542.1 3,751.3 3,537.0 3,838.8 3,651.2 2,188.5 1,138.1 795.8 2,229.8 ............... 1,173.6 ............... 867.1 791.8 Capital transfer receipts Total e xp e nd itu re s.......... Current expenditures.... Gross government investment................ Capital transfer payments................... Net purchases of nonproduced assets Less: Consumption of fixed capital............... Net lending o r net borrow ing ( - ) ............... 59.1 -260.2 42 148.2 158.4 152.4 159.2 163.1 159.1 161.2 43 161.6 223.4 311.2 234.5 162.3 185.6 158.7 44 -19.2 -7.0 -26.9 -2.6 1.8 -0 .4 -0.2 4b 119.8 125.6 122.5 124.0 126.1 130.0 132.0 46 -785.1 -1,449.1 -1,258.2 -1,510.3 -1,528.6 -1,499.4 Current re ce ip ts ....................... Current tax receiDts........................... Personal current taxes................... Income ta xe s.............................. Other............................................ Taxes on production and imports Sales taxe s................................. ........................... 101.2 98.5 75.7 73.5 25.4 25.0 Property taxe s 238.1 270.2 51.2 60.3 186.8 209.8 Contributions for government social insurance......................................... 13.1 10.8 13.1 Income receipts on assets................ Interest receipts.............................. 945.7 947.6 967.6 Dividends......................................... 49.5 51.7 43.8 Rents and royalties........................ 25.1 Current transfer receipts.................... 25.3 24.7 19.1 22.4 15.0 Federal grants-in-aid...................... 3.7 5.1 4.6 From business (net)....................... 58.7 From persons.................................. 61.1 58.3 39.5 42.0 39.6 Current surplus of government 19.2 18.8 enterprises...................................... 19.0 93.5 72.4 21.0 Addenda: Total re c e ip ts .................. Line 2008 I 1 20092009 2010 I II III IV I 3 4 5 6 7 8 q m 1,974.2 1,336.3 330.0 302.4 27.6 955.3 443.9 410.6 100.9 51.0 1,995.5 1,263.1 273.0 245.0 28.0 931.6 422.7 421.8 87.0 58.5 1,961.4 1,272.2 287.0 259.2 27.8 933.0 429.4 417.7 85.9 52.2 1,989.3 1,238.1 252.7 224.9 27.8 928.0 420.7 420.4 86.9 57.4 2,003.6 1,263.5 275.2 247.2 28.0 929.7 421.2 423.2 85.3 58.6 2,027.5 1,278.7 277.3 248.9 28.4 935.6 419.7 426.0 89.9 65.8 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 21.1 113.9 100.1 2.9 11.0 506.1 391.7 45.6 68.8 21.9 116.1 101.8 2.8 11.6 597.5 476.6 47.9 73.1 21.8 115.8 101.2 3.3 11.3 555.7 437.7 46.8 71.2 21.7 115.7 101.5 2.7 11.5 617.4 497.9 47.3 72.2 21.9 116.2 102.0 2.6 11.6 604.9 483.7 48.0 73.3 22.1 116.9 102.6 2.5 11.8 612.1 487.2 49.4 75.5 7 275.3 246.6 28.6 943.2 424.0 428.7 90.4 22.3 115.6 101.0 2.7 12.0 631.7 503.0 50.9 77.8 20 -3 .2 -3.2 -4 .0 -3.5 -2 .9 -2 .3 -2 .0 ?1 22 2,014.4 1,452.4 2,014.6 1,430.5 1,998.0 1,424.4 2,013.9 1,429.9 2,018.6 1,429.8 2,028.0 1,438.1 2,045.3 1,451.0 23 24 25 455.0 103.9 3.0 475.9 106.8 1.4 465.7 106.0 2.0 477.5 105.4 1.2 480.0 107.5 1.2 480.4 108.3 1.2 484.1 109.2 1.0 26 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 71 ?8 ?<? -40.2 2.0 -42.2 -19.2 1.9 -21.1 -36.6 2.1 -38.7 -24 .6 1.9 -26.5 -14 .9 1.9 -16.8 -0.5 1.8 -2.3 1.7 Total re ce ip ts................................. Current receipts......................... Capital transfer receipts............ 10 11 32 2,035.9 1,974.2 61.7 2,058.8 1,995.5 63.3 2,017.7 1,961.4 56.3 2,050.8 1,989.3 61.4 2,077.4 2,003.6 73.8 2,089.2 2,027.5 61.7 53.0 Total e xp e n d itu re s....................... Current expenditures................ Gross government investment Capital transfer payments......... Net purchases of nonproduced a ssets..................................... Less: Consumption of fixed capital..................................... 11 34 35 36 2,184.3 2,014.4 348.2 0.0 2,183.8 2,014.6 355.4 0.0 2,159.2 1,998.0 347.9 0.0 2,189.0 2,013.9 361.3 0.0 2,194.2 2,018.6 361.3 0.0 2,192.6 2,028.0 350.9 0.0 2,195.3 2,045.3 338.0 0.0 3/ 12.9 13.4 13.1 13.2 13.5 13.7 14.0 38 191.2 199.6 199.8 199.5 199.1 200.0 202.0 Net lending or net borrow ing (-) 39 -148.4 -125.0 -141.5 -138.2 -116.8 -103.4 Current e xp e n d itu re s ............. Consumption expenditures............... Government social benefit payments to persons Interest paym ents............................... Subsidies... Less: Wage accruals less disbursements................................ D-24 National Data Table 3.9.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Government Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment May 2010 Table 3.9.2. Contributions to Percent Change in Real Government Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment [Percent] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I G overnm ent co nsum ption expenditures and gross investm ent........................... Consumption expenditures 1 Gross investm ent2.............. Structures......................... Equipment and software II Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 2010 IV III Line 2008 2009 I 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Percent change at annual rate: 1 2 3 4 5 3.1 3.0 3.4 -0.1 10.1 1.8 1.8 1.9 1.9 1.8 -2 .6 -1 .3 -8 .7 -4 .3 -15.8 6.7 4.0 20.3 23.7 14.5 2.6 1.8 6.8 8.6 3.6 -1 .3 0.7 -10.1 -14.4 -2 .0 -1 .8 -0 .2 -9.1 -15.6 3.3 Federal............................................... Consumption expenditures...... Gross investment...................... Structures.............................. Equipment and software..... 6 7 8 9 10 7.7 6.7 14.0 10.3 14.8 5.2 4.9 7.1 21.6 4.2 -4 .3 -2 .6 -14.2 8.2 -18.6 11.4 10.0 20.1 15.0 21.4 8.0 7.4 11.2 43.1 4.8 0.0 1.8 -10.3 -22.2 -7 .2 1.4 0.9 4.4 17.3 1.5 National defense......................... Consumption expenditures..... Gross investment...................... Structures.............................. Equipment and software..... 11 12 13 14 15 7.8 6.5 16.7 20.4 16.2 5.4 4.9 8.4 29.3 5.4 -5.1 -4 .9 -6 .6 17.6 -10.1 14.0 12.2 24.7 21.6 25.2 8.4 8.0 11.0 72.7 2.6 -3 .6 -1 .3 -16.4 -42.3 -10.7 1.2 0.7 4.7 55.4 -2 .4 Nondefense.................................. Consumption expenditures..... Gross investment...................... Structures.............................. Equipment and software..... 16 17 18 19 20 7.3 7.2 8.3 0.9 11.1 4.8 4.8 4.3 13.3 1.0 -2.5 2.4 -29.6 -1 .7 -38.2 6.1 5.6 9.7 7.4 10.7 7.0 6.3 11.7 11.9 11.7 8.3 8.6 6.4 14.0 3.5 1.7 1.4 3.5 -18.3 13.4 State and lo c a l................................. Consumption expenditures.......... Gross investment.......................... Structures.................................. Equipment and software 21 22 23 24 25 0.5 0.7 -0 .6 -0 .9 1.1 -0.2 -0.2 -0.3 0.3 -3 .3 -1.5 -0 .4 -6.1 -5 .5 -9.2 3.9 0.1 20.4 24.6 0.2 -0.6 -2.0 4.8 5.6 0.7 -2.2 -0.1 -10.0 -13.5 11.4 -3 .8 -1 .0 -14 .7 -18.5 7.5 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account invest ment (construction and software). 2. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures. Government co nsum ption expenditures and gross in vestm en t........................... 1 3.1 1.8 -2 .6 6.7 2.6 -1 .3 -1.8 Percentage poin ts at annual rates: Consumption expenditures 1 Gross investm ent2.............. Structures......................... Equipment and software 2 3 4 5 2.48 0.59 -0.02 0.60 1.51 0.34 0.22 0.12 -1.04 -1.57 -0.49 -1.08 3.37 3.35 2.47 0.88 1.48 1.17 0.95 0.22 0.54 -1.85 -1.73 -0.12 -0.19 -1.61 -1.82 0.21 F ederal............................................... Consumption expenditures..... Gross investment...................... Structures.............................. Equipment and software..... 6 7 8 9 10 2.78 2.11 0.66 0.08 0.58 1.96 1.59 0.37 0.19 0.18 -1.66 -0.84 -0.82 0.08 -0.89 4.31 3.29 1.02 0.15 0.87 3.02 2.43 0.59 0.38 0.21 0.02 0.61 -0.59 -0.26 -0.33 0.54 0.31 0.23 0.16 0.07 National d efe nse ......................... Consumption expenditures...... Gross investment...................... Structures.............................. Equipment and software..... 11 12 13 14 15 1.93 1.39 0.54 0.08 0.46 1.39 1.09 0.30 0.13 0.17 -1.36 -1.10 -0.25 0.09 -0.34 3.53 2.66 0.87 0.11 0.76 2.17 1.76 0.41 0.33 0.09 -0.98 -0.29 -0.69 -0.32 -0.37 0.33 0.15 0.18 0.25 -0.08 N o ndefense.................................. Consumption expenditures..... Gross investment...................... Structures.............................. Equipment and software..... 16 17 18 19 20 0.85 0.73 0.12 0.00 0.12 0.57 0.50 0.07 0.05 0.01 -0.30 0.26 -0.56 -0.01 -0.56 0.78 0.63 0.15 0.04 0.12 0.85 0.67 0.18 0.05 0.12 1.00 0.90 0.10 0.06 0.04 0.21 0.16 0.06 -0.09 0.15 State and lo c a l................................. Consumption expenditures.......... Gross investment.......................... S tructures.................................. Equipment and software.......... 21 22 23 24 25 0.29 0.37 -0 .08 -0.10 0.02 -0.11 -0.08 -0.03 0.04 -0.07 -0.95 -0.20 -0.75 -0.57 -0.19 2.41 0.08 2.33 2.32 0.01 -0.37 -0.96 0.59 0.57 0.01 -1.33 -0.07 -1.26 -1.47 0.20 -2.34 -0.50 -1.84 -1.98 0.14 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account invest ment (construction and software). 2. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures. Table 3.9.3. Real Government Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment, Quantity Indexes Table 3.9.4. Price Indexes for Government Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment [Index numbers, 2005=100] [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Seasonally adjusted Line G overnm ent consu m p tion expenditures and gross investm ent............................ Consumption expenditures 1 Gross investm ent2.............. Structures......................... Equipment and software 2008 2009 2009 Line 2010 I II III IV I Government consum ption expenditures and gross investm ent........................... Consumption expenditures 1 Gross investm ent2.............. Structures......................... Equipment and software I 115.985 115.960 116.147 125.587 101.423 114.837 114.630 115.894 125.281 101.245 6 110.938 7 111.892 8 104.776 9 117.990 10 102.563 111.513 112.596 104.614 118.652 102.271 111.084 112.046 104.885 121.023 102.124 111.214 112.245 104.617 119.152 102.170 111.601 112.746 104.349 117.366 102.209 112.151 113.319 113.346 114.670 104.606 104.857 117.068 117.246 102.582 102.850 National d efe nse......................... Consumption expenditures...... Gross investment...................... Structures.............................. Equipment and software..... 11 12 13 14 15 111.913 112.891 105.630 117.040 104.376 112.086 113.126 105.478 117.499 104.134 111.584 112.502 105.650 119.518 104.024 111.664 112.653 105.338 117.683 103.939 112.195 113.288 105.300 116.320 104.110 112.901 114.062 105.623 116.477 104.462 114.276 115.616 105.986 116.708 104.848 119.025 117.664 128.668 133.970 126.854 N o ndefense .................................. Consumption expenditures...... Gross investment...................... Structures.............................. Equipment and software...... 16 17 18 19 20 108.935 109.848 102.951 119.025 98.060 110.358 111.531 102.746 119.753 97.621 110.085 111.136 103.258 122.580 97.369 110.320 111.432 103.093 120.670 97.781 110.401 111.656 102.267 118.322 97.453 110.625 111.899 102.367 117.441 97.882 111.364 112.755 102.363 117.549 97.841 102.909 101.912 102.811 102.546 99.197 103.223 101.234 96.173 112.859 114.917 State and lo c a l................................. Consumption expenditures.......... Gross investment.......................... S tructures.................................. Equipment and software.......... 21 22 23 24 25 116.642 116.057 119.132 123.978 98.669 115.896 114.498 121.960 127.368 99.247 115.587 113.738 123.579 129.312 99.491 115.713 115.889 114.145 114.702 122.481 121.054 127.943 126.246 99.527 99.259 108.737 108.024 112.274 104.980 126.131 108.245 107.961 109.636 100.607 127.166 Federal............................................... Consumption expenditures...... Gross investment...................... Structures.............................. Equipment and software..... 6 111.362 7 109.048 8 128.020 9 132.686 10 127.155 117.154 114.385 137.151 161.391 132.518 113.693 111.206 131.612 152.558 127.609 116.801 113.899 137.790 157.967 133.942 119.057 115.958 141.501 172.782 135.522 119.067 116.476 137.701 162.258 133.000 119.470 116.736 139.178 168.854 133.508 Fe de ra l............................................... Consumption expenditures..... Gross investment...................... Structures.............................. Equipment and software..... National defense......................... Consumption expenditures...... Gross investment...................... Structures.............................. Equipment and software..... 11 111.939 12 109.088 13 132.547 14 147.710 15 130.625 117.992 114.456 143.626 191.050 137.654 114.219 111.005 137.493 177.604 132.443 118.014 114.258 145.286 186.485 140.101 120.419 116.468 149.128 213.769 140.999 119.317 119.680 116.092 116.283 142.596 144.255 186.342 208.046 137.075 136.239 Nondefense.................................. Consumption expenditures...... Gross investment...................... Structures.............................. Equipment and software...... 16 110.153 17 108.959 18 118.607 19 119.169 20 118.576 115.394 114.214 123.687 135.029 119.733 112.576 111.598 119.377 130.250 115.581 114.259 116.203 113.130 114.874 122.180 125.617 132.593 136.371 118.558 121.875 118.536 117.256 127.574 140.901 122.918 21 22 23 24 25 103.172 103.085 103.477 101.942 110.501 102.660 103.323 99.976 98.008 109.625 103.640 103.356 104.735 103.554 109.669 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account invest ment (construction and software). 2. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures. IV 114.312 113.968 116.022 125.559 101.156 109.097 107.849 115.300 109.127 126.765 103.479 102.848 105.975 104.973 109.851 III 114.051 113.434 117.058 127.268 101.210 108.386 107.373 113.431 106.908 125.664 103.355 103.255 103.800 101.683 114.255 2010 II 113.924 113.111 117.879 128.686 101.167 106.639 106.321 108.298 101.364 121.488 State and lo c a l................................. Consumption expenditures.......... Gross investment.......................... Structures.................................. Equipment and software 2009 I 114.281 113.786 116.713 126.698 101.195 108.215 107.392 112.326 105.595 125.012 1 2 3 4 5 2009 114.502 114.427 114.877 123.540 101.208 106.252 105.464 110.214 103.617 122.760 1 2 3 4 5 2008 116.397 117.529 115.407 116.741 120.726 120.978 125.970 126.290 98.711 98.694 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account invest ment (construction and software). 2. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures. May 2010 D-25 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Table 3.9.5. Government Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 2010 I II III IV I 2,955.4 2,431.0 524.3 337.7 186.6 2,959.2 2,449.1 510.0 324.2 185.8 2,975.2 2,476.1 499.1 311.4 187.7 G overnm ent consu m p tion expenditures and g ross investm ent Consumption expenditures 1............................................................. Gross investm ent2.............................................................................. Structures......................................................................................... Equipment and software................................................................. 1 2 3 4 5 2,883.2 2,386.9 496.3 315.5 180.8 2,930.7 2,416.9 513.8 329.7 184.1 2,879.0 2,378.6 500.4 321.5 178.8 2,929.4 2,409.0 520.4 335.4 185.1 Federal........................................... Consumption expenditures.. Gross investment.................. Structures............................................................................................. Equipment and software.- 6 7 8 9 10 1,082.6 934.4 148.2 24.6 123.6 1,144.8 986.4 158.4 30.1 128.4 1,106.7 954.2 152.4 29.0 123.4 1,138.3 979.1 159.2 29.6 129.6 1,164.3 1,001.2 163.1 31.9 131.2 1,170.1 1,011.0 159.1 29.8 129.2 1,186.3 1,025.1 161.2 31.1 130.1 National defense..................... Consumption expenditures.. Gross investment................. Structures............................................................................................. Equipment and software 11 12 13 14 15 737.9 634.0 103.9 12.9 91.0 779.0 666.6 112.4 16.7 95.7 750.7 642.9 107.8 15.8 91.9 776.2 662.7 113.5 16.4 97.2 795.8 679.3 116.5 18.5 98.0 793.5 681.7 111.7 16.2 95.6 805.6 692.1 113.4 18.1 95.3 N ondefense............................. Consumption expenditures.. Gross investment.................. Structures............................................................................................. Equipment and software..................................................................... 16 17 18 19 20 344.7 300.4 44.3 11.7 32.5 365.8 319.7 46.1 13.3 32.7 356.0 311.3 44.7 13.2 31.5 362.1 316.4 45.7 13.2 32.4 368.5 321.9 46.6 13.3 33.2 376.7 329.3 47.3 13.7 33.7 380.7 333.0 47.7 13.0 34.7 State and lo c a l............... Consumption expenditures......................................................................... Gross investment......... Structures................................................................................................. Equipment and software......................................................................... 21 22 23 24 25 1,800.6 1,452.4 348.2 290.9 57.3 1,785.9 1,430.5 355.4 299.6 55.7 1,772.3 1,424.4 347.9 292.5 55.4 1,791.2 1,429.9 361.3 305.8 55.4 1,791.1 1,429.8 361.3 305.9 55.4 1,789.0 1,438.1 350.9 294.4 56.6 1,788.9 1,451.0 338.0 280.3 57.6 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of produc tion. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software). 2. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures. Table 3.9.6. Real Government Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment, Chained Dollars [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 2010 I II III IV I Government consum ption expenditures and gross investm ent Consumption expenditures 1............................................................. Gross investm ent2.............................................................................. Structures......................................................................................... Equipment and software................................................................. 1 2 3 4 5 2,518.1 2,085.9 432.1 255.4 178.7 2,564.6 2,124.1 440.3 260.3 181.9 2,527.2 2,102.9 424.5 249.8 176.8 2,568.6 2,123.7 444.7 263.5 182.9 2,585.5 2,133.1 452.0 269.0 184.5 2,576.9 2,136.6 440.1 258.8 183.6 2,565.3 2,135.3 429.8 248.0 185.1 Consumption expenditures..................................................................... Gross investment..................................................................................... Structures............................................................................................. Equipment and software..................................................................... 6 7 8 9 10 975.9 835.1 141.4 20.9 120.5 1,026.6 876.0 151.5 25.4 125.6 996.3 851.7 145.4 24.0 120.9 1,023.5 872.3 152.2 24.8 126.9 1,043.3 888.1 156.3 27.2 128.4 1,043.4 892.0 152.1 25.5 126.0 1,046.9 894.0 153.7 26.5 126.5 National defense......................................................................................... Consumption expenditures..................................................................... Gross investment..................................................................................... Structures............................................................................................. Equipment and software..................................................................... 11 12 13 14 15 659.4 561.6 98.4 11.0 87.2 695.0 589.3 106.6 14.2 91.9 672.8 571.5 102.0 13.2 88.4 695.2 588.2 107.8 13.9 93.5 709.3 599.6 110.7 15.9 94.1 702.8 597.7 105.8 13.9 91.5 705.0 598.7 107.1 15.5 91.0 Nondefense.................................................................................................. Consumption expenditures..................................................................... Gross investment..................................................................................... Structures............................................................................................. Equipment and software..................................................................... 16 17 18 19 20 316.4 273.5 43.0 9.9 33.2 331.5 286.7 44.8 11.2 33.5 323.4 280.1 43.3 10.8 32.3 328.2 284.0 44.3 11.0 33.2 333.8 288.3 45.5 11.3 34.1 340.5 294.3 46.2 11.6 34.4 341.9 295.3 46.6 11.1 35.5 State and lo c a l................................................................................................ Consumption expenditures......................................................................... Gross investment.......................................................................................... Structures.................................................................................................. Equipment and software......................................................................... 21 22 23 24 25 26 1,543.7 1,251.5 292.3 234.6 58.0 -2.4 1,541.0 1,249.4 291.3 235.2 56.1 -2.9 1,533.3 1,252.3 281.5 226.2 55.7 -3.3 1,548.0 1,252.7 294.9 239.0 55.7 -2.6 1,545.5 1,246.6 298.4 242.2 55.8 -2.4 1,537.0 1,246.1 290.6 233.6 57.3 -3.5 1,522.1 1,242.9 279.3 221.9 58.4 -5.0 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of produc tion. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software). 2. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures. Note. Chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines. D-26 National Data May 2010 Table 3.10.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Government Consumption Expenditures and General Government Gross Output [Percent] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III I IV G overnm ent consu m p tion expenditures 1.................................................................................. Gross output of general governm ent..... Value added.................................................................................................................................. Compensation of general government employees............................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.......................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3....................................................................... Durable goods.......................................................................................................................... Nondurable goods............... Services................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4 Sales to other sectors.... 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 3.0 2.9 2.2 1.9 3.5 4.1 11.7 1.9 4.3 3.5 2.4 1.8 1.6 1.8 1.5 3.9 1.3 5.1 0.9 1.1 0.7 0.4 -1 .3 -1 .0 1.2 0.7 4.0 -4.5 -16.7 0.5 -4.9 0.7 0.8 4.0 3.6 2.7 2.3 4.5 5.3 25.1 4.0 3.9 6.5 1.1 1.8 1.6 1.0 0.3 5.1 2.4 19.6 -3.7 2.9 -1 .4 0.3 0.7 0.5 1.5 0.4 7.3 -1.2 -11.9 -4 .3 1.1 -9.1 0.0 -0 .2 -0 .2 0.9 0.3 4.4 -2.1 -8 .9 -1 .8 -1 .5 -6 .0 0.3 Federal co nsum ption expenditures 1..... Gross output of general governm ent................................................................................................. Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2............................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods.................... Services.................................... Less: Own-account investm ent4 ....................................................................................................... Sales toother sectors............................................................................................................. 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 6.7 6.6 3.9 3.8 4.4 10.0 18.1 7.3 9.4 7.6 -4.2 4.9 5.0 6.1 6.3 5.3 3.6 7.6 5.3 2.9 10.1 13.0 -2 .6 -2.1 4.8 4.5 5.8 -9 .9 -24 .3 4.9 -9 .6 29.3 51.7 10.0 10.1 8.2 8.6 6.7 12.6 40.2 22.7 7.8 -4 .5 29.3 7.4 7.5 6.9 6.7 7.7 8.2 31.0 -14 .0 8.8 10.5 14.1 1.8 1.8 4.8 2.7 12.6 -1 .8 -16 .5 -17.7 3.2 -1 .3 4.6 0.9 1.2 4.8 4.6 5.4 -3 .4 -12 .2 -5 .9 -1 .7 22.5 17.1 Defense consu m p tion expenditures 1 .............................................................................................. Gross output of general governm ent...................... Value added........................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2............................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods........................................................................................................................ Services........... Less: Own-account investm ent4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................. 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 6.5 6.2 4.0 3.9 4.4 8.9 18.4 3.4 7.9 4.6 -28.6 4.9 4.9 6.5 6.9 5.4 3.1 7.7 2.9 2.3 14.4 1.4 -4 .9 -4 .7 4.5 4.2 5.7 -14.3 -25.7 -14.2 -12.0 58.2 -1.5 12.2 12.2 8.5 9.0 6.9 16.7 43.2 34.9 10.7 7.5 1.6 8.0 8.0 8.3 8.4 8.0 7.6 31.9 -7.7 5.0 7.1 13.8 -1 .3 -1 .3 6.2 4.1 13.0 -9.5 -18.2 -44.0 -3 .0 7.3 -11 .8 0.7 0.8 2.6 1.6 5.9 -1.4 -13.8 -0.3 1.2 27.1 18.3 Nondefense co nsum ption expenditures ........................................................................................ Gross output of general governm ent................................................................................................. Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2............................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. ....................................... ................................................................. Nondurable goods Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change............................................................... Other nondurable goods........................................................................................................ Services............................................................. Less: Own-account investm ent4 ............................ Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................. 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 7.2 7.4 3.9 3.8 4.4 12.8 14.4 4.8 5.1 5.4 5.4 5.1 4.7 6.6 2.4 3.5 5.2 5.1 6.1 1.2 -1.7 5.6 6.0 7.6 7.8 6.3 3.7 5.5 6.3 6.5 4.4 3.9 7.0 9.6 18.9 8.6 8.5 2.1 0.4 11.6 18.0 9.6 1.4 1.8 9.1 10.2 4.0 -7 .6 11.2 13.0 12.7 10.0 20.4 8.2 4.1 7.1 19.7 39.5 ^ .1 11.8 100.4 14.6 1.7 -12.7 47.7 -17.7 17.7 13.2 14.3 9.6 17.9 -7 .5 14.0 6.7 -7.4 18.9 16.5 State and local consu m p tion expenditures 1........................................................................................... Gross output of general governm ent................................................................................................. Value added .................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2............................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods....................................................................................................................... S ervices.......... Less: Own-account investm ent4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................ Tuition and related educational charges.......................................................................... Health and hospital charges............................................................................................. Other s a le s .... ................ " .................................................................................................. 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 0.7 1.1 1.4 1.2 2.8 0.5 1.4 0.8 0.2 2.6 2.6 1.2 4.2 1.3 -0 .2 -0.1 0.0 -0 .4 2.8 -0 .3 0.3 0.0 -0 .5 -1 .4 0.1 -1 .0 0.5 0.5 -0 .4 -0 .4 -0.4 -0 .8 2.6 -0 .5 -0.5 -0.5 -0 .5 -5 .0 -0.1 -0 .4 -0 .4 0.5 0.1 0.3 0.3 -0.1 2.8 0.4 0.9 -0.1 0.6 9.4 0.5 -0 .4 -0 .4 2.3 -2 .0 -1 .6 -1 .6 -2.3 3.1 -1 .6 -0.5 -0.9 -2.1 ^1.1 -0.1 -0 .4 -0 .4 0.6 -0.1 -0 .3 0.0 -0 .5 3.3 -0 .8 -1 .6 -0 .8 -0 .7 -11.0 -0.1 -0 .4 -0 .4 0.5 -1 .0 -1 .0 -0 .9 -1.5 3.5 -1 .2 -1 .7 -0 .9 -1 .3 -12.2 -0.1 -0 .4 -0 .4 0.4 1 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software). 2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets. 3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment. 4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software in table 3.9.5. 2010 D-27 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u s in e ss Table 3.10.3. Real Government Consumption Expenditures and General Government Gross Output, Quantity Indexes [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I G overnm ent consu m p tion expenditures 1.................................................................................. Gross output of general government............................................................................................ Value added................................................................................................................................. Compensation of general government employees............................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.......................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3....................................................................... Durable goods.......................................................................................................................... Nondurable goods................................................................................................................... Services................................................................................................................................... Less: Own-account investm ent4................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors........................................................................................................ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 105.464 105.437 104.247 103.272 109.980 107.395 125.976 103.804 107.172 108.925 104.985 107.392 107.161 106.167 104.796 114.243 108.770 132.374 104.765 108.326 109.675 105.440 106.321 106.207 105.409 104.271 112.094 107.478 125.031 104.771 107.084 109.221 105.199 107.373 107.163 106.107 104.877 113.336 108.879 132.221 105.807 108.120 110.964 105.475 107.849 107.576 106.381 104.960 114.750 109.528 138.284 104.814 108.897 110.565 105.542 108.024 107.700 106.773 105.077 116.791 109.197 133.958 103.667 109.205 107.952 105.544 107.961 107.638 107.017 105.154 118.048 108.619 130.886 103.192 108.798 106.295 105.616 Federal consum ption expenditures 1......................................................................................................... Gross output of general government................................................................................................ Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.............................................................. Intermediate goods and services purchased 3........................................................................... Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods....................................................................................................................... Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................ 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 109.048 108.670 104.664 102.825 111.545 113.903 139.614 102.984 112.626 101.333 80.310 114.385 114.094 111.052 109.334 117.482 118.030 150.290 108.461 115.866 111.600 90.745 111.206 110.902 108.183 106.597 114.097 114.402 137.721 107.619 112.803 111.259 84.741 113.899 113.603 110.327 108.806 115.975 117.853 149.868 113.263 114.951 109.980 90.371 115.958 115.677 112.191 110.590 118.152 120.205 160.331 109.076 117.395 112.759 93.406 116.476 116.195 113.506 111.341 121.705 119.661 153.241 103.888 118.315 112.401 94.463 116.736 116.528 114.847 112.612 123.323 118.641 148.322 102.325 117.818 118.252 98.264 Defense consum ption expenditures 1 .............................................................................................. Gross output of general government................................................................................................ Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.............................................................. Intermediate goods and services purchased 3........................................................................... Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods....................................................................................................................... Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................ 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 109.088 108.871 104.024 101.891 110.908 114.840 140.946 103.345 112.234 97.632 81.700 114.456 114.246 110.776 108.876 116.889 118.445 151.841 106.328 114.842 111.682 82.837 111.005 110.813 107.590 105.774 113.428 114.695 138.631 105.074 112.198 108.739 81.890 114.258 114.043 109.803 108.072 115.340 119.220 151.650 113.250 115.077 110.718 82.225 116.468 116.255 112.011 110.269 117.576 121.434 162.513 110.990 116.490 112.629 84.933 116.092 115.874 113.700 111.391 121.214 118.430 154.569 95.997 115.604 114.643 82.298 116.283 116.112 114.442 111.839 122.978 118.022 148.928 95.936 115.935 121.730 85.830 Nondefense consum ption expenditures 1........................................................................................ Gross output of general government................................................................................................ Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.............................................................. Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods....................................................................................................................... Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change.............................................................. Other nondurable goods........................................................................................................ Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................. 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 4? 43 44 45 46 108.959 108.262 105.855 104.413 113.271 111.807 124.613 114.214 113.774 111.547 110.086 119.081 117.057 132.861 111.598 111.068 109.282 107.989 115.908 113.700 127.916 113.130 112.697 111.296 110.043 117.691 114.750 129.645 114.874 114.489 112.506 111.106 119.703 117.409 135.370 117.256 116.843 113.103 111.205 123.020 122.369 138.511 117.664 117.370 115.601 113.935 124.231 119.977 142.224 100.893 113.509 104.305 79.864 109.124 118.177 111.731 95.565 108.347 114.168 113.380 86.483 112.108 114.658 109.609 95.343 106.780 119.437 113.057 98.575 109.261 124.444 110.877 101.861 111.046 122.073 115.786 105.825 State and local consum ption expenditures 1........................................................................................... Gross output of general government................................................................................................ Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.............................................................. Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods....................................................................................................................... Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................ Tuition and related educational charges.......................................................................... Health and hospital charges............................................................................................. Other sa les......................................................................................................................... 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 103.255 103.819 104.066 103.445 108.760 103.370 106.335 104.020 102.800 110.775 105.753 103.382 106.851 105.863 103.085 103.696 104.042 103.005 111.788 103.068 106.687 103.973 102.297 109.262 105.910 102.318 107.353 106.393 103.323 103.865 104.202 103.355 110.552 103.251 106.682 104.164 102.489 108.780 105.833 102.471 107.514 105.828 103.356 103.945 104.269 103.325 111.327 103.358 106.915 104.142 102.653 111.239 105.957 102.369 107.407 106.424 102.848 103.525 103.852 102.737 112.177 102.930 106.790 103.897 102.112 110.088 105.939 102.266 107.299 106.591 102.811 103.451 103.843 102.605 113.094 102.732 106.360 103.689 101.934 106.942 105.912 102.164 107.192 106.726 102.546 103.192 103.607 102.207 114.081 102.428 105.900 103.459 101.599 103.510 105.878 102.062 107.085 106.844 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software). 2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets. 3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment. 4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software in table 3.9.5. National Data D-28 May 2010 Table 3.10.4. Price Indexes for Government Consumption Expenditures and General Government Gross Output [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Governm ent c o nsu m p tion e xpenditures 1.................................................................................. Gross output of general government............................................................................................ Value added.................................................................................................................................. Compensation of general government employees............................................................. Consumption of general government fixed ca p ita l2.......................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3....................................................................... Durable goods.......................................................................................................................... Nondurable goods................................................................................................................... Services.................................................................................................................................... Less: Own-account investm ent4................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors........................................................................................................ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 114,427 114.355 112.750 112.691 113.077 116.973 103.537 131.300 113.135 112.035 114.061 113.786 114.210 115.399 115.622 114.197 112.326 104.500 110.266 113.698 112.993 117.166 113.111 113.480 114.907 114.890 115.012 111.209 104.581 105.471 113.763 112.290 116.054 113.434 113.848 115.346 115.533 114.338 111.461 104.450 107.723 113.336 112.771 116.720 113.968 114.406 115.482 115.804 113.744 112.704 104.359 111.868 113.691 113.228 117.454 114.630 115.107 115.860 116.261 113.694 113.930 104.610 116.002 114.003 113.682 118.438 115.960 116.380 116.777 117.300 113.973 115.784 104.710 121.811 114.667 114.484 119.357 Federal consum ption expenditures 1......................................................................................................... Gross output of general government................................................................................................. Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2............................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods........................................................................................................................ Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4 ....................................................................................................... Sales toother sectors............................................................................................................. 12 13 14 15 16 1/ 18 19 20 21 22 111.892 111.872 112.192 113.493 107.643 111.419 102.607 128.011 110.269 110.735 110.668 112.596 112.520 114.660 116.756 107.380 109.915 103.161 110.824 110.604 110.591 106.104 112.046 111.968 114.569 116.555 107.664 108.807 103.122 104.308 110.120 110.119 105.255 112.245 112.170 114.501 116.583 107.267 109.335 103.039 108.897 110.144 110.381 105.776 112.746 112.671 114.488 116.589 107.190 110.455 103.086 113.718 110.891 110.794 106.307 113.346 113.271 115.083 117.297 107.399 111.061 103.396 116.375 111.262 111.070 107.078 114.670 114.588 116.892 119.535 107.775 111.771 103.588 117.873 111.945 112.277 107.785 Defense consum ption expenditures 1 .............................................................................................. Gross output of general government................................................................................................. Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.............................................................. Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods........................................................................................................................ Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................. 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 112.891 112.878 113.490 115.062 108.763 112.088 103.449 142.673 110.384 111.646 111.470 113.126 113.091 116.021 118.596 108.335 109.781 104.159 107.290 110.929 108.270 109.918 112.502 112.470 115.819 118.253 108.546 108.693 104.139 97.584 110.548 107.586 110.005 112.653 112.618 115.689 118.244 108.059 109.154 104.031 104.108 110.467 107.949 109.411 113.288 113.252 115.839 118.378 108.257 110.325 104.094 111.486 111.195 108.536 109.913 114.062 114.024 116.737 119.508 108.477 110.953 104.371 115.981 111.508 109.007 110.343 115.616 115.575 118.990 122.359 109.009 111.689 104.569 117.949 112.239 110.496 111.445 Nondefense consum ption expenditures ' ........................................................................................ Gross output of general government................................................................................................. Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2............................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods........................................................................................................................ 109.848 109.849 109.828 110.903 104.684 109.871 93.181 111.531 111.386 112.181 113.719 104.856 110.254 91.823 111.136 110.975 112.295 113.755 105.334 109.101 91.556 111.432 111.285 112.340 113.845 105.171 109.786 91.778 111.656 111.516 112.027 113.637 104.369 110.786 91.616 111.899 111.770 112.064 113.641 104.551 111.342 92.343 112.755 112.621 113.059 114.861 104.514 111.993 92.461 Other nondurable goods........................................................................................................ Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................. 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 4? 43 44 45 46 113.175 110.012 110.024 109.718 113.549 109.885 112.233 103.936 110.499 109.173 111.929 102.608 112.991 109.430 112.113 103.706 115.006 110.222 112.385 104.249 115.700 110.715 112.504 105.181 116.721 111.297 113.474 105.702 State and local consum ption expenditures 1........................................................................................... Gross output of general government................................................................................................. Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2............................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods........................................................................................................................ Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................. Tuition and related educational charges.......................................................................... Health and hospital charges............................................................................................. Other sa les.......................................................................................................................... 47 48 49 50 fa1 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 116.057 115.644 112.994 112.383 117.598 120.715 105.156 132.013 115.572 112.315 114.152 120.444 111.049 114.435 114.498 115.063 115.716 115.171 119.879 113.770 106.901 110.076 116.341 113.529 117.461 127.719 113.912 115.905 113.738 114.234 115.040 114.223 121.150 112.644 107.230 105.707 116.916 112.771 116.342 124.687 112.796 115.965 114.145 114.693 115.713 115.116 120.241 112.692 107.002 107.389 116.074 113.304 117.011 126.685 113.519 115.736 114.702 115.284 115.919 115.497 119.201 114.025 106.625 111.364 116.059 113.772 117.751 128.973 114.171 115.641 115.407 116.042 116.192 115.849 118.923 115.719 106.746 115.843 116.314 114.270 118.740 130.532 115.163 116.277 116.741 117.288 116.677 116.376 119.115 118.433 106.659 122.633 116.958 114.964 119.666 132.161 115.939 116.975 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software). 2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets. 3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment. 4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software in table 3.9.5. May 2010 D-29 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Table 3.10.5. Government Consumption Expenditures and General Government Gross Output [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I G overnm ent consu m p tion e xpenditures 1.................................................................................. Gross output of general government............................................................................................ Value added................................................................................................................................. Compensation of general government employees............................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.......................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3....................................................................... Durable goods.......................................................................................................................... Nondurable goods................................................................................................................... Services.................................................................................................................................... Less: Own-account investm ent4................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors........................................................................................................ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 2,386.9 2,772.5 1,688.4 1,428.9 259.5 1,084.1 71.2 296.5 716.3 29.0 356.6 2,416.9 2,814.3 1,759.9 1,487.6 272.2 1,054.4 75.5 251.3 727.6 29.5 367.9 2,378.6 2,771.3 1,739.8 1,470.8 269.0 1,031.5 71.4 240.5 719.6 29.2 363.5 2,409.0 2,805.3 1,758.0 1,487.6 270.4 1,047.3 75.4 248.0 723.9 29.8 366.6 2,431.0 2,829.9 1,764.7 1,492.3 272.4 1,065.3 78.8 255.2 731.4 29.8 369.1 2,449.1 2,850.6 1,776.9 1,499.9 277.1 1,073.6 76.5 261.7 735.4 29.2 372.2 2,476.1 2,880.4 1,795.1 1,514.4 280.8 1,085.3 74.8 273.5 737.0 28.9 375.4 Federal consum ption expenditures 1......................................................................................................... Gross output of general government................................................................................................ Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.............................................................. Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods....................................................................................................................... Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investment4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................ 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 934.4 947.7 515.2 402.0 113.2 432.5 46.3 53.5 332.7 5.2 8.1 986.4 1,000.9 558.7 439.7 118.9 442.2 50.1 48.8 343.3 5.7 8.7 954.2 968.0 543.8 428.0 115.8 424.2 45.9 45.6 332.7 5.7 8.1 979.1 993.4 554.3 437.0 117.3 439.1 49.9 50.1 339.1 5.6 8.7 1,001.2 1,016.0 563.6 444.1 119.4 452.5 53.4 50.4 348.7 5.8 9.0 1,011.0 1,026.0 573.1 449.9 123.2 452.9 51.2 49.1 352.6 5.8 9.2 1,025.1 1,040.9 589.0 463.7 125.3 451.9 49.7 49.0 353.2 6.2 9.6 Defense consum ption expenditures 1 .............................................................................................. Gross output of general government................................................................................................ Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.............................................................. Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods....................................................................................................................... Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investment4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................ 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 634.0 639.3 335.7 252.9 82.9 303.5 43.1 30.8 229.6 2.2 3.0 666.6 672.1 365.5 278.6 87.0 306.6 46.7 23.8 236.1 2.5 3.0 642.9 648.3 354.4 269.8 84.6 293.9 42.6 21.4 229.8 2.4 3.0 662.7 668.1 361.3 275.7 85.6 306.8 46.6 24.6 235.6 2.5 3.0 679.3 684.9 369.0 281.6 87.4 315.9 50.0 25.9 240.0 2.5 3.1 681.7 687.3 377.5 287.2 90.3 309.8 47.6 23.3 238.9 2.6 3.0 692.1 698.1 387.3 295.2 92.1 310.8 46.0 23.7 241.1 2.8 3.2 Nondefense consum ption expenditures 1........................................................................................ Gross output of general government................................................................................................ Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.............................................................. Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods....................................................................................................................... Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change.............................................................. Other nondurable goods........................................................................................................ Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investment4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................ 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 300.4 308.5 179.4 149.1 30.4 129.0 3.2 22.7 -0.4 23.1 103.0 3.0 5.1 319.7 328.7 193.1 161.2 32.0 135.6 3.4 25.0 -0.1 25.1 107.2 3.2 5.7 311.3 319.7 189.4 158.2 31.3 130.3 3.3 24.2 -0.1 24.3 102.8 3.3 5.1 316.4 325.3 193.0 161.3 31.7 132.3 3.3 25.5 -0.2 25.7 103.5 3.2 5.7 321.9 331.1 194.5 162.6 32.0 136.6 3.4 24.5 -0.3 24.9 108.6 3.3 5.9 329.3 338.7 195.6 162.7 32.9 143.1 3.6 25.8 0.2 25.6 113.7 3.2 6.2 333.0 342.8 201.7 168.5 33.2 141.1 3.7 25.4 -0.9 26.3 112.1 3.4 6.4 State and local consum ption expenditures 1........................................................................................... Gross output of general government................................................................................................ Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.............................................................. Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods....................................................................................................................... Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................ Tuition and related educational charges......................................................................... Health and hospital charges............................................................................................. Other sa les.......................................................................................................................... 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 1,452.4 1,824.7 1,173.2 1,026.9 146.3 651.5 24.9 243.0 383.6 23.8 348.5 76.2 157.0 115.4 1,430.5 1,813.4 1,201.2 1,047.9 153.3 612.3 25.4 202.5 384.3 23.7 359.1 79.9 161.8 117.4 1,424.4 1,803.3 1,196.0 1,042.8 153.2 607.3 25.5 194.9 387.0 23.5 355.5 78.1 160.4 116.9 1,429.9 1,812.0 1,203.8 1,050.7 153.1 608.2 25.5 197.9 384.8 24.1 357.9 79.3 161.3 117.3 1,429.8 1,813.9 1,201.1 1,048.2 152.9 612.8 25.4 204.8 382.7 24.0 360.1 80.7 162.1 117.4 1,438.1 1,824.5 1,203.8 1,050.0 153.8 620.7 25.3 212.6 382.9 23.4 363.1 81.6 163.3 118.2 1,451.0 1,839.5 1,206.1 1,050.7 155.4 633.4 25.2 224.5 383.7 22.8 365.8 82.5 164.3 119.0 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software). 2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets. 3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment. 4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software in table 3.9.5. D-30 National Data May 2010 Table 3.10.6. Real Government Consumption Expenditures and General Government Gross Output, Chained Dollars [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I G overnm ent consu m p tion expenditures 1.................................................................................. Gross output of general governm ent............................................................................................ Value added.................................................................................................................................. Compensation of general government employees.............................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2.......................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3....................................................................... Durable goods.......................................................................................................................... Nondurable goods................................................................................................................... Services.................................................................................................................................... Less: Own-account investm ent4................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors........................................................................................................ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 2,085.9 2,424.5 1,497.5 1,268.0 229.5 926.8 68.8 225.8 633.2 25.9 312.6 2,124.1 2,464.1 1,525.1 1,286.7 238.4 938.6 72.3 227.9 640.0 26.1 314.0 2,102.9 2,442.2 1,514.2 1,280.2 233.9 927.5 68.3 227.9 632.7 26.0 313.3 2,123.7 2,464.1 1,524.2 1,287.7 236.5 939.6 72.2 230.2 638.8 26.4 314.1 2,133.1 2,473.6 1,528.1 1,288.7 239.5 945.2 75.5 228.0 643.4 26.3 314.3 2,136.6 2,476.5 1,533.8 1,290.1 243.7 942.3 73.1 225.5 645.2 25.7 314.3 2,135.3 2,475.1 1,537.3 1,291.1 246.4 937.3 71.5 224.5 642.8 25.3 314.5 Federal consu m p tion expenditures 1......................................................................................................... Gross output of general governm ent................................................................................................. Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2............................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods........................................................................................................................ S ervices........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................. 12 13 14 15 16 1/ 18 19 20 21 22 835.1 847.2 459.2 354.2 105.2 388.2 45.1 41.8 301.7 4.7 7.3 876.0 889.4 487.2 376.6 110.8 402.3 48.6 44.1 310.4 5.2 8.2 851.7 864.6 474.6 367.2 107.6 389.9 44.5 43.7 302.2 5.2 7.7 872.3 885.6 484.1 374.8 109.4 401.7 48.4 46.0 307.9 5.1 8.2 888.1 901.8 492.2 380.9 111.4 409.7 51.8 44.3 314.5 5.2 8.5 892.0 905.8 498.0 383.5 114.8 407.8 49.5 42.2 316.9 5.2 8.6 894.0 908.4 503.9 387.9 116.3 404.4 47.9 41.6 315.6 5.5 8.9 Defense consu m p tion expenditures 1 .............................................................................................. Gross output of general government................................................................................................. Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2............................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods........................................................................................................................ S ervices........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................. 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 561.6 566.3 295.8 219.8 76.2 270.8 41.6 21.6 208.0 2.0 2.7 589.3 594.3 315.0 234.9 80.3 279.3 44.9 22.2 212.9 2.3 2.7 571.5 576.4 306.0 228.2 77.9 270.5 41.0 21.9 208.0 2.2 2.7 588.2 593.2 312.3 233.1 79.2 281.1 44.8 23.7 213.3 2.3 2.7 599.6 604.8 318.6 237.9 80.8 286.3 48.0 23.2 215.9 2.3 2.8 597.7 602.8 323.4 240.3 83.3 279.3 45.7 20.1 214.3 2.4 2.7 598.7 604.0 325.5 241.2 84.5 278.3 44.0 20.0 214.9 2.5 2.8 Nondefense consu m p tion expenditures 1........................................................................................ Gross output of general governm ent................................................................................................. Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2............................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods........................................................................................................................ Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change............................................................... Other nondurable goods........................................................................................................ Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4 ....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................. 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 273.5 280.8 163.4 134.4 29.0 117.4 3.5 20.2 -0.2 20.4 93.7 2.7 4.6 286.7 295.1 172.2 141.7 30.5 122.9 3.7 21.9 -0.2 22.1 97.5 2.9 5.5 280.1 288.1 168.7 139.0 29.7 119.4 3.6 21.6 -0 .3 22.0 94.2 2.9 5.0 284.0 292.3 171.8 141.7 30.1 120.5 3.6 22.4 -0 .3 22.7 94.6 2.8 5.5 288.3 297.0 173.7 143.0 30.7 123.3 3.8 21.3 -0 .3 21.6 98.6 2.9 5.7 294.3 303.1 174.6 143.2 31.5 128.5 3.9 22.3 0.1 22.1 102.7 2.9 5.9 295.3 304.4 178.4 146.7 31.8 126.0 4.0 21.8 -0 .7 22.5 100.7 3.0 6.1 State and local co nsum ption expenditures 1........................................................................................... Gross output of general governm ent................................................................................................. Value added...................................................................................................................................... Compensation of general government employees.................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2............................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3............................................................................ Durable goods.............................................................................................................................. Nondurable goods.................................... ................................................................................... Services........................................................................................................................................ Less: Own-account investm ent4....................................................................................................... Sales to other sectors............................................................................................................. Tuition and related educational charges......................................................................... Health and hospital charges............................................................................................. Other s a les.......................................................................................................................... Residual.............................................................................................................................................................. 47 48 49 50 61 62 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 1,251.5 1,577.9 1,038.3 913.8 124.4 539.7 23.7 184.1 332.0 21.2 305.3 63.2 141.4 100.8 -1.5 1,249.4 1,576.0 1,038.1 909.9 127.9 538.1 23.8 184.0 330.3 20.9 305.8 62.6 142.0 101.3 -2.1 1,252.3 1,578.6 1,039.7 913.0 126.5 539.1 23.8 184.3 331.0 20.8 305.5 62.7 142.2 100.8 -1.6 1,252.7 1,579.8 1,040.3 912.7 127.4 539.7 23.8 184.3 331.5 21.3 305.9 62.6 142.1 101.3 -1.9 1,246.6 1,573.4 1,036.2 907.5 128.3 537.4 23.8 183.8 329.7 21.1 305.8 62.6 142.0 101.5 -2.3 1,246.1 1,572.3 1,036.1 906.3 129.4 536.4 23.7 183.5 329.2 20.5 305.8 62.5 141.8 101.6 -2.4 1,242.9 1,568.4 1,033.7 902.8 130.5 534.8 23.6 183.1 328.1 19.8 305.7 62.4 141.7 101.7 -2.4 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software). 2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets. 3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment. 4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software in table 3.9.5. Note. Chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines. May 2010 D-31 S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin e ss Table 3.11.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real National Defense Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment by Type [Percent] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I National defense co nsum ption expenditures and gross in v e s tm e n t....................................... 1 7.8 5.4 -5.1 14.0 8.4 -3 .6 1.2 Consum ption expenditures 1....................................................................................................................... Gross output of general government.......................................................................................................... Value added.............................................................................................................................................. Compensation of general government employees.......................................................................... M ilitary.............................................................................................................................................. Civilian.............................................................................................................................................. Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2....................................................................... Intermediate goods and services purchased 3 .................................................................................... Durable goods....................................................................................................................................... Aircraft............................................................................................................................................... Missiles............................................................................................................................................. Ships.................................................................................................................................................. Vehicles............................................................................................................................................. Electronics........................................................................................................................................ Other durable goods....................................................................................................................... Nondurable goods................................................................................................................................ Petroleum products.......................................................................................................................... Ammunition....................................................................................................................................... Other nondurable goods................................................................................................................. Services................................................................................................................................................. Research and development........................................................................................................... Installation support........................................................................................................................... Weapons support............................................................................................................................. Personnel support............................................................................................................................ Transportation of m aterial............................................................................................................... Travel of persons.............................................................................................................................. Less: Own-account investm ent4 ................................................................................................................ Sales to other sectors..................................................................................................................... 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 6.5 6.2 4.0 3.9 4.5 2.6 4.4 8.9 18.4 13.1 5.2 -31.6 35.3 38.7 16.0 3.4 1.5 2.4 7.8 7.9 5.0 3.9 18.7 16.6 -16.6 -20.0 4.6 -28.6 4.9 4.9 6.5 6.9 7.7 5.0 5.4 3.1 7.7 19.5 2.1 -12.6 7.1 3.3 2.5 2.9 -2 .0 -5.6 12.6 2.3 -1.7 9.9 -3.9 7.4 -20.7 3.1 14.4 1.4 -4.9 4.5 4.2 5.6 1.0 5.7 -14.3 -25.7 -2.6 -33.2 -22.0 -81.6 -40.1 3.8 -14.2 -9.6 -50.9 5.0 -12.0 -40.8 14.9 -33.5 9.4 46.2 14.6 58.2 -1.5 12.2 12.2 8.5 9.0 10.3 6.1 6.9 16.7 43.2 32.1 15.9 60.8 256.7 62.4 17.9 34.9 19.4 62.3 41.1 10.7 21.1 13.8 5.1 5.0 7.4 2.2 7.5 1.6 8.0 8.0 8.3 8.4 7.5 10.5 8.0 7.6 31.9 22.1 112.8 17.3 37.5 31.2 18.1 -7 .7 -32.7 -13.7 32.2 5.0 -6.5 1.1 23.5 13.0 -8.7 -10.8 7.1 13.8 -1 .3 -1 .3 6.2 4.1 -0 .3 15.0 13.0 -9.5 -18.2 36.1 -31.5 -76.4 -2.2 -37.4 -43.6 -44.0 -50.1 15.1 -53.7 -3 .0 -8 .0 -9 .3 -30.8 20.9 -13.9 -30.0 7.3 -11.8 0.7 0.8 2.6 1.6 1.8 1.3 5.9 -1 .4 -13.8 -49.9 -16.6 198.6 27.1 32.5 -1 .7 -0.3 -23.6 4.6 30.5 1.2 5.2 -8 .4 -25.3 7.7 56.8 14.3 27.1 18.3 Gross in v e s tm e n t5......................................................................................................................................... Structures....................................................................................................................................................... Equipment and software.............................................................................................................................. Aircraft........................................................................................................................................................ Missiles...................................................................................................................................................... Ships.......................................................................................................................................................... Vehicles...................................................................................................................................................... Electronics and software.......................................................................................................................... Other equipment....................................................................................................................................... 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 16.7 20.4 16.2 5.1 -4 .7 -0 .5 47.2 26.6 18.1 8.4 29.3 5.4 12.8 16.3 6.7 -6.4 5.7 3.7 -6.6 17.6 -10.1 -5.0 88.9 -21.5 -45.8 -22.6 5.8 24.7 21.6 25.2 66.8 19.4 21.7 -2.9 36.4 12.6 11.0 72.7 2.6 -44.4 15.0 -6.6 27.2 23.1 15.9 -16.4 -42.3 -10.7 63.3 -2.2 53.9 -14.1 -15.3 -42.5 4.7 55.4 -2 .4 -14.6 4.6 -47.5 27.2 25.7 0.6 -4 .7 1. National defense consumption expenditures are defense services produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software). 2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets. 3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment. 4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software. 5. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures. D-32 National Data May 2010 Table 3.11.3. Real National Defense Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment by Type, Quantity Indexes Table 3.11.4. Price Indexes for National Defense Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment by Type [Index numbers, 2005=100] [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2009 I National defense co nsum ption expenditures and gross investm ent............................ II Seasonally adjusted 2010 III IV 1 111.939 117.992 114.219 118.014 120.419 119.317 119.680 2 109.088 114.456 111.005 114.258 116.468 116.092 116.283 3 108.871 4 104.024 114.246 110.776 110.813 107.590 114.043 109.803 116.255 112.011 115.874 113.700 116.112 114.442 b 6 7 101.891 101.205 103.351 108.876 109.008 108.486 105.774 106.074 104.996 108.072 108.695 106.561 110.269 110.675 109.248 111.391 110.588 113.140 111.839 111.078 113.493 8 110.908 116.889 113.428 115.340 117.576 121.214 122.978 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Gross in v e s tm e n t5......................... Structures....................................... Equipment and software.............. Aircraft........................................ Missiles...................................... S hips.......................................... Vehicles..................................... Electronics and software......... Other equipment....................... 30 132.547 143.626 137.493 145.286 149.128 142.596 144.255 31 147.710 191.050 177.604 186.485 213.769 186.342 208.046 32 130.625 137.654 132.443 140.101 140.999 137.075 136.239 33 100.266 113.050 106.968 121.560 104.992 118.682 114.105 34 100.497 116.847 111.162 116.211 120.343 119.673 121.030 91.352 97.477 95.110 105.940 90.167 35 92.108 96.749 36 229.040 214.404 211.140 209.593 222.587 214.296 227.600 37 168.586 178.131 165.288 178.612 188.125 180.497 191.110 38 135.209 140.154 139.123 143.308 148.693 129.495 129.685 9 114.840 118.445 114.695 119.220 121.434 118.430 118.022 10 140.946 151.841 138.631 151.650 162.513 154.569 148.928 11 117.187 140.017 126.825 135.955 142.926 154.363 129.891 12 137.034 139.891 126.286 131.037 158.272 143.968 137.565 37.794 13 54.445 47.595 46.268 54.218 49.682 52.100 14 277.342 297.135 222.465 305.734 331.092 329.250 349.619 15 198.803 205.290 186.142 210.127 224.874 200.017 214.583 16 131.777 135.040 132.724 138.298 144.175 124.964 124.427 17 103.345 106.328 105.074 113.250 110.990 95.997 95.936 18 101.234 99.202 104.757 109.496 99.185 83.372 77.956 19 94.160 88.925 89.096 92.283 93.334 81.893 92.431 20 113.204 127.434 120.707 131.565 141.074 116.390 124.399 21 112.234 114.842 112.198 115.077 116.490 115.604 115.935 103.472 107.742 113.723 139.831 95.597 77.074 111.682 82.837 101.177 105.654 112.222 134.773 96.280 79.533 108.739 81.890 106.130 109.113 113.618 136.418 98.009 79.971 110.718 82.225 104.362 109.415 119.785 140.654 95.814 77.709 112.629 84.933 102.219 106.785 109.266 147.479 92.286 71.083 114.643 82.298 103.514 104.477 101.573 150.244 103.263 73.499 121.730 85.830 1. National defense consumption expenditures are defense services produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and soft ware). 2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets. 3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment. 4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software. 5. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures. 2008 2009 I Consum ption expenditures 1 ...... Gross output of general government............................... Value added............................... Compensation of general government employees... Military............................... Civilian............................... Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2 Intermediate goods and services purchased 3 .......... Durable g oods...................... Aircraft............................... Missiles.............................. S hips................................. Vehicles............................. Electronics........................ Other durable goods........ Nondurable goods............... Petroleum products......... Ammunition...................... Other nondurable goods S ervices................................ Research and development................ Installation support.......... Weapons support............ Personnel support........... Transportation of material Travel of persons............. Less: Own-account investm ent4 Sales to other sectors...... 105.212 98.048 118.290 130.257 120.488 74.758 97.632 81.700 Line 2009 I National defense consum ption expenditures and gross in vestm en t........................... Consum ption expenditures 1........ Gross output of general government................................ Value added............................... Compensation of general government employees... Military............................... Civilian............................... Consumption of general government fixed ca p ita l2 Intermediate goods and services purchased 3........... Durable g oo ds ...................... A ircraft............................... Missiles.............................. Ships.................................. Vehicles............................ Electronics........................ Other durable goods........ Nondurable g oo d s............... Petroleum products.......... Ammunition....................... Other nondurable goods Services................................. Research and development................ Installation support.......... Weapons supp ort............ Personnel supp ort........... Transportation of material Travel of persons.............. Less: Own-account investm ent4 Sales to other sectors..... G ross in v e s tm e n t5......................... S tructures...................................... Equipment and software.............. A ircraft........................................ Missiles...................................... Ships........................................... V ehicles..................................... Electronics and software.......... Other equipment....................... II 2010 III IV I 1 111.913 112.086 111.584 111.664 112.195 112.901 114.276 2 112.891 113.126 112.502 112.653 113.288 114.062 115.616 3 112.878 4 113.490 113.091 116.021 112.470 115.819 112.618 115.689 113.252 115.839 114.024 116.737 115.575 118.990 b 6 7 115.062 117.109 110.779 118.596 120.952 113.649 118.253 120.422 113.710 118.244 120.351 113.834 118.378 120.736 113.423 119.508 122.300 113.629 122.359 125.655 115.422 8 108.763 108.335 108.546 108.059 108.257 108.477 109.009 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 112.088 103.449 101.701 107.052 107.541 103.707 102.129 104.386 142.673 175.903 119.092 108.422 110.384 109.781 104.159 102.316 108.008 109.379 105.436 101.580 106.016 107.290 102.304 116.972 109.977 110.929 108.693 104.139 102.733 107.811 108.999 105.382 101.630 105.418 97.584 81.715 116.845 109.278 110.548 109.154 104.031 102.221 108.010 109.035 105.508 101.372 105.812 104.108 95.075 117.145 109.697 110.467 110.325 104.094 102.086 108.128 109.052 105.295 101.514 106.134 111.486 111.084 116.895 110.317 111.195 110.953 104.371 102.224 108.080 110.431 105.559 101.804 106.700 115.981 121.343 117.005 110.614 111.508 111.689 104.569 102.460 108.754 109.676 105.533 101.870 106.909 117.949 124.679 118.709 111.355 112.239 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 110.756 112.173 106.986 108.850 114.912 118.712 111.646 111.470 111.927 111.805 108.189 110.395 103.654 115.020 108.270 109.918 112.020 110.458 108.263 110.094 103.216 113.250 107.586 110.005 111.511 111.108 107.959 110.264 101.396 112.629 107.949 109.411 111.885 112.717 108.256 110.596 103.718 115.907 108.536 109.913 112.294 112.937 108.276 110.627 106.286 118.293 109.007 110.343 113.174 114.401 108.812 110.981 107.373 118.641 110.496 111.445 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 105.630 117.040 104.376 102.508 104.988 123.044 104.756 96.015 103.701 105.478 117.499 104.134 103.742 105.360 116.554 107.170 94.227 104.800 105.650 119.518 104.024 103.612 104.912 116.208 107.520 94.707 104.304 105.338 105.300 117.683 116.320 103.939 104.110 104.056 103.813 104.131 105.944 114.557 116.659 107.524 106.732 94.408 94.023 104.635 104.839 105.623 116.477 104.462 103.487 106.454 118.793 106.902 93.773 105.422 105.986 116.708 104.848 104.032 107.073 120.882 106.836 93.614 105.685 1. National defense consumption expenditures are defense services produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and soft ware). 2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets. 3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment. 4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software. 5. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures. S u r v e y o f C u r r e n t B u sin e ss May 2010 D-33 Table 3.11.6. Real National Defense Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment by Type, Chained Dollars Table 3.11.5. National Defense Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment by Type [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 I National defense consum ption expenditures and gross in vestm ent........................... Consum ption expenditures 1 ...... Gross output of general governm ent.............................. Value added............................... Compensation of general government employees... Military............................... Civilian............................... Consumption of general government fixed ca pita l2 Intermediate goods and services purchased 3 .......... II Line 2010 2009 III IV 1 737.9 779.0 750.7 776.2 795.8 793.5 805.6 2 634.0 666.6 642.9 662.7 679.3 681.7 692.1 3 4 639.3 335.7 672.1 365.5 648.3 354.4 668.1 361.3 684.9 369.0 687.3 377.5 698.1 387.3 5 6 7 252.9 174.3 78.6 278.6 193.9 84.7 269.8 187.8 82.0 275.7 192.4 83.3 281.6 196.5 85.1 287.2 198.9 88.3 295.2 205.3 89.9 I National defense co nsum ption expenditures and gross investm en t........................... Consum ption expenditures 1........ Gross output of general government................................ Value added............................... Compensation of general government employees... Military............................... Civilian............................... Consumption of general government fixed c a p ita l2 Intermediate goods and services purchased 3........... Durable g oo d s...................... A ircraft............................... Missiles.............................. Ships.................................. Vehicles............................. Electronics........................ Other durable goods........ 82.9 87.0 84.6 85.6 87.4 90.3 92.1 Petroleum products......... Ammunition...................... Other nondurable goods S ervices................................ Research and development................ Installation support.......... Weapons support............ Personnel support........... Transportation of material Travel of p ersons............. Less: Own-account investm ent4 Sales to other sectors...... 9 m 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 303.5 43.1 12.8 4.8 0.8 3.2 10.9 10.5 30.8 18.0 4.5 8.4 229.6 306.6 46.7 15.4 4.9 0.7 3.5 11.2 11.0 23.8 10.1 4.1 9.6 236.1 293.9 42.6 14.0 4.5 0.7 2.6 10.2 10.7 21.4 8.6 3.8 9.0 229.8 306.8 46.6 14.9 4.6 0.8 3.6 11.4 11.2 24.6 10.5 4.3 9.9 235.6 315.9 50.0 15.7 5.6 0.8 3.9 12.3 11.7 25.9 11.1 4.1 10.6 240.0 309.8 47.6 16.9 5.1 0.6 3.9 10.9 10.2 23.3 10.2 4.3 8.8 238.9 310.8 46.0 14.3 4.9 0.8 4.1 11.7 10.2 23.7 9.8 4.4 9.5 241.1 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 62.9 38.9 30.8 79.2 10.7 7.3 2.2 3.0 62.4 42.5 30.0 86.2 7.7 7.3 2.5 3.0 61.1 41.2 29.6 82.8 7.7 7.4 2.4 3.0 63.8 42.8 29.9 84.0 7.7 7.4 2.5 3.0 63.0 43.6 31.6 86.8 7.7 7.4 2.5 3.1 61.9 42.6 28.8 91.1 7.6 6.9 2.6 3.0 63.2 42.2 26.9 93.1 8.6 7.2 2.8 3.2 Petroleum products.......... Ammunition....................... Other nondurable goods Services................................. Research and development................ Installation support.......... Weapons su pp ort............ Personnel su pp ort........... Transportation of material Travel of persons.............. Less: Own-account investm ent4 Sales to other sectors...... G ross in v e s tm e n t5......................... Structures...................................... Equipment and software.............. A ircraft....................................... Missiles...................................... S hips.......................................... Vehicles..................................... Electronics and software......... Other equipment....................... 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 103.9 12.9 91.0 13.9 4.2 11.0 9.3 20.5 32.1 112.4 16.7 95.7 15.8 4.9 11.1 8.9 21.2 33.6 107.8 15.8 91.9 15.0 4.7 10.5 8.8 19.8 33.2 113.5 16.4 97.2 17.1 4.9 10.9 8.7 21.3 34.3 116.5 18.5 98.0 14.7 5.1 10.9 9.2 22.4 35.7 111.7 16.2 95.6 16.6 5.1 12.3 8.9 21.4 31.3 113.4 18.1 95.3 16.0 5.2 10.7 9.4 22.6 31.4 G ross in v e s tm e n t5......................... Structures...................................... Equipment and software.............. A ircraft....................................... Missiles...................................... Ships........................................... Vehicles..................................... Electronics and software.......... Other equipment....................... 1. National defense consumption expenditures are defense services produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and soft ware). 2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets. 3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment. 4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software. 5. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures. 2009 2009 I 8 Aircraft............................... Missiles.............................. S hips................................. Vehicles............................ Electronics........................ Other durable goods........ 2008 II 2010 III IV I 1 659.4 695.0 672.8 695.2 709.3 702.8 2 561.6 589.3 571.5 588.2 599.6 597.7 705.0 598.7 3 4 566.3 295.8 594.3 315.0 576.4 306.0 593.2 312.3 604.8 318.6 602.8 323.4 604.0 325.5 5 6 7 219.8 148.8 71.0 234.9 160.3 74.5 228.2 156.0 72.1 233.1 159.8 73.2 237.9 162.7 75.0 240.3 162.6 77.7 241.2 163.3 77.9 8 76.2 80.3 77.9 79.2 80.8 83.3 84.5 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 270.8 41.6 12.6 4.5 0.8 3.1 10.7 10.1 21.6 10.2 3.7 7.7 208.0 279.3 44.9 15.0 4.6 0.7 3.3 11.0 10.3 22.2 10.0 3.5 8.7 212.9 270.5 41.0 13.6 4.1 0.6 2.5 10.0 10.2 21.9 10.6 3.3 8.2 208.0 281.1 44.8 14.6 4.3 0.7 3.4 11.3 10.6 23.7 11.0 3.7 9.0 213.3 286.3 48.0 15.4 5.2 0.7 3.7 12.1 11.0 23.2 10.0 3.5 9.6 215.9 279.3 45.7 16.6 4.7 0.5 3.7 10.7 9.6 20.1 8.4 3.7 7.9 214.3 278.3 44.0 14.0 4.5 0.7 3.9 11.5 9.5 20.0 7.9 3.7 8.5 214.9 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 56.8 34.6 28.8 72.7 9.3 6.1 2.0 2.7 55.8 38.1 27.7 78.1 7.4 6.3 2.3 2.7 54.6 37.3 27.3 75.2 7.4 6.5 2.2 2.7 57.2 38.6 27.7 76.2 7.6 6.6 2.3 2.7 56.3 38.7 29.2 78.5 7.4 6.4 2.3 2.8 55.1 37.7 26.6 82.3 7.1 5.8 2.4 2.7 55.8 36.9 24.8 83.9 8.0 6.0 2.5 2.8 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 98.4 11.0 87.2 13.6 4.0 9.0 8.9 21.3 31.0 -2.4 106.6 14.2 91.9 15.3 4.7 9.6 8.3 22.5 32.1 -2 .3 102.0 13.2 88.4 14.5 4.5 9.0 8.2 20.9 31.9 -1 .9 107.8 13.9 93.5 16.4 4.7 9.5 8.1 22.6 32.8 -2 .5 110.7 15.9 94.1 14.2 4.8 9.3 8.6 23.8 34.1 -2 .5 105.8 13.9 91.5 16.0 4.8 10.4 8.3 22.8 29.7 -2 .0 107.1 15.5 91.0 15.4 4.9 8.8 8.8 24.2 29.7 -2 .3 1. National defense consumption expenditures are defense services produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and soft ware). 2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets. 3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment. 4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software. 5. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures. Note. Chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 currentdollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines. D-34 National Data May 2010 4. Foreign Transactions Table 4.1. Foreign Transactions in the National Income and Product Accounts [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV Current receipts fro m the rest o f the w o rld ..................................................................................... 1 2,640.3 2,153.7 2,089.0 2,065.0 2,164.4 2,296.3 E xports o f goods and se rvice s.................................................................................................................... Goods 1...... Durable... Nondurable................................................................................................................................................. Services '. . 2 3 4 5 6 1,831.1 1,266.9 822.8 444.1 564.2 1,564.2 1,038.4 664.6 373.7 525.9 1,509.3 989.5 644.7 344.8 519.8 1,493.7 978.1 617.0 361.1 515.6 1,573.8 1,045.2 664.2 381.1 528.5 1,680.1 1,140.6 732.7 407.9 539.6 Income re ce ipts................................................................................................................................................ Wage and salary receipts.. Income receipts on assets. Interest............................ Dividends........................ 7 8 9 m 11 1? 809.2 3.0 806.2 261.9 258.7 285.6 589.4 3.0 586.4 156.1 203.2 227.1 579.6 3.0 576.6 174.5 222.0 180.1 571.3 3.0 568.3 158.4 181.4 228 5 590.6 2.9 587.6 146.9 219.9 220.8 616.2 3.0 613.2 144.7 189.5 279 0 Current paym ents to the rest o f the w o rld ........................................................................................ 13 3,347.6 2,583.8 2,498.5 2,454.5 2,589.8 2,772.0 Im ports o f g oods and se rv ic e s .................................................................................................................... Goods 1...... Durable... Nondurable................................................................................................................................................. Services 1.. 14 15 16 17 18 2,538.9 2,126.4 1,160.9 965.5 412.4 1,956.6 1,575.4 892.6 682.8 381.2 1,887.9 1,508.2 862.5 645.8 379.6 1,832.8 1,461.1 820.9 640.2 371.7 1,976.0 1,592.8 895.3 697.5 383.1 2,129.7 1,739.4 991.6 747.7 390.3 Incom e paym en ts............................................................................................................................................ Wage and salary payments 20 Income payments on a ssets........................................................................................................................ Interest............................ Dividends........................ Reinvested earnings on foreign direct investment in the United States............................................ 19 21 ?? ?3 24 667.3 10.4 656.9 489.9 112.1 55.0 484.5 10.1 474.4 355.9 86.3 32.2 479.7 10.2 469.5 383.1 119.2 -32.8 478.6 10.0 468.6 359.9 80.9 27.8 469.1 10.0 459.1 341.5 67.0 50.5 510.5 10.0 500.5 339.1 78.1 83.3 Current taxes and transfer paym ents to the rest o f the w orld (net) From persons (net)............................................................................. From government (net)...................................................................... From business (n e t)........................................................................... 25 26 27 28 141.4 64.5 40.8 36.2 142.7 63.5 49.3 29.9 130.9 63.8 35.9 31.2 143.0 63.1 50.4 29.6 144.8 61.9 54.0 28.9 131.8 65.3 36.8 29.8 29 -707.2 -430.1 -409.5 -389.5 -425.5 -475.7 3n ^1 32 -706.8 -707.2 -0.4 -433.1 -430.1 3.0 -412.6 -409.5 3.1 -392 5 -389.5 3.0 -428.4 -425.5 2.9 -4 7 8 6 -475 7 2.9 Balance on current account, N IP A s................................................................................................... I 1,719.5 1,171.2 743.1 428.2 548.3 2,223.3 1,822.7 1,016.8 805.9 400.6 150.1 66.5 53.6 30.0 Addenda: Less: Capital account transactions (n e t)2............................................................................................ 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, primarily military equipment purchased and sold by the federal government, are included in services. Beginning with 1986, repairs and alterations of equipment are reclassi fied from goods to services. 2. Consists of capital transfers and the acquisition and disposal of nonproduced nonfinancial assets. May 2010 D-35 S u r v ey o f C u r r e n t B u sin ess Table 4.2.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Exports and in Real Imports of Goods and Services by Type of Product [Percent] Table 4.2.2. Contributions to Percent Change in Real Exports and in Real Imports of Goods and Services by Type of Product Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 1 II III IV 2008 2009 I 2009 I E xpo rts o f goods and services 1 5.4 -9.6 -29 .9 -4.1 17.8 22.8 5.8 E xports o f g oods 1............................ Foods, feeds, and beverages.......... Industrial supplies and materials.... Durable goods.............................. Nondurable goods....................... Capital goods, except automotive... Civilian aircraft, engines, and p a rts.......................................... Computers, peripherals, and p a rts.......................................... O th e r............................................. Automotive vehicles, engines, and p a rts.............................................. Consumer goods, except automotive.................................... Durable goods.............................. Nondurable goods....................... O the r................................................. 2 3 4 5 6 7 5.9 6.7 11.2 10.5 11.6 5.1 -12.2 -3 .0 -7 .2 -12.9 -3 .9 -13.6 -36 .9 -20.1 -34.6 -48.0 -26.0 -28.3 -6 .3 23.5 10.5 0.2 16.2 -18.9 24.6 -0 .2 38.9 34.2 41.4 8.8 34.1 54.9 14.1 24.5 9.1 34.1 6.7 -5 .3 14.6 7.1 18.7 8.2 8 -3.2 -3 .3 111.0 -24.9 -15.9 38.5 -25 .4 9 10 5.2 7.1 -7 .9 -16.7 -14.0 -45.6 -10.8 -18.2 26.5 14.1 33.3 33.1 35.4 14.9 11 -1.1 -32.9 -83.0 -17.8 182.7 111.1 9.9 12 13 14 15 8.2 7.5 9.0 -11.3 -7 .2 -16.7 5.2 -15.1 -23.8 -41.6 1.2 -35.1 -2 .7 -7.3 2.0 -25.4 12.6 38.0 -8 .4 8.1 29.3 35.2 23.2 27.0 4.7 -7.0 18.3 -29.9 E xports o f services 1 ........................ Transfers under U.S. military agency sales contracts................ Travel................................................. Passenger fares................................ Other transportation........................ Royalties and license fees.............. Other private services..................... O th e r................................................. 16 4.2 -4.1 -13.6 0.1 5.6 2.6 3.8 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 -14.6 8.4 11.5 1.0 5.9 3.2 11.1 -3 .0 -9 .9 -6.1 -14.2 -3.1 -0 .3 11.3 -4 .5 -23.3 -17.8 -38.7 -11.8 -4 .0 -3 .8 42.3 -14 .4 8.0 -1 .9 -0 .6 1.6 19.8 10.9 10.8 -6 .9 12.3 6.0 3.9 -2 .5 -30.6 2.7 -19.2 29.9 4.2 3.6 -0 .3 -12.2 7.7 -0 .8 7.0 4.0 3.4 2.8 Im ports o f g oods and services 24 -3 .2 -13 .9 -36.4 -14 .7 21.3 15.8 8.9 Im p orts o f g oo ds 1 ............................ Foods, feeds, and beverages.......... Industrial supplies and materials, except petroleum and products Durable goods............................. Nondurable goods....................... Petroleum and products................. Capital goods, except automotive Civilian aircraft, engines, and p a rts......................................... Computers, peripherals, and p a rts.......................................... O th e r............................................. Automotive vehicles, engines, and p a rts.............................................. Consumer goods, except automotive.................................... Durable goods.............................. Nondurable goods....................... O th e r................................................. 25 26 -3 .9 -1 .3 -16 .0 -5 .0 -41.0 -20.9 -16.5 -1.6 25.1 -1.1 20.3 1.4 9.0 7.4 27 28 29 30 31 -7.4 -8 .6 -0.2 -2.9 0.6 -24.7 -29.6 -19.7 -8 .6 -18.0 -51.6 -56.9 -45.7 -15.9 -44 .0 -39.5 -49 .2 -28.9 -21.9 -19.9 24.4 5.4 45.2 5.3 22.7 27.5 48.5 9.9 -30.8 46.0 23.1 24.8 21.5 6.9 11.8 32 -3 .0 -18.3 -27 .5 11.5 -28 .9 28.9 -21.9 33 34 1.7 0.6 -1 .8 -22.9 -22.3 -50.7 24.7 -33.9 60.0 19.1 116.6 25.6 17.9 13.9 35 -12.1 -31 .8 -82.3 -7.3 279.5 83.0 -10.7 36 37 38 39 -1.1 -1 .4 -0 .7 -11.9 -10.8 -14.1 -6 .8 -9 .8 -25 .3 -32.1 -16 .7 -11.7 -3 .8 1.4 -9.2 -12.4 4.5 -3.2 13.6 -2 .9 26.7 28.6 24.7 0.7 3.6 9.6 -2 .7 58.2 Im ports o f services 1......................... Direct defense expenditures........... Travel................................................. Passenger fares................................ Other transportation........................ Royalties and license fee s.............. Other private services..................... O th e r................................................. 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 0.7 -5.6 -1.7 -0 .3 -3 .4 4.5 5.0 -0.2 -3 .6 3.4 1.3 -9 .7 -15.3 -15.2 -0 .2 11.9 -11 .5 21.3 -11.1 -21 .3 -26.8 -27.4 -7 .7 2.9 -7.5 -18.5 -23.1 14.7 -20.7 -0.3 2.7 15.0 7.0 -8 .9 16.8 12.1 6.5 10.6 5.7 3.0 -1 .9 -11.2 -3 .6 -41.0 16.7 7.1 1.3 16.8 8.7 2.6 3.5 -0 .6 28.1 78.7 0.2 1.7 Addenda: Exports of durable g oods............... Exports of nondurable g oods......... Exports of agricultural goods 2....... Exports of nonagricultural goods.... Imports of durable goods................ Imports of nondurable goods.......... Imports of nonpetroleum g o o d s.... 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 4.7 8.4 6.6 5.8 -4 .4 -3 .3 -4.2 -16.7 -2 .9 -1 .5 -13.2 -20.9 -9 .4 -17.7 -44 .2 -2 0 .3 -1 7 .8 -38.6 -52.2 -22.4 -44.9 -15.3 12.2 12.3 -8.2 -16.7 -16.3 -15.5 29.1 17.3 -2 .3 28.0 37.1 11.3 29.4 41.0 22.7 47.6 32.7 46.1 -6 .6 35.1 5.2 9.5 8.3 6.6 9.3 8.5 9.4 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, primarily military equipment purchased and sold by the federal government, are included in services. Beginning with 1986, repairs and alterations of equipment are reclassified from goods to services. 2. Includes parts of foods, feeds, and beverages, of nondurable industrial supplies and materials, and of nondurable nonautomotive consumer goods. Line 2010 2010 II III IV I Percent change at annual rate: E xports of goods and services 1 5.4 -9.6 -29.9 -4.1 17.8 22.8 5.8 2 3 4 5 6 7 4.06 0.36 2.10 0.71 1.38 1.31 -8.36 -0.21 -1.35 -0.82 -0.53 -3.50 -25.76 -1.01 -6.34 -3.52 -2.82 -6.81 -4.19 1.27 1.72 0.02 1.70 -5.29 15.82 0.10 6.43 1.93 4.50 2.34 21.76 3.03 2.84 1.55 1.29 7.86 4.58 -0.32 2.69 0.46 2.23 1.98 8 -0.14 -0.11 3.58 -1.44 -0.79 1.60 -1.28 9 10 0.13 1.32 -0.18 -3.20 -0.31 -10.08 -0.27 -3.58 0.59 2.54 0.75 5.51 0.76 2.51 11 -0.08 -2.26 -8.50 -0.89 5.47 4.75 0.60 12 13 14 15 0.71 0.37 0.34 -0.36 -0.65 -0.85 0.20 -0.40 -2.09 -2.28 0.18 -1.00 -0.26 -0.36 0.10 -0.74 1.28 1.66 -0.38 0.20 2.66 1.62 1.04 0.63 0.45 -0.34 0.79 -0.82 Percentage poin ts a t annual rates: E xports o f goods 1 ............................ Foods, feeds, and beverages.......... Industrial supplies and m aterials.... Durable g oo d s.............................. Nondurable goo ds....................... Capital goods, except automotive... Civilian aircraft, engines, and p a rts .......................................... Computers, peripherals, and p a rts ......................................... O ther.............................................. Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts............................................... Consumer goods, except automotive.................................... Durable goo ds.............................. Nondurable goo ds....................... Other.................................................. E xports of services 1......................... Transfers under U.S. military agency sales contracts............... Travel.................................................. Passenger fares................................ Other transportation......................... Royalties and license fe e s .............. Other private services...................... Other.................................................. 16 1.32 -1.27 -4.18 0.04 1.99 1.05 1.20 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 -0.21 0.49 0.18 0.03 0.30 0.43 0.10 -0.03 -0.60 -0.10 -0.45 -0.16 -0.03 0.11 -0.05 -1.44 -0.32 -1.27 -0.61 -0.47 -0.03 0.47 -0.96 0.14 -0.05 -0.03 0.25 0.23 0.15 0.66 -0.12 0.35 0.36 0.61 -0.03 -0.45 0.17 -0.32 0.82 0.25 0.58 0.00 -0.15 0.43 -0.01 0.20 0.22 0.48 0.03 24 -3.2 -13.9 -36.4 -14.7 21.3 15.8 8.9 25 26 -3.31 -0.05 -13.28 -0.19 -34.65 -0.74 -13.30 -0.03 19.80 0.02 16.08 0.08 7.35 0.30 27 28 29 30 31 -0.95 -0.57 -0.38 -0.45 0.10 -3.03 -1.80 -1.23 -0.92 -3.50 -6.85 -3.93 -2.92 -1.84 -8.99 -4.86 -3.15 -1.70 -2.76 -3.93 2.28 0.32 1.97 0.73 4.20 2.47 1.96 0.51 -5.15 7.40 2.20 1.15 1.04 0.99 2.15 32 -0.04 -0.27 -0.35 0.20 -0.52 0.39 -0.34 33 34 0.07 0.07 -0.05 -3.18 -0.83 -7.81 0.99 -5.11 2.38 2.35 4.11 2.90 0.90 1.59 Percent change at annual rate: Im ports o f goods and services Percentage points at annual rates: Im ports o f g oods 1.............................. Foods, feeds, and beverages.......... Industrial supplies and materials, except petroleum and products Durable goo ds.............................. Nondurable g oo d s ....................... Petroleum and products.................. Capital goods, except automotive... Civilian aircraft, engines, and p a rts .......................................... Computers, peripherals, and p a rts .......................................... Other.............................................. Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts............................................... Consumer goods, except automotive.................................... Durable goo ds............................. Nondurable goo ds....................... Other.................................................. Im ports of services 1......................... Direct defense expenditures........... Travel.................................................. Passenger fares................................ Other transportation......................... Royalties and license fe e s .............. Other private services...................... Other.................................................. 35 -1.27 -3.10 -11.00 -0.45 11.35 5.93 -1.05 36 37 38 39 -0.21 -0.15 -0.06 -0.47 -2.19 -1.56 -0.63 -0.34 -4.87 -3.48 -1.39 -0.35 -0.71 0.27 -0.97 -0.56 1.24 -0.22 1.47 -0.04 5.31 2.95 2.36 0.05 0.82 1.06 -0.24 1.94 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 0.10 -0.08 -0.05 0.00 -0.10 0.05 0.29 0.00 -0.64 0.05 0.03 -0.14 -0.45 -0.17 -0.02 0.06 -1.72 0.41 -0.35 -0.29 -0.75 -0.29 -0.47 0.03 -1.45 -0.36 -0.98 0.21 -0.63 0.00 0.22 0.09 1.47 -0.17 0.64 0.17 0.20 0.13 0.49 0.02 -0.30 -0.21 -0.13 -0.68 0.43 0.08 0.11 0.10 1.55 0.04 0.12 -0.01 0.68 0.69 0.02 0.01 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, primarily military equipment purchased and sold by the federal government, are included in services. Beginning with 1986, repairs and alterations of equipment are reclassified from goods to services. D-36 National Data May 2010 Table 4.2.3. Real Exports and Imports of Goods and Services Table 4.2.4. Price Indexes for Exports and Imports by Type of Product, Quantity Indexes of Goods and Services by Type of Product [Index numbers, 2005=100] [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 I E xports o f g oods and s e rv ic e s ............................ E xports o f g oods 1..................... Foods, feeds, and beverages Industrial supplies and materials................................ Durable goods...................... Nondurable goods............... Capital goods, except automotive............................. Civilian aircraft, engines, and p a rts .......................... Computers, peripherals, and p a rts .................................. O th e r..................................... Automotive vehicles, engines, and p a rts............................... Consumer goods, except automotive............................. Durable goods...................... Nondurable g oods............... O th e r.......................................... E xports o f services 1 ................ Transfers under U.S. military agency sales contracts........ Travel.......................................... Passenger fares........................ Other transportation................ Royalties and license fe e s....... Other private services............. O th e r.......................................... Im ports o f g oods and se rv ic e s ........................... Im p orts o f g oods 1 ..................... Foods, feeds, and beverages Industrial supplies and materials, except petroleum and products......................... Durable goods...................... Nondurable goods............... Petroleum and products.......... Capital goods, except automotive............................. Civilian aircraft, engines, and p a rts .......................... Computers, peripherals, and p a rts.................................. O the r..................................... Automotive vehicles, engines, and p a rts............................... Consumer goods, except automotive............................. Durable goods...................... Nondurable goods............... O the r.......................................... Im ports o f services 1.................. Direct defense expenditures.... Travel.......................................... Passenger fares........................ Other transportation................ Royalties and license fee s....... Other private services............. O th e r.......................................... Addenda: Exports of durable goo ds........ Exports of nondurable goods Exports of agricultural goods 2 Exports of nonagricultural goods..................................... Imports of durable goods......... Imports of nondurable goods... Imports of nonpetroleum goods II Seasonally adjusted 2010 2009 III IV 2008 2009 I 1 124.842 112.823 109.922 108.766 113.315 119.289 120.976 2 3 124.436 125.205 109.268 121.462 105.520 113.436 103.817 119.581 109.695 119.510 118.040 133.321 119.980 131.506 4 126.127 5 127.899 6 125.070 117.076 111.355 120.131 109.198 105.676 111.044 111.948 105.732 115.288 121.540 113.804 125.713 125.615 120.209 128.481 129.965 122.274 134.105 7 126.462 109.291 110.363 104.737 106.960 115.104 117.387 8 116.222 112.411 118.653 110.470 105.779 114.745 106.649 9 119.171 10 130.106 109.720 108.407 106.781 108.673 103.783 103.360 110.063 106.835 118.252 114.760 127.561 118.821 E xports o f g oods and s e rv ic e s ........................... E xports o f g oods 1 ..................... Foods, feeds, and beverages Industrial supplies and materials................................ Durable g oo d s ...................... Nondurable g oo ds............... Capital goods, except automotive............................ Civilian aircraft, engines, and p a rts .......................... Computers, peripherals, and p a rts .................................. Other...................................... Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts................................ Consumer goods, except automotive............................ Durable g oo d s ...................... Nondurable g oo d s ............... Other........................................... 2009 I II 2010 III IV I 1 112.389 106.250 105.265 105.284 106.473 107.978 108.965 2 112.366 3 146.784 104.916 131.296 103.588 129.545 104.076 134.358 105.261 131.076 106.740 130.204 107.835 131.732 4 128.728 5 122.381 6 132.455 106.140 105.129 106.802 102.289 101.922 102.600 103.321 101.297 104.509 107.408 106.057 108.253 111.542 111.240 111.847 115.294 114.196 116.019 7 100.967 99.782 99.548 99.390 99.689 100.502 100.294 8 113.924 119.052 118.976 118.699 118.836 119.697 120.983 9 10 80.893 101.611 75.380 99.901 75.897 99.498 75.145 99.471 74.682 99.944 75.795 100.691 73.875 100.494 11 103.645 104.176 104.277 104.157 104.023 104.246 104.643 12 13 14 15 105.618 104.001 107.684 115.375 105.867 104.678 107.285 108.124 105.727 104.649 107.021 106.638 105.149 104.122 106.391 107.238 106.183 105.079 107.507 108.555 106.409 104.863 108.221 110.064 106.217 102.710 110.159 111.416 11 119.077 79.893 68.362 65.085 84.396 101.731 104.157 12 13 14 15 132.467 140.471 123.226 89.009 122.990 117.041 129.668 75.604 119.777 111.696 128.891 77.878 118.960 109.595 129.540 72.385 122.550 118.783 126.735 73.804 130.672 128.088 133.508 78.351 132.173 125.772 139.244 71.703 16 125.759 120.661 119.619 119.649 121.293 122.082 123.217 109.218 108.910 107.997 109.199 110.763 111.515 107.929 119.014 125.784 115.941 129.776 132.462 120.246 104.717 107.191 118.102 99.456 125.697 132.057 133.777 98.881 108.768 118.985 96.707 124.581 130.733 129.735 107.998 104.622 121.298 96.248 124.406 131.266 135.741 110.824 107.330 119.162 99.086 126.246 132.520 134.871 101.165 108.045 112.962 105.784 127.555 133.707 134.760 97.920 110.066 112.747 107.577 128.827 134.841 135.688 E xports o f services 1.................. Transfers under U.S. military agency sales contracts........ Travel........................................... Passenger fares........................ Other transportation................. Royalties and license fe e s ....... Other private services.............. Other........................................... 16 112.445 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 107.300 113.084 119.891 123.158 109.610 110.153 117.146 107.944 108.211 105.050 108.316 109.757 109.809 115.150 107.661 107.199 111.838 106.508 109.334 109.029 117.762 107.777 106.702 99.657 105.737 109.459 109.017 113.835 107.997 108.903 100.610 109.208 109.841 109.979 112.924 108.341 110.038 108.094 111.812 110.393 111.213 116.079 108.756 110.591 112.260 113.858 110.868 111.605 116.015 24 104.721 90.146 89.804 86.292 90.554 93.933 95.958 Im ports of g oods and s e rv ic e s ........................... 24 25 26 103.472 105.982 86.879 100.680 86.326 101.026 82.520 100.623 87.270 100.355 91.400 100.715 93.380 102.536 27 28 29 30 92.721 90.271 95.903 93.161 69.840 63.521 77.033 85.191 73.451 69.724 77.838 90.616 64.785 58.864 71.485 85.175 68.422 59.647 78.467 86.283 72.702 65.849 80.343 78.691 76.586 69.601 84.358 80.008 31 118.152 96.841 95.962 90.789 95.562 105.051 108.027 32 118.665 96.949 97.519 100.213 92.013 98.051 92.180 33 34 130.693 114.019 128.292 87.959 109.493 91.606 115.697 82.602 130.121 86.283 157.857 91.343 164.485 94.364 35 93.886 63.988 51.769 50.804 70.908 82.471 80.166 36 37 38 39 112.954 113.986 111.713 89.684 100.785 97.918 104.129 80.900 99.446 96.501 102.874 83.184 98.484 96.830 100.413 80.479 99.570 96.053 103.675 79.898 105.641 102.289 109.552 80.038 106.573 104.668 108.799 89.757 Im ports o f goods 1...................... Foods, feeds, and beverages Industrial supplies and materials, except petroleum and products......................... Durable g oo d s ...................... Nondurable g oo d s ............... Petroleum and products........... Capital goods, except automotive............................ Civilian aircraft, engines, and p a rts .......................... Computers, peripherals, and p a rts .................................. Other...................................... Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts................................ Consumer goods, except automotive............................. Durable goo ds...................... Nondurable goo ds............... Other........................................... 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 111.478 88.361 96.885 96.546 107.281 98.620 140.312 99.351 107.455 91.339 98.189 87.183 90.875 83.598 139.979 111.197 108.238 106.160 91.850 96.668 101.379 94.921 86.471 89.485 93.237 87.989 82.236 82.171 138.202 139.131 106.844 110.633 107.962 89.735 98.676 92.070 89.381 84.268 141.061 111.450 107.458 87.103 97.780 80.704 92.893 85.718 141.522 115.860 109.718 87.665 98.617 80.589 98.831 99.110 141.595 116.352 Im ports of services 1................. Direct defense expenditures.... Travel........................................... Passenger fares........................ Other transportation................. Royalties and license fe e s ....... Other private services.............. O ther........................................... 48 49 50 125.468 121.846 123.679 104.454 118.315 121.885 101.991 111.957 116.605 97.853 115.215 120.045 104.309 119.901 119.349 113.665 126.187 131.543 115.118 129.079 134.177 51 52 53 54 124.485 106.222 99.395 105.469 108.028 84.026 90.018 86.809 104.426 81.465 92.209 85.029 102.228 77.834 88.204 81.518 108.742 84.215 90.592 86.944 116.717 92.589 89.068 93.743 118.591 94.664 90.913 95.875 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, primarily military equipment purchased and sold by the federal government, are included in services. Beginning with 1986, repairs and alterations of equipment are reclassified from goods to services. 2. Includes parts of foods, feeds, and beverages, of nondurable industrial supplies and materials, and of nondurable nonautomotive consumer goods. Line Addenda: Exports of durable goods......... Exports of nondurable goods Exports of agricultural goods 2 Exports of nonagricultural goods..................................... Imports of durable goods......... Imports of nondurable goods... Imports of nonpetroleum goods 119.559 107.037 103.746 104.821 107.688 111.891 114.346 25 120.323 26 123.321 106.172 119.270 102.402 118.683 103.777 118.868 106.974 118.503 111.537 121.025 114.402 124.390 27 28 29 30 128.309 130.361 125.461 193.187 104.662 109.723 99.681 119.180 106.757 106.471 106.358 91.534 101.264 104.308 97.926 106.185 102.006 111.063 93.682 126.769 108.622 117.048 100.758 152.230 115.445 122.021 109.133 166.280 31 101.186 100.243 100.478 100.119 100.199 100.178 99.939 32 115.890 121.986 120.073 121.655 122.735 123.480 124.756 33 34 82.719 106.882 78.324 106.666 78.999 106.914 78.272 106.513 78.374 106.468 77.651 106.771 77.157 106.548 35 103.984 104.636 104.330 104.196 104.781 105.235 104.997 36 37 38 39 104.278 103.759 104.917 116.086 103.905 102.755 105.283 115.599 103.993 102.454 105.813 115.998 103.880 102.707 105.285 114.968 103.773 102.786 104.965 115.079 103.973 103.073 105.071 116.351 104.290 102.727 106.137 118.005 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 115.682 137.169 119.338 129.118 108.572 109.651 111.668 114.061 110.911 129.737 108.700 119.475 95.354 109.750 114.094 107.066 109.655 118.193 106.577 127.892 96.491 109.327 112.560 106.185 109.471 126.914 108.293 112.382 93.255 109.452 113.375 106.165 110.953 135.165 109.538 108.764 94.489 109.834 114.793 107.451 113.564 138.676 110.393 128.862 97.179 110.386 115.647 108.464 114.162 138.234 110.492 132.225 99.320 110.860 115.622 109.030 48 49 50 104.955 129.594 146.997 101.826 112.364 127.562 101.199 109.654 124.712 100.960 111.569 129.553 101.947 113.147 127.818 103.200 115.087 128.167 103.342 118.093 129.751 51 52 53 54 109.720 106.592 142.300 108.947 103.179 103.576 111.235 104.571 101.984 103.267 102.650 104.959 102.088 102.878 106.383 103.919 103.531 103.696 112.856 104.070 105.112 104.464 123.052 105.337 106.167 104.774 129.922 106.575 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, primarily military equipment purchased and sold by the federal government, are included in services. Beginning with 1986, repairs and alterations of equipment are reclassified from goods to services. 2. Includes parts of foods, feeds, and beverages, of nondurable industrial supplies and materials, and of nondurable nonautomotive consumer goods. May 2010 Su r v e y D-37 C u r r e n t B u s in e s s of Table 4.2.5. Exports and Imports of Goods and Services Table 4.2.6. Real Exports and Imports of Goods and Services by Type of Product by Type of Product, Chained Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I E xports o f goods and se rv ic e s ........................... E xports o f g oods 1..................... Foods, feeds, and beverages Industrial supplies and materials................................ Durable goods...................... Nondurable goods............... Capital goods, except automotive............................ Civilian aircraft, engines, and p arts .......................... Computers, peripherals, and p arts.................................. O the r..................................... Automotive vehicles, engines, and p a rts ............................... Consumer goods, except automotive............................ Durable goods...................... Nondurable goods............... O th e r.......................................... II IV 1 1,831.1 1,564.2 1,509.3 1,493.7 1,573.8 1,680.1 1,719.5 2 3 1,266.9 108.3 1,038.4 93.9 989.5 86.6 978.1 94.7 1,045.2 92.3 1,140.6 102.3 1,171.2 102.1 4 5 6 369.4 128.6 240.7 282.6 96.3 186.3 253.5 88.4 165.1 262.5 87.9 174.6 296.3 99.0 197.2 318.0 109.7 208.3 340.1 114.6 225.5 7 457.7 390.9 393.8 373.1 382.2 414.6 422.0 8 74.0 74.9 79.0 73.4 70.4 76.9 72.2 9 10 43.9 339.8 37.7 278.4 36.9 277.9 35.5 264.2 37.4 274.4 40.8 297.0 42.9 306.9 11 121.5 81.9 70.2 66.7 86.4 104.4 107.3 12 13 14 15 161.3 90.7 70.6 48.8 150.1 76.1 74.0 38.9 146.0 72.6 73.4 39.5 144.2 70.9 73.3 36.9 150.0 77.5 72.5 38.1 160.3 83.4 76.9 41.0 161.8 80.2 81.6 38.0 16 564.2 525.9 519.8 515.6 528.5 539.6 548.3 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 21.0 110.1 31.6 58.9 91.6 233.5 17.4 20.5 94.9 26.0 44.5 88.8 232.1 19.1 19.3 95.4 27.9 42.5 87.7 228.1 18.9 21.1 91.3 25.3 42.0 87.7 229.0 19.1 21.7 95.6 25.1 44.7 89.3 233.3 18.9 19.8 97.3 25.6 48.8 90.7 238.0 19.4 19.3 99.6 26.5 50.5 92.0 240.9 19.5 Im ports o f g oods and se rv ic e s ........................... 24 2,538.9 1,956.6 1,887.9 1,832.8 1,976.0 2,129.7 2,223.3 25 26 2,126.4 89.0 1,575.4 81.8 1,508.2 81.7 1,461.1 81.5 1,592.8 81.0 1,739.4 83.0 1,822.7 86.9 27 28 29 30 316.5 160.1 156.4 453.3 194.5 94.8 99.7 253.5 208.4 100.9 107.5 208.9 174.4 83.5 90.9 227.8 185.5 90.0 95.4 275.5 209.9 104.8 105.1 301.7 235.0 115.4 119.5 335.1 31 455.2 369.6 367.1 346.1 364.6 400.7 411.1 32 35.4 30.5 30.2 31.4 29.1 31.2 29.7 Im ports o f services 1.................. Direct defense expenditures.... Travel.......................................... Passenger fares........................ Other transportation................ Royalties and license fee s....... Other private se rvices............. O th e r.......................................... Addenda: Exports of durable goo ds........ Exports of nondurable goods Exports of agricultural goods 2 Exports of nonagricultural goods..................................... Imports of durable goods......... Imports of nondurable goods... Imports of nonpetroleum goods 33 34 100.9 318.9 93.6 245.6 80.6 256.3 84.4 230.3 95.0 240.4 114.2 255.2 118.3 263.1 35 233.8 160.5 129.4 126.8 178.0 207.9 201.6 36 37 38 39 484.7 264.9 219.8 94.0 431.0 225.4 205.6 84.5 425.6 221.5 204.1 87.2 421.0 222.8 198.3 83.6 425.2 221.2 204.1 83.1 452.0 236.2 215.9 84.2 457.4 240.9 216.5 95.7 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 412.4 36.5 79.7 32.6 72.1 26.6 153.3 11.6 381.2 35.6 73.6 27.2 53.8 22.6 156.2 12.2 379.6 34.4 74.5 29.0 55.8 22.1 152.2 11.6 371.7 35.1 70.9 26.4 50.9 22.1 154.3 12.1 383.1 36.5 74.5 26.3 52.4 22.8 158.4 12.3 390.3 36.4 74.4 27.3 56.0 23.3 160.1 12.9 400.6 36.5 75.2 27.9 60.9 27.0 160.1 13.0 48 49 50 822.8 444.1 118.0 664.6 373.7 101.0 644.7 344.8 94.4 617.0 361.1 101.0 664.2 381.1 99.0 732.7 407.9 109.4 743.1 428.2 113.0 51 52 53 54 1,149.0 1,160.9 965.5 1,673.2 937.4 892.6 682.8 1,321.9 895.1 862.5 645.8 1,299.3 877.1 820.9 640.2 1,233.3 946.2 895.3 697.5 1,317.3 1,031.1 991.6 747.7 1,437.7 1,058.2 1,016.8 805.9 1,487.6 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, prim arily military equipment purchased and sold by the federal government, are included in services. Beginning with 1986, repairs and alterations of equipment are reclassified from goods to services. 2. Includes parts of foods, feeds, and beverages, of nondurable industrial supplies and materials, and of nondurable nonautomotive consumer goods. 2008 2009 I E xports o f services 1 ................ Transfers under U.S. military agency sales contracts........ Travel.......................................... Passenger fares........................ Other transportation................ Royalties and license fee s...... Other private services............. O th e r.......................................... Im ports o f g oods 1..................... Foods, feeds, and beverages Industrial supplies and materials, except petroleum and products......................... Durable goods...................... Nondurable goods............... Petroleum and products.......... Capital goods, except automotive............................ Civilian aircraft, engines, and p a rts.......................... Computers, peripherals, and p a rts.................................. O the r..................................... Automotive vehicles, engines, and p a rts ............................... Consumer goods, except automotive............................ Durable goods...................... Nondurable goods............... O th e r.......................................... Line 2010 III E xports of goods and se rv ic e s ........................... E xports o f g oods 1 ..................... Foods, feeds, and beverages Industrial supplies and materials................................ Durable goo ds...................... Nondurable g oo d s ............... Capital goods, except automotive............................ Civilian aircraft, engines, and p a rts .......................... Computers, peripherals, and Other...................................... Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts................................ Consumer goods, except automotive............................ Durable g oo d s...................... Nondurable g oo ds............... O ther........................................... 2010 2009 I II III IV I 1 1,629.3 1,472.4 1,434.5 1,419.5 1,478.8 1,556.8 1,578.8 2 3 1,127.5 73.8 990.1 71.6 956.1 66.9 940.7 70.5 993.9 70.5 1,069.5 78.6 1,087.1 77.5 4 5 6 287.0 105.1 181.8 266.4 91.5 174.6 248.4 86.9 161.4 254.7 86.9 167.5 276.5 93.5 182.7 285.8 98.8 186.7 295.7 100.5 194.9 I 453.3 391.7 395.6 375.4 383.4 412.6 420.7 8 65.0 62.8 66.3 61.7 59.1 64.1 59.6 q 10 334.4 278.6 279.3 265.6 274.6 294.9 305.4 11 117.2 78.6 67.3 64.0 83.1 100.1 102.5 12 13 14 15 152.7 87.2 65.6 42.3 141.8 72.7 69.0 35.9 138.1 69.3 68.6 37.0 137.1 68.0 68.9 34.4 141.3 73.7 67.4 35.1 150.6 79.5 71.0 37.2 152.4 78.1 74.1 34.1 E xports o f services 1................. Transfers under U.S. military agency sales contracts........ Travel........................................... Passenger fares........................ Other transportation................. Royalties and license fe e s....... Other private services.............. O ther........................................... Residual......................................... 16 501.7 481.4 477.2 477.4 483.9 487.1 491.6 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 19.5 97.4 26.4 47.9 83.6 212.0 14.9 0.9 18.9 87.7 24.8 41.1 80.9 211.4 16.6 5.7 17.9 89.0 25.0 39.9 80.2 209.2 16.1 5.6 19.5 85.6 25.4 39.7 80.1 210.1 16.8 7.5 20.1 87.8 25.0 40.9 81.3 212.1 16.7 5.1 18.3 88.4 23.7 43.7 82.1 214.0 16.7 5.2 17.7 90.0 23.6 44.4 83.0 215.8 16.8 2.7 Im ports o f g oods and s e rv ic e s ........................... 2b 2,123.5 1,828.0 1,821.0 1,749.8 1,836.2 1,904.8 1,945.8 26 27 1,767.3 72.2 1,483.9 68.6 1,474.4 68.8 1,409.4 68.5 1,490.6 68.3 1,561.1 68.6 1,594.9 69.8 28 29 30 31 246.7 122.8 124.7 234.6 185.8 86.4 100.2 214.6 195.4 94.8 101.2 228.2 172.3 80.1 92.9 214.5 182.0 81.1 102.0 217.3 193.4 89.6 104.5 198.2 203.7 94.7 109.7 201.5 32 449.9 368.7 365.4 345.7 363.8 400.0 411.3 33 30.6 25.0 25.1 25.8 23.7 25.2 23.7 '■14 35 298.4 230.2 239.7 216.2 225.8 239.0 246.9 36 224.8 153.2 124.0 121.7 169.8 197.5 192.0 37 38 39 40 464.8 255.3 209.5 81.0 414.8 219.4 195.3 73.0 409.3 216.2 192.9 75.1 405.3 216.9 188.3 72.7 409.8 215.2 194.4 72.1 434.8 229.1 205.4 72.3 438.6 234.5 204.0 81.0 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 356.5 26.6 66.8 25.2 66.4 24.3 137.3 10.2 -9.1 343.7 27.5 67.7 22.8 56.3 20.6 136.9 11.4 -0 .8 346.2 29.1 69.9 22.6 57.7 20.2 135.2 11.0 7.1 339.5 27.6 65.5 23.4 54.5 20.2 136.1 11.3 5.6 345.3 27.0 68.1 24.1 55.4 20.7 138.0 11.4 0.4 343.7 26.2 67.4 21.1 57.5 21.1 138.4 11.9 -15.5 350.9 26.4 68.0 21.1 61.2 24.4 138.5 11.9 -17.0 50 51 52 784.0 342.7 80.3 652.7 332.7 79.1 637.3 314.9 75.7 611.4 324.0 77.9 651.8 337.2 77.4 710.2 354.9 85.4 719.3 363.0 87.1 53 54 55 56 1,047.2 1,089.2 678.5 1,535.8 908.7 861.6 614.5 1,264.0 878.4 835.3 629.4 1,238.1 859.9 798.1 602.1 1,187.0 914.7 863.5 618.4 1,266.0 981.8 949.4 608.0 1,365.0 997.6 970.6 620.6 1,396.1 Im ports of g oods 1...................... Foods, feeds, and beverages Industrial supplies and materials, except petroleum and products......................... Durable g oo d s ...................... Nondurable g oo d s ............... Petroleum and products........... Capital goods, except automotive............................ Civilian aircraft, engines, and p a rts .......................... Computers, peripherals, and Other...................................... Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts................................ Consumer goods, except automotive............................ Durable g oo d s ...................... Nondurable g oo d s ............... Other........................................... Im ports o f services 1................. Direct defense expenditures.... Travel........................................... Passenger fares........................ Other transportation.................. Royalties and license fe e s ....... Other private services.............. Other........................................... Residual.......................................... Addenda: Exports of durable goods......... Exports of nondurable goods Exports of agricultural goods 3 Exports of nonagricultural goods..................................... Imports of durable goods......... Imports of nondurable goods... Imports of nonpetroleum goods 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, primarily military equipment purchased and sold by the federal government, are included in services. Beginning with 1986, repairs and alterations of equipment are reclassified from goods to services. 2. The quantity index for computers can be used to accurately measure the real growth of this component. However, because computers exhibit rapid changes in prices relative to other prices in the economy, the chained-dollar estimates should not be used to measure the component's relative im portance or its contribution to the growth rate of more aggre gate series; accurate estimates of these contributions are shown in table 4.2.2 and real growth rates are shown in table 4.2.1. 3. Includes parts of foods, feeds, and beverages, of nondurable industrial supplies and materials, and of nondurable nonautomotive consumer goods. N ote . Chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 currentdollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. For exports and for imports, the residual line is the difference between the aggregate line and the sum of the most detailed lines. D-38 May 2010 National Data 5. Saving and Investment Table 5.1. Saving and Investment Table 5.3.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Private Fixed Investment by Type [Billions of dollars] [Percent] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II III IV Gross s a v in g .......................... 1 1,824.1 1,508.4 1,595.3 1,530.7 1,401.7 1,505.9 ? 3 4 -23.0 659.8 286.4 -355.6 888.3 464.9 -288.3 717.4 403.1 -333.3 960.2 595.7 -449.0 919.5 431.5 -351.7 956.0 429.3 G ross d om estic investm ent, capital account transa ctio ns, and net lending, N IP A s................... Gross domestic investment............ Gross private domestic investment................................ Gross government investment.... Capital account transactions (n e t)1 Net lending or net borrowing (-), NIPAs............................................. Statistical d is c re p a n c y ........ Line I Net s a v in g ........................................ Net private saving........................ Personal saving....................... Undistributed corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments Undistributed pro fits........... Inventory valuation adjustment....................... Capital consumption adjustment....................... Wage accruals less disbursements..................... Net government saving............... Federal..................................... C onsum ption o f fixe d c a p ita l...... P rivate........................................... Domestic business.................. Households and institutions... Government.................................. Federal..................................... State and local......................... 5 6 378.3 480.7 418.4 537.1 294.2 358.0 364.5 475.1 488.0 624.1 526.7 691.1 7 -38.2 9.1 81.1 18.1 -17.1 -45.6 8 -64.1 -127.8 -144.9 -128.6 -118.9 -118.8 340.8 -271.3 -5.0 5.0 20.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 -682.7 -1,243.8 -1,005.7 -1,293.5 -1,368.5 -1,307.7 -642.6 -1,224.7 -969.1 -1,268.9 -1,353.6 -1,307.2 -40.2 -19.2 -3 6 6 -2 4 6 -1 4 9 -0 5 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1,847.1 1,536.2 1,252.3 283.9 310.9 119.8 191.2 1,864.0 1,538.8 1,257.7 281.0 325.2 125.6 199.6 1,883.6 1,561.3 1,277.0 284.4 322.3 122.5 199.8 1,864.0 1,540.5 1,259.4 281.1 323.5 124.0 199.5 1,850.7 1,525.5 1,246.9 278.6 325.2 126.1 199.1 1,857.7 1,527.7 1,247.6 280.1 330.0 130.0 200.0 1,861.9 1,527.9 1,246.1 281.8 334.0 132.0 202.0 ?n 21 1,925.2 2,632.4 1,712.5 2,142.6 1,780.8 2,190.3 1,692.4 2,082.0 1,654.9 2,080.4 1,742.1 2,217.8 2,262.0 22 23 24 2,136.1 496.3 -0.4 1,628.8 513.8 3.0 1,689.9 500.4 3.1 1,561.5 520.4 3.0 1,556.1 524.3 2.9 1,707.8 510.0 2.9 'r>S -706.8 -433.1 -412.6 -392.5 -428 4 -478.6 26 101.0 209.2 185.4 161.7 253.3 236.2 0.0 1,762.9 499.1 Addenda: Gross government saving........... Federal..................................... State and local......................... Net domestic investment............ ?7 28 ?9 30 31 G ross saving as a percentage o f g ross national in co m e .... 32 12.6 10.7 11.3 10.9 9.9 10.5 Net saving as a percentage of g ross national in c o m e ......... 33 -0.2 -2.5 -2.0 -2 .4 -3 .2 -2.5 Disaster losses 2....................... Private...................................... Domestic business............. Households and institutions Government............................. Federal................................. State and local..................... 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 17.4 17.4 9.9 7.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 2,278.7 2,500.7 2,445.0 2 483.7 -683.4 -977.7 -970.0 -1,043.3 -846.6 -1,144.9 -1,227.5 -1,177.3 163.2 174.9 199.5 184 2 306.7 229.7 218.0 360.1 1. Consists of capital transfers and the acquisition and disposal of nonproduced nonfinancial assets. 2. Consists of damages to fixed assets. 2008 2009 2009 I 9 10 11 1? 2,195.9 2,427.0 -371.8 -918.6 -522.8 -1,099.1 151.0 180.4 785.3 278.6 Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 2010 400.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 II 2010 III IV I Private fixed investm ent...... 1 -5.1 -18.3 -39.0 -12.5 -1.3 5.0 N onresidential................................ 2 1.6 -17.8 -39.2 -9.6 -5.9 5.3 0.7 4.1 S tructu re s................................... Commercial and health care Manufacturing......................... Power and communication.... Mining exploration, shafts, and wells.............................. Other structures 1................... 3 4 5 6 10.3 -1.8 25.4 18.4 -19.8 -25.9 21.5 -0 .7 -43.6 -35.3 59.7 -8 .8 -17.3 -21.6 30.0 42.5 -18.4 -30.2 -29.3 3.1 -18.0 -37.0 -43.9 -5.1 -14.0 -20.6 -51 .9 1.3 7 8 16.1 11.1 -41.5 -18.5 -82.4 -31.6 -69.1 -7 .3 8.6 -29.0 73.8 -34.3 43.8 -35 .7 13.4 Equipm ent and so ftw a re ......... Information processing equipment and software.... Computers and peripheral equipment....................... Software 2... O th e r3........ Industrial equipment.............. Transportation equipment...... Other equipm ent4.................. 9 -2 .6 -16.6 -36.4 -4 .9 1.5 19.0 10 6.0 -5 .4 -19.6 5.5 7.6 27.6 15.6 11 12 13 14 15 16 8.4 6.4 4.4 -3.5 -27.3 -2.1 -5 .4 -6 .4 -4.1 -23.5 -48.7 -19.5 -14.7 -24.0 -15.6 -49.7 -81.3 -31.1 16.8 1.3 6.9 -15.1 20.7 -29.8 9.7 5.2 9.9 -13.4 22.6 -10.4 97.1 22.1 14.1 -7.0 77.0 -2 .8 27.6 22.1 3.8 -0.1 1.3 26.0 R esidential...................................... 17 -22.9 -20.5 -38.2 -23.3 18.9 3.8 -10.9 S tru ctu re s ................................... Permanent site........................ Single fam ily....................... Multifamily........................... Other structures 5................... 18 19 20 21 22 -23.2 -33.5 -36.7 -14.8 -9.5 -20.8 -37.5 -39.4 -29.8 -4 .6 -38.8 -60.9 -67.5 -28.8 -13.9 -23.6 -44.5 -47.0 -36 .6 -6 .2 19.0 29.3 73.0 -50.9 13.2 3.5 1.2 22.5 -56 .7 4.9 -11.4 -0 .5 13.2 -51.7 -17.6 E qu ip m e nt.................................. 23 -3.0 -6.0 -7.1 -10.0 14.6 14.6 10.4 Addenda: Private fixed investment in structures................................. Private fixed investment in equipment and software........ Private fixed investment in new structures 6.............................. Nonresidential structures....... Residential structures............ 24 -7.5 -20.3 -41.7 -19.9 -4.4 -9.1 -12.9 25 -2.6 -16.6 -36.1 -4.9 1.6 19.0 13.4 26 27 28 -6.5 10.2 -23.5 -21.1 -19.8 -23.1 -42.6 -43.6 -40.8 -21.3 -17.3 -27.6 -7.5 -18.2 13.2 -12.4 -17.8 -3 .4 -9.6 -13.9 -2 .9 1. Consists primarily of religious, educational, vocational, lodging, railroads, farm, and amusement and recreational structures, net purchases of used structures, and brokers’ commissions on the sale of structures. 2. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. 3. Includes communication equipment, nonmedical instruments, medical equipment and instruments, photocopy and related equipment, and office and accounting equipment. 4. Consists prim arily of furniture and fixtures, agricultural machinery, construction machinery, mining and oilfield machinery, service industry machinery, and electrical equipment not elsewhere classified. 5. Consists primarily of manufactured homes, improvements, dormitories, net purchases of used structures, and brokers’ commissions on the sale of residential structures. 6. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers’ commissions on the sale of structures. May 2010 Su r v e y of D-39 C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Table 5.3.2. Contributions to Percent Change in Real Private Fixed Investment by Type Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III I IV Percent change at annual rate: Private fixe d in vestm en t...................................................................................................... 1 -5.1 -18.3 -39.0 -12.5 -1.3 0.7 N o n re sid e n tia l................................................................................................................................ 2 1.19 -13.95 -30.88 -7.36 -4.82 4.20 3.16 S tru c tu re s ................................................................................................................................... Commercial and health care Manufacturing.......................................................................................................................... Power and communication..................................................................................................... Mining exploration, shafts, and wells.................................................................................... Other structures 1................................................................................................................... 3 4 5 6 7 8 2.46 -0.15 0.52 0.62 1.01 0.45 -5.62 -2.26 0.63 -0.03 -3.08 -0.88 -13.33 -3.07 1.98 -0.33 -10.36 -1.54 -5.17 -2.01 1.22 1.88 -5.90 -0.37 -5.61 -2.89 -1.59 0.17 0.36 -1.66 -5 .15 -3.32 -2 .33 -0.29 2.63 -1.84 -3.73 -1 .50 -2.50 0.07 1.92 -1 .72 Equipm ent and software Information processing equipment and software................................................................ Computers and peripheral equipment.............................................................................. Software 2............................................................................................................................ Other 3 Industrial equipment................................................................................................................ Transportation equipm ent...................................................................................................... Other equipm ent4 .................................................................................................................. 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 -1.26 1.40 0.31 0.70 0.39 -0 .30 -2.18 -0.18 -8.33 -1.39 -0.22 -0.77 -0 .40 -2.12 -3.00 -1.82 -17.55 -4.55 -0.46 -2.88 -1.20 -4.98 -5.26 -2.77 -2 .18 1.60 0.63 0.21 0.76 -1.34 0.83 -3.26 0.79 2.19 0.39 0.70 1.10 -1.24 0.85 -1.01 9.35 7.63 3.11 2.90 1.61 -0.61 2.59 -0.26 6.88 4.70 1.22 3.01 0.46 -0.01 0.06 2.14 5.0 Percentage poin ts at annual rates: 17 -6.27 -4 .39 -8.10 -5.18 3.54 0.79 -2.41 S tructures Permanent site........................................................................................................................ Single family........................................................................................................................ Multifamily............................................................................................................................ Other structures 5 ................................................................................................................... 18 19 20 21 22 -6.25 -5.15 -4 .82 -0 .33 -1.10 -4 .36 -3 .87 -3.28 -0.59 -0.49 -8.07 -6.67 -6.11 -0.56 -1.40 -5.13 -4.40 -3.53 -0.87 -0.73 3.46 1.92 3.14 -1.22 1.54 0.72 0.10 1.29 -1.19 0.62 -2.46 -0.04 0.81 -0.85 -2.42 E q u ip m e n t.................................................................................................................................. 23 -0.01 -0.03 -0.03 -0.05 0.07 0.07 0.05 Addenda: Private fixed investment in structures........................................................................................ Private fixed investment in equipment and software.............................................................. Private fixed investment in new structures 6 ............................................................................ Nonresidential structures................. Residential structures....................... 24 25 26 27 28 -3.80 -1 .27 -3.06 2.43 -5.49 -9.98 -8.36 -9.82 -5.61 -4.21 -21.40 -17.58 -20.77 -13.30 -7.46 -10.30 -2.24 -10.43 -5.16 -5.28 -2.14 0.86 -3.44 -5.52 2.08 -4.43 9.42 -5.67 -5.08 -0.58 -6.19 6.94 -4.17 -3 .68 -0.49 R e sid en tia l........... 1. Consists primarily of religious, educational, vocational, lodging, railroads, farm, and amusement and recreational structures, net purchases of used structures, and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures. 2. Excludes software “embedded," or bundled, in computers and other equipment. 3. Includes communication equipment, nonmedical instruments, medical equipment and instruments, photocopy and related equipment, and office and accounting equipment. 4. Consists primarily of furniture and fixtures, agricultural machinery, construction machinery, mining and oilfield machinery, service industry machinery, and electrical equipment not elsewhere classified. 5. Consists primarily of manufactured homes, improvements, dormitories, net purchases of used structures, and brokers’ commissions on the sale of residential structures. 6. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers’ commissions on the sale of structures. Table 5.3.3. Real Private Fixed Investment by Type, Quantity Indexes [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2010 2009 I II III IV I Private fixed in vestm en t...................................................................................................... 1 95.106 77.660 79.514 76.895 76.647 77.585 77.730 N o nreside ntia l................................................................................................................................ 2 116.502 95.819 98.061 95.623 94.183 95.410 96.364 S tru c tu re s ................................................................................................................................... Commercial and health care Manufacturing......................................................................................................................... Power and communication..................................................................................................... Mining exploration, shafts, and wells.................................................................................... Other structures 1 ................................................................................................................... 3 4 5 6 7 8 138.392 114.464 169.306 171.103 146.293 140.948 110.966 84.761 205.744 169.903 85.558 114.837 119.243 95.029 211.321 158.762 101.231 124.402 113.716 89.434 225.659 173.474 75.481 122.057 108.074 81.755 206.899 174.819 77.052 112.027 102.832 72.827 179.094 172.556 88.468 100.863 99.018 68.744 149.111 173.100 96.871 90.323 Equipment and software Information processing equipment and software................................................................ Computers and peripheral equipment.............................................................................. Software 2............................................................................................................................ O th e r3..... Industrial equipment................................................................................................................ Transportation equipm ent...................................................................................................... Other equipm ent4 .................................................................................................................. 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 107.332 123.885 157.032 117.896 118.346 109.426 70.937 100.749 89.462 117.135 148.621 110.362 113.465 83.675 36.396 81.089 89.143 113.092 136.221 108.007 109.792 88.186 32.912 87.888 88.036 114.624 141.609 108.358 111.640 84.659 34.498 80.453 88.370 116.748 144.929 109.728 114.298 81.663 36.302 78.284 92.300 124.077 171.726 115.355 118.131 80.190 41.871 77.731 95.255 128.655 182.505 121.268 119.237 80.161 42.007 82.356 Resid en tia l........... 17 58.213 46.288 47.478 44.436 46.403 46.833 45.499 S tru ctu re s........ Permanent site ......................................................................................................................... Single family......................................................................................................................... Multifamily............................................................................................................................ Other structures 5 ................................................................................................................... 18 19 20 21 22 57.694 45.220 41.462 77.014 79.035 45.691 28.246 25.131 54.079 75.370 46.904 30.483 26.035 66.645 74.862 43.852 26.307 22.212 59.478 73.682 45.806 28.055 25.474 49.795 76.009 46.200 28.137 26.800 40.398 76.926 44.819 28.103 27.643 33.671 73.300 E q u ip m e n t.................................................................................................................................. 23 100.478 94.417 93.839 91.411 94.576 97.843 100.294 Addenda: Private fixed investment in structures........................................................................................ Private fixed investment in equipment and software............................................................... Private fixed investment in new structures6 ............................................................................ Nonresidential structures................. Residential structures....................... 24 25 26 27 28 84.941 107.265 87.575 138.574 57.592 67.733 89.509 69.081 111.151 44.279 71.400 89.188 73.497 119.377 46.403 67.545 88.068 69.235 113.852 42.798 66.785 88.429 67.900 108.282 44.147 65.202 92.353 65.691 103.093 43.767 62.996 95.303 64.062 99.314 43.451 1. Consists primarily of religious, educational, vocational, lodging, railroads, farm, and amusement and recreational structures, net purchases of used structures, and brokers’ commissions on the sale of structures. 2. Excludes software “embedded”, or bundled, in computers and other equipment. 3. Includes communication equipment, nonmedical instruments, medical equipment and instruments, photocopy and related equipment, and office and accounting equipment. 4. Consists primarily of furniture and fixtures, agricultural machinery, construction machinery, mining and oilfield machinery, service industry machinery, and electrical equipment not elsewhere classified. 5. Consists primarily of manufactured homes, improvements, dormitories, net purchases of used structures, and brokers' commissions on the sale of residential structures. 6. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers’ commissions on the sale of structures. D-40 National Data May 2010 Table 5.3.4. Price Indexes for Private Fixed Investment by Type [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2009 1 II 2010 III IV I Private fixed in vestm en t...................................................................................................... 1 107.551 106.132 107.668 106.463 105.265 105.130 104.834 N o nreside ntia l................................................................................................................................ 2 107.897 107.524 109.154 107.993 106.656 106.294 105.826 S tru c tu re s .................................................................................................................................... Commercial and health care Manufacturing.......................................................................................................................... Power and communication..................................................................................................... Mining exploration, shafts, and wells.................................................................................... Other structures 1.................... 3 4 5 6 7 8 125.207 119.014 120.113 122.152 147.142 115.011 122.811 119.798 123.299 124.229 132.319 112.869 127.092 123.134 127.187 126.624 142.001 116.002 123.706 121.311 125.139 124.790 131.583 113.735 120.451 117.684 120.206 122.887 128.314 111.233 119.994 117.061 120.663 122.616 127.375 110.506 120.272 116.490 120.434 123.667 128.761 110.239 Equipment and s o ftw a re .......... Information processing equipment and software................................................................ Computers and peripheral equipment.............................................................................. Software 2............................................................................................................................ O th e r3 ........ Industrial equipment................................................................................................................ Transportation equipm ent...................................................................................................... Other equipm ent4 .................................................................................................................. 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 101.455 95.600 69.960 102.748 100.487 110.942 102.641 108.231 102.008 93.913 64.239 101.494 100.542 112.322 109.493 112.578 102.450 94.578 66.328 102.145 100.416 112.055 109.015 113.120 102.304 94.033 64.563 101.674 100.465 112.003 112.335 112.916 101.802 93.545 63.508 100.928 100.603 112.327 110.666 112.161 101.478 93.497 62.558 101.229 100.683 112.904 105.957 112.116 100.724 93.138 62.151 100.880 100.359 113.113 101.077 111.125 17 105.779 100.716 101.915 100.554 99.863 100.532 100.863 Structures Permanent site ......................................................................................................................... Single family......................................................................................................................... Multifamily............................................................................................................................ Other stru ctu re s5 ................................................................................................................... 18 19 20 21 22 105.832 105.756 103.358 121.226 105.572 100.701 99.756 96.782 116.265 101.028 101.871 102.142 99.097 119.047 101.423 100.484 99.639 96.668 116.129 100.759 99.853 98.170 95.243 114.418 100.643 100.596 99.071 96.117 115.468 101.287 100.962 99.071 96.117 115.468 101.883 E q u ip m e n t................................................................................................................................... 23 101.608 99.824 102.085 101.732 98.787 96.691 95.728 Addenda: Private fixed investment in structures........................................................................................ Private fixed investment in equipment and software............................................................... Private fixed investment in new structures 6 ............................................................................ Nonresidential structures....................................................................................................... Residential structures............................................................................................................. 24 25 26 27 28 113.490 101.457 114.919 125.370 107.059 109.872 101.987 111.396 122.975 101.926 112.636 102.447 114.441 127.287 103.418 110.229 102.299 111.779 123.879 101.635 108.249 101.773 109.613 120.598 100.868 108.373 101.430 109.752 120.137 101.783 108.689 100.674 110.137 120.416 102.317 Residential.. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Consists primarily of religious, educational, vocational, lodging, railroads, farm, and amusement and recreational structures, net purchases of used structures, and brokers’ commissions on the sale of structures. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. Includes communication equipment, nonmedical instruments, medical equipment and instruments, photocopy and related equipment, and office and accounting equipment. Consists primarily of furniture and fixtures, agricultural machinery, construction machinery, mining and oilfield machinery, service industry machinery, and electrical equipment not elsewhere classified. Consists primarily of manufactured homes, improvements, dormitories, net purchases of used structures, and brokers' commissions on the sale of residential structures. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures. Table 5.3.5. Private Fixed Investment by Type [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I 2010 II III IV I Private fixed in vestm en t...................................................................................................... 1 2,170.8 1,749.7 1,817.2 1,737.7 1,712.6 1,731.4 1,729.7 N o n re sid e n tia l................................................................................................................................ 2 1,693.6 1,388.8 1,442.6 1,391.8 1,353.9 1,366.9 1,374.4 S tru c tu re s .................................................................................................................................... Commercial and health care Manufacturing.......................................................................................................................... Power and communication...... Mining exploration, shafts, and wells.................................................................................... Other structures 1 .................... 3 4 5 6 7 8 609.5 185.2 60.8 94.4 165.9 103.3 480.0 138.4 75.9 95.4 87.5 82.7 533.1 159.2 80.3 90.9 110.7 92.0 494.8 147.6 84.4 97.9 76.5 88.5 457.9 130.9 74.3 97.1 76.1 79.4 434.1 116.0 64.6 95.7 86.8 71.0 418.9 109.0 53.7 96.8 96.1 63.5 Equipment and s o ftw a re .......... Information processing equipment and software................................................................ Computers and peripheral equipment.............................................................................. Software 2............................................................................................................................ O th e r3 .................................. Industrial equipment................ Transportation equipm ent...... Other equipm ent4 ................... 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 1,084.1 562.9 86.7 264.1 212.1 193.8 132.3 195.1 908.8 522.7 75.0 244.2 203.5 150.1 72.5 163.5 909.5 508.3 71.1 240.5 196.7 157.8 65.4 178.0 897.0 512.2 72.0 240.2 200.1 151.4 70.6 162.7 895.9 519.0 72.5 241.4 205.1 146.5 73.2 157.2 932.8 551.3 84.6 254.6 212.2 144.6 80.9 156.0 955.5 569.4 89.3 266.7 213.5 144.8 77.4 163.9 17 477.2 361.0 374.6 345.9 358.8 364.5 355.3 S tru c tu re s .................................................................................................................................... Permanent site ......................................................................................................................... Single family......................................................................................................................... Multifamily.... 21 Other structures 5 ................................................................................................................... 18 19 20 22 467.2 229.9 185.8 44.2 237.3 351.7 135.2 105.4 29.8 216.5 365.2 149.4 111.8 37.5 215.9 336.8 125.8 93.1 32.7 211.1 349.6 132.1 105.2 26.9 217.5 355.3 133.7 111.7 22.1 221.5 345.9 133.6 115.2 18.4 212.3 E q u ip m e n t.......... 23 10.0 9.2 9.4 9.1 9.1 9.3 9.4 24 25 26 27 28 1,076.7 1,094.1 1,013.7 608.6 405.0 831.7 918.0 775.7 479.5 296.3 898.3 918.9 847.3 532.4 315.0 831.7 906.1 779.6 494.1 285.5 807.5 905.1 749.8 457.5 292.3 789.3 942.1 726.3 433.9 292.4 764.8 964.9 710.8 419.0 291.8 R e sid en tia l........................................ Addenda: Private fixed investment in structures........................................................................................ Private fixed investment in equipment and software.............................................................. Private fixed investment in new structures 6...... Nonresidential structures................................. Residential structures...................................... 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Consists primarily of religious, educational, vocational, lodging, railroads, farm, and amusement and recreational structures, net purchases of used structures, and brokers’ commissions on the sale of structures. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. Includes communication equipment, nonmedical instruments, medical equipment and instruments, photocopy and related equipment, and office and accounting equipment. Consists primarily of furniture and fixtures, agricultural machinery, construction machinery, mining and oilfield machinery, service industry machinery, and electrical equipment not elsewhere classified. Consists primarily of manufactured homes, improvements, dormitories, net purchases of used structures, and brokers’ commissions on the sale of residential structures. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers’ commissions on the sale of structures. 2010 Su r v e y of D-41 C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Table 5.3.6. Real Private Fixed Investment by Type, Chained Dollars [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I 2010 II III IV Private fixe d in ve stm e n t...................................................................................................... 1 2,018.4 1,648.2 1,687.5 1,631.9 1,626.7 1,646.6 1,649.6 N o nreside ntia l................................................................................................................................ 2 1,569.7 1,291.0 1,321.2 1,288.4 1,269.0 1,285.5 1,298.3 S tru c tu re s ................................................................................................................................... Commercial and health care................................................................................................. Manufacturing................................... Power and communication.............. Mining exploration, shafts, and wells.................................................................................... Other structures 1 ............................ 3 4 5 6 7 8 486.8 155.6 50.6 77.3 112.7 89.8 390.3 115.2 61.5 76.7 65.9 73.2 419.4 129.2 63.2 71.7 78.0 79.3 400.0 121.6 67.4 78.3 58.2 77.8 380.2 111.1 61.8 78.9 59.4 71.4 361.7 99.0 53.5 77.9 68.2 64.3 348.3 93.4 44.6 78.2 74.7 57.6 Equipm ent and s o ftw a re ......................................................................................................... Information processing equipment and software................................................................ Computers and peripheral equipm ent2.. Software 3.................................................. O th e r4 ........................................................ Industrial equipment............................................................................................................... Transportation equipm ent...................................................................................................... Other e quipm ent5 ... 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 1,068.6 588.8 890.7 556.7 887.5 537.5 876.5 544.8 879.8 554.9 918.9 589.7 948.3 611.5 257.0 211.1 174.7 128.9 180.3 240.6 202.4 133.6 66.1 145.1 235.5 195.8 140.8 59.8 157.3 236.2 199.1 135.2 62.7 144.0 239.2 203.9 130.4 66.0 140.1 251.5 210.7 128.0 76.1 139.1 264.4 212.7 128.0 76.3 147.4 R e sidential....................... I 17 451.1 358.7 367.9 344.4 359.6 362.9 352.6 S tru c tu re s .................... Permanent site........................................................................................................................ Single family........................................................................................................................ Multifamily............................................................................................................................ Other structures 6 ................................................................................................................... 18 19 20 21 22 441.5 217.4 179.7 36.4 224.7 349.6 135.8 108.9 25.6 214.3 358.9 146.6 112.9 31.5 212.9 335.5 126.5 96.3 28.1 209.5 350.5 134.9 110.4 23.6 216.1 353.5 135.3 116.2 19.1 218.7 342.9 135.1 119.8 15.9 208.4 E q u ip m e n t...... Residual............................................................................................................................................ 23 24 9.8 5.9 9.2 -7 .3 9.2 2.9 8.9 -3.1 9.3 -9.2 9.6 -20.8 9.8 -25.6 Addenda: Private fixed investment in structures........................................................................................ Private fixed investment in equipment and software.............................................................. Private fixed investment in new structures 7 ... Nonresidential structures.............................. Residential structures................................... 25 26 27 28 29 948.7 1,078.4 882.1 485.5 378.3 756.5 899.9 695.8 389.4 290.9 797.5 896.7 740.3 418.2 304.8 754.4 885.4 697.4 398.9 281.1 745.9 889.0 683.9 379.4 290.0 728.3 928.5 661.7 361.2 287.5 703.6 958.1 645.2 347.9 285.4 1. Consists primarily of religious, educational, vocational, lodging, railroads, farm, and amusement and recreational structures, net purchases of used structures, and brokers’ commissions on the sale of structures. 2. The quantity index for computers can be used to accurately measure the real growth rate of this component. However, because computers exhibit rapid changes in prices relative to other prices in the economy, the chained-dollar estimates should not be used to measure the component’s relative importance or its contribution to the growth rate of more aggregate series; accurate estimates of these contributions are shown in table 5.3.2 and real growth rates are shown in table 5.3.1. 3. Excludes software “embedded,” or bundled, in computers and other equipment. 4. Includes communication equipment, nonmedical instruments, medical equipment and instruments, photocopy and related equipment, and office and accounting equipment. 5. Consists primarily of furniture and fixtures, agricultural machinery, construction machinery, mining and oilfield machinery, service industry machinery, and electrical equipment not elsewhere classified. 6. Consists primarily of manufactured homes, improvements, dormitories, net purchases of used structures, and brokers’ commissions on the sale of residential structures. 7. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers’ commissions on the sale of structures. N ote . Chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines. Table 5.6.5B. Change in Private Inventories by Industry [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2010 2009 I II III Change in private in ven torie s............................................................................................ Farm................................................................................................................................................... Mining, utilities, and construction................................................................................................... Manufacturing.................................................................................................................................. Durable goods industries........................................................................................................... Nondurable goods industries..................................................................................................... Wholesale trade............... Durable goods industries........................................................................................................... Nondurable goods in dustries..................................................................................................... Retail trade........................ Motor vehicle and parts dealers................................................................................................ Food and beverage stores.......................................................................................................... General merchandise stores...................................................................................................... Other retail stores....... Other industries................ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 -34.8 -7.1 -2 .6 -7 .0 12.6 -19.7 -7.1 7.7 -14 .9 -13 .4 -0.5 0.3 -3 .4 -9.8 2.5 -120.9 -2.4 1.3 -35.8 -31.7 -4.1 -52.2 -46.7 -5 .5 -27.2 -10.2 -0.1 -2 .8 -14.1 -4 .7 -127.4 -1.3 7.0 -31.4 -25.4 -6.1 -47.3 -57.1 9.8 -50.2 -35.5 2.7 -3.9 -13.4 -4.1 -176.2 0.6 8.1 -42.7 -32.8 -9.9 -81.2 -58.6 -22.6 -54.7 -32.7 -0.4 -2.9 -18.7 -6.3 -156.5 0.0 4.2 -62.4 -53.2 -9.2 -75.3 -48.0 -27.3 -18.4 4.9 0.4 -4.6 -19.0 -4 .7 IV -23.6 -8.9 -14.1 -6.6 -15.5 8.9 -4.9 -23.0 18.1 14.3 22.5 -3.2 0.3 -5.2 -3.4 33.2 -5.8 -8.5 10.6 -1.5 12.1 8.9 -4 .0 12.9 23.3 23.8 1.6 -3.0 0.9 4.6 Addenda: Change in private inventories..................................................................................................... Durable goods industries.... Nondurable goods industries................................................................................................. Nonfarm industries...................................................................................................................... Nonfarm change in book value 1........................................................................................... Nonfarm inventory valuation adjustm ent2........................................................................... Wholesale tra de ....................... Merchant wholesale trade... Durable goods industries................................................................................................... Nondurable goods industries............................................................................................ Nonmerchant wholesale tra d e .............................................................................................. 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 -34.8 10.3 -45.1 -27.7 17.6 -45.3 -7.1 0.0 10.8 -10.7 -7.1 -120.9 -93.9 -27.0 -118.5 -129.5 10.9 -52.2 -43.8 -40.8 -3 .0 -8 .3 -127.4 -122.7 -4 .6 -126.1 -225.7 99.6 -47.3 -37.2 -48.4 11.2 -10.1 -176.2 -129.0 -47.2 -176.8 -203.7 26.9 -81.2 -70.8 -51.5 -19.2 -10.4 -156.5 -100.2 -56.3 -156.5 -134.2 -22.2 -75.3 -66.0 -42.2 -23 .7 -9 .3 -23.6 -23.8 0.2 -14.7 45.9 -60.6 -4 .9 -1 .3 -21.1 19.8 -3.6 33.2 14.9 18.2 38.9 89.7 -50 .8 8.9 3.3 -5 .9 9.2 5.6 I 1. This series is derived from the Census Bureau series “current cost inventories.” 2. The inventory valuation adjustment (IVA) shown in this table differs from the IVA that adjusts business incomes. The IVA in this table reflects the mix of methods (such as first-in, first-out and last-in, first-out) under lying inventories derived primarily from Census Bureau statistics (see footnote 1). This mix differs from that underlying business income derived primarily from Internal Revenue Service statistics. N ote . Estimates in this table are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). D-42 National Data May 2010 Table 5.6.6B. Change in Real Private Inventories by Industry, Chained Dollars [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2009 2008 2009 2010 1 II III Change in private in ve n to rie s............................................................................................ Farm................................................................................................................................................... Mining, utilities, and construction................................................................................................... Manufacturing....................... Durable goods in dustries. Nondurable goods in dustries..................................................................................................... Wholesale tra de ................................................................................................................................ Durable goods in dustries. Nondurable goods industries..................................................................................................... Retail trade............................. Motor vehicle and parts dealers................................................................................................. Food and beverage stores General merchandise stores...................................................................................................... Other retail sto re s ............ Other industries................................................................................................................................. Residual............................................................................................................................................ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 -25.9 -5 .3 -2 .4 -3.8 11.5 -14.2 -5.2 6.7 -10.7 -11.8 -0.5 0.2 -3.1 -8 .3 2.5 -2 .3 -108.2 -0 .4 1.3 -32.5 -29.1 -3 .8 -46.6 -43.2 -4 .8 -25.7 -10.4 -0.1 -2 .6 -12.9 -4.1 1.9 -113.9 0.3 6.6 -28.9 -23.5 -5 .6 -42.3 -53.1 8.7 -47.2 -35.6 2.3 -3 .6 -12 .3 -3 .4 5.3 -160.2 2.2 7.6 -39.8 -30.7 -9 .4 -72.9 -54.7 -19.2 -51.4 -32.8 -0 .3 -2 .6 -17.2 -5 .8 2.7 -139.2 1.9 4.0 -55.3 -48.3 -7 .6 -66.5 -44.2 -22.8 -17.3 4.7 0.3 -4 .3 -17 .4 -4 .3 -1.2 IV -19.7 -5.9 -12.8 -6.1 -14.1 7.4 -4 .8 -20 .8 14.1 13.3 22.1 -2 .8 0.2 -4 .7 -3 .0 0.6 I 31.1 -3 .7 -7 .4 9.4 -1 .3 10.3 7.7 -3 .6 10.3 21.5 23.1 1.3 -2 .7 0.9 4.1 -0 .2 Addenda: Change in private inventories..................................................................................................... Durable goods in dustries....................................................................................................... Nondurable goods in dustries................................................................................................. Nonfarm industries........... Wholesale tra de ............... Merchant wholesale trade...................................................................................................... Durable goods industries................................................................................................... Nondurable goods in dustries............................................................................................ Nonmerchant wholesale tra d e .............................................................................................. 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 -25.9 9.4 -33.7 -20.4 -5.2 1.2 9.5 -7 .3 -6 .4 -108.2 -88.0 -22.2 -108.3 -16.6 -39.0 -37.7 -2 .7 -7 .7 -113.9 -115.3 -1 .7 -114.9 -42.3 -33.1 -44 .9 9.7 -9 .5 -160.2 -121.8 -40.8 -163.1 -72.9 -63.1 -48.0 -16.0 -9 .8 -139.2 -93.1 -47.6 -141.4 -66.5 -58.2 -38.7 -19.8 -8.3 -19.7 -21.8 1.4 -13 .7 -4.8 -1.8 -19 .0 15.3 -3.1 31.1 13.8 17.3 34.9 7.7 3.0 -5 .2 7.4 4.7 N ote . Estimates in this table are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). Chained (2005) dollar series for real change in private inventories are calculated as the period-to-period change in chained-dollar end-of-period inventories. Quarterly changes in end-of-period inventories are stated at annual rates. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines. Table 5.7.5B. Private Inventories and Domestic Final Sales by Industry [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted quarterly totals Line 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Private inventories 1 ............................................................................................................. Farm................................................................................................................................................... Mining, utilities, and construction................................................................................................... Manufacturing....................... Durable goods industries. Nondurable goods in dustries..................................................................................................... Wholesale tra de .................... Durable goods industries. Nondurable goods industries..................................................................................................... Retail trade............................ Motor vehicle and parts dealers................................................................................................. Food and beverage stores General merchandise stores...................................................................................................... Other retail sto re s........................................................................................................................ Other industries................................................................................................................................. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 1,948.1 171.9 96.4 575.8 346.3 229.4 464.3 271.4 192.9 489.7 148.1 42.3 79.2 220.1 150.0 1,912.2 171.6 96.8 567.4 336.7 230.7 449.6 256.7 192.8 478.5 140.9 42.2 78.6 216.8 148.3 1,892.3 168.6 97.7 564.3 331.6 232.7 436.6 248.0 188.6 477.1 143.7 42.3 77.4 213.8 147.9 1,923.3 171.8 98.2 571.7 327.4 244.3 445.2 244.4 200.8 487.4 151.1 42.9 78.0 215.4 149.0 1,954.2 175.1 100.0 582.1 332.0 250.0 449.7 245.7 204.0 496.1 158.1 44.2 77.4 216.3 151.2 Addenda: Private inventories........................................................................................................................ Durable goods industries....................................................................................................... Nondurable goods in dustries................................................................................................. Nonfarm industries........... Wholesale tra de ............... Merchant wholesale trade...................................................................................................... Durable goods industries................................................................................................... Nondurable goods in dustries............................................................................................ Nonmerchant wholesale tra d e .............................................................................................. 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 1,948.1 874.6 1,073.4 1,776.1 464.3 413.8 243.1 170.7 50.5 1,912.2 840.3 1,071.9 1,740.6 449.6 400.5 230.2 170.3 49.1 1,892.3 828.6 1,063.7 1,723.7 436.6 388.2 222.7 165.5 48.4 1,923.3 827.2 1,096.0 1,751.5 445.2 395.7 219.4 176.2 49.5 1,954.2 840.2 1,114.0 1,779.1 449.7 398.2 220.0 178.2 51.5 Final sales o f d om estic business 2 .................................................................................. 25 794.1 792.5 795.3 799.3 803.8 Final sales o f g oods and stru ctu re s of dom estic business 2.................................... 26 413.9 411.6 412.7 412.5 412.7 Ratios o f private inventories to fin a l sales of dom estic business: Private inventories to final sales............................................................................................ Nonfarm inventories to final sales......................................................................................... Nonfarm inventories to final sales of goods and structures.............................................. 27 28 29 2.45 2.24 4.29 2.41 2.20 4.23 2.38 2.17 4.18 2.41 2.19 4.25 2.43 2.21 4.31 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 private inventories component of GDP. The former is the difference between two inventory stocks, each valued at its 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, the change in private inventories is stated at annual rates. 2. Quarterly totals at monthly rates. Final sales of domestic business equals final sales of domestic product less gross output of general government, gross value added of nonprofit institutions, compensation paid to domestic workers, and imputed rental of owner-occupied nonfarm housing. It includes a small amount of final sales by farm and by government enterprises. N ote . Estimates in this table are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). May 2010 Su r v e y of D-43 C u r r e n t B u s in e s s Table 5.7.6B. Real Private Inventories and Real Domestic Final Sales by Industry, Chained Dollars [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted quarterly totals Line 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Private inventories 1............................................................................................................ Farm................................................................................................................................................... Mining, utilities, and construction Manufacturing.............................. Durable goods in dustries....... Nondurable goods in dustries. Wholesale trade............................................................................................................................... Durable goods industries Nondurable goods industries Retail trade....................... Motor vehicle and parts dealers................................................................................................ Food and beverage stores General merchandise stores Other retail stores...... Other industries................................................................................................................................ Residual............................................................................................................................................ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 1,790.3 150.7 89.2 529.9 321.9 208.9 419.0 252.3 167.1 462.8 149.2 37.1 72.7 203.4 138.1 -0 .3 1,750.2 151.3 91.1 520.0 314.2 206.6 400.8 238.6 162.4 450.0 141.0 37.1 72.0 199.1 136.6 0.2 1,715.4 151.8 92.1 506.2 302.1 204.7 384.1 227.6 156.7 445.7 142.2 37.1 71.0 194.8 135.6 -0 .3 1,710.5 150.3 88.9 504.6 298.6 206.6 382.9 222.4 160.2 449.0 147.7 36.5 71.0 193.6 134.8 -0.1 1,718.3 149.4 87.0 507.0 298.3 209.1 384.9 221.5 162.8 454.3 153.5 36.8 70.4 193.8 135.8 -0.1 Addenda: Private inventories....................................................................................................................... Durable goods industries....................................................................................................... Nondurable goods industries................................................................................................ Nonfarm industries...................................................................................................................... Wholesale tra de .......... Merchant wholesale trade Durable goods industries Nondurable goods industries Nonmerchant wholesale trade 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 1,790.3 823.6 967.4 1,639.8 419.0 371.2 225.6 145.7 47.7 1,750.2 793.1 957.2 1,599.1 400.8 355.4 213.6 141.7 45.3 1,715.4 769.8 945.3 1,563.7 384.1 340.8 203.9 136.7 43.2 1,710.5 764.4 945.6 1,560.3 382.9 340.4 199.2 140.6 42.4 1,718.3 767.8 950.0 1,569.0 384.9 341.2 197.9 142.4 43.6 Final sales o f d om estic business 2 .................................................................................. 26 734.7 734.3 737.2 741.1 745.3 Final sales o f g oods and structu re s of d om estic business 2.................................... 27 391.9 391.1 393.4 396.2 398.0 Ratios o f private inventories to fin al sales o f dom estic business: Private inventories to final sales................................................................................................ Nonfarm inventories to final sales............................................................................................. Nonfarm inventories to final sales of goods and structures.................................................. 28 29 30 2.44 2.23 4.18 2.38 2.18 4.09 2.33 2.12 3.97 2.31 2.11 3.94 2.31 2.11 3.94 1. Inventories are as of the end of the quarter. The quarter-to-quarter changes calculated from this table are at quarterly rates, whereas the change in private inventories component of GDP is stated at annual rates. 2. Quarterly totals at monthly rates. Final sales of domestic business equals final sales of domestic product less gross output of general government, gross value added of nonprofit institutions, compensation paid to domestic workers, and imputed rental of owner-occupied nonfarm housing. It includes a small amount of final sales by farm and by government enterprises. N ote . Estimates in this table are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). Chained (2005) dollar inventory series are calculated to ensure that the chained (2005) dollar change in inventories for 2005 equals the current-dollar change in inventories for 2005 and that the average of the 2004 and 2005 end-of-year chain-weighted and fixed-weighted inventories are equal. Table 5.7.9B. Implicit Price Deflators for Private Inventories by Industry [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2009 I II 2010 III IV I Private inventories 1 ............................................................................................................ Farm................................................................................................................................................... Mining, utilities, and construction.................................................................................................. Manufacturing................. Durable goods industries Nondurable goods in dustries..................................................................................................... Wholesale tra de.............. Durable goods industries Nondurable goods in dustries..................................................................................................... Retail trade....................... Motor vehicle and parts dealers................................................................................................. Food and beverage stores.......................................................................................................... General merchandise stores...................................................................................................... Other retail sto re s........................................................................................................................ Other industries................................................................................................................................ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 108.813 114.052 108.082 108.649 107.597 109.810 110.809 107.563 115.410 105.814 99.297 113.887 108.978 108.200 108.633 109.255 113.459 106.252 109.115 107.169 111.642 112.179 107.588 118.781 106.346 99.963 113.785 109.170 108.876 108.552 110.308 111.100 106.134 111.478 109.758 113.659 113.656 108.972 120.392 107.064 101.071 113.775 109.107 109.737 109.134 112.437 114.311 110.456 113.297 109.644 118.298 116.254 109.914 125.343 108.547 102.268 117.652 109.801 111.271 110.545 113.728 117.237 114.869 114.807 111.320 119.567 116.847 110.923 125.367 109.184 103.011 120.032 110.090 111.624 111.340 Addenda: Private inventories........................................................................................................................ Durable goods industries....................................................................................................... Nondurable goods industries................................................................................................ Nonfarm industries.................. Wholesale tra de...................... Merchant wholesale trade.. Durable goods industries Nondurable goods industries............................................................................................ Nonmerchant wholesale tra de .............................................................................................. 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 108.813 106.202 110.962 108.312 110.809 111.485 107.735 117.175 105.741 109.255 105.950 111.987 108.851 112.179 112.697 107.778 120.171 108.356 110.308 107.627 112.528 110.230 113.656 113.903 109.215 121.030 111.969 112.437 108.218 115.905 112.254 116.254 116.236 110.172 125.368 116.689 113.728 109.423 117.266 113.389 116.847 116.720 111.194 125.103 118.140 1. Implicit price deflators are as of the end of the quarter and are consistent with inventory stocks. Estimates in this table are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). N ote . D-44 National Data May 2010 6. Income and Employment by Industry Table 6.1 D. National Income Without Capital Consumption Adjustment by Industry [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2010 2009 National incom e w ith o u t capital co nsum ption a d ju s tm e n t..... 12.547.4 12.276.2 12,218.2 12,207.5 12,236.9 12,442.1 Dom estic in d u s trie s ......................................................................................... 12.405.4 12.171.2 12,118.3 12,114.8 12,115.4 12,336.4 Private in d u s trie s ..................................... Agriculture, forestry, fishing, and hunting............................................... M inin g ......................................................................................................... U tilities..................................................... Construction............................................................................................... Manufacturing............................................................................................ Durable goods........................................................................................ Nondurable goods................................................................................. Wholesale trade Retail trade........ Transportation and warehousing............................................................. Information................................................................................................. Finance, insurance, real estate, rental, and leasing............................. Professional and business services 1........................................ Educational services, health care, and social assistance....... Arts, entertainment, recreation, accommodation, and food services.. Other services, except government........................................... 10,863.0 116.6 231.6 191.8 626.3 1,328.0 742.7 585.3 753.6 861.2 338.5 428.0 2.239.9 1.730.9 1.167.9 475.0 373.5 10,573.8 96.4 189.0 206.4 553.8 1.196.4 654.9 541.5 730.3 838.4 313.6 423.7 2.239.6 1.725.6 1,225.2 468.1 367.5 10,539.0 96.4 199.7 207.7 573.8 1,209.5 668.7 540.8 744.8 835.5 320.4 412.2 2.185.3 1.722.0 10,512.0 92.3 181.5 10,726.9 212.1 200.0 464.7 366.9 10,517.4 96.7 183.6 205.9 550.4 1,198.0 656.4 541.6 731.0 844.6 310.1 414.3 2.203.5 1.728.7 1.221.7 464.9 363.9 548.2 1.171.2 633.3 537.9 714.5 836.5 309.3 420.0 2,254.9 1,700.1 1,230.5 472.2 368.9 542.7 1,206.9 661.3 545.6 730.8 836.8 314.6 448.6 2.314.7 1.751.7 1,248.3 470.5 370.1 G overnm ent.................................................................................................. 1,542.5 1.597.4 1.579.3 1.597.5 1.603.3 1,609.5 Rest o f the w o rld .............................................................................................. 141.9 104.9 99.9 92.6 121.5 105.7 . 1 200.1 100.1 191.1 1. Consists of professional, scientific, and technical services; management of companies and enterprises; and administrative and waste management services. N ote . Estimates in this table are based on the 2002 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). Table 6.16D. Corporate Profits by Industry [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I Corporate p ro fits w ith inventory valuation and capital consum ption a d ju s tm e n ts .............. II 2010 III IV 1 1,360.4 1,308.9 1,182.7 1,226.5 1,358.9 1,467.6 ? 3 4 983.2 271.6 711.6 997.1 316.8 680.3 867.0 237.8 629.2 925.3 266.3 659.0 1,035.7 349.1 686.6 1,160.4 414.1 746.4 Receipts from the rest of the w o rld ............................................................................................................. Less: Payments to the rest of the w o rld ..................................................................................................... 5 6 7 377.2 544.2 167.0 311.8 430.3 118.5 315.8 402.2 86.4 301.2 409.9 108.7 323.2 440.8 117.6 307.1 468.5 161.4 C orporate p ro fits w ith inventory valuation a d ju stm e nt................................................................. 8 1,424.5 1,436.7 1,327.6 1,355.1 1,477.8 1,586.3 q m 12 13 14 175.5 16 17 18 19 20 21 ?? ?3 24 25 ?6 27 ?R ?9 30 31 32 1,047.3 278.9 35.7 243.2 768.4 40.1 136.0 30.7 17.6 16.1 4.7 ^ .1 -47.5 43.9 144.9 33.7 66.5 31.3 13.3 75.1 78.2 11.4 84.7 303.4 1,124.9 331.2 50.1 281.1 793.7 54.1 121.6 14.9 13.4 11.0 3.6 -8 .5 -28 .4 23.8 121.1 33.1 21.4 35.9 30.7 87.9 91.2 5.9 108.9 309.7 1,011.9 253.9 28.8 225.1 758.0 53.6 132.3 8.0 19.3 12.8 3.2 -6.3 -54.8 33.9 113.6 34.7 29.4 29.6 19.8 94.0 83.1 6.7 95.4 303.6 1,053.9 280.7 46.1 234.6 773.3 53.4 129.7 11.9 13.7 10.4 3.9 -9.1 -38.5 31.5 120.4 33.1 15.2 39.4 32.8 87.5 95.1 1.3 99.4 304.2 1,154.6 362.4 57.6 304.8 792.2 61.5 160.5 6.7 10.9 8.1 3.1 -9.6 -16.6 10.8 122.9 35.1 15.8 37.4 34.5 80.6 98.8 4.8 107.0 309.9 1,279.2 427.9 67.9 359.9 851.4 47.8 33 377.2 311.8 315.8 301.2 323.2 307.1 Financial.......................................................................................................................................................... Federal Reserve banks............................................................................................................................ Other fin an cia l2 Manufacturing... 15 Durable goods....................................................................................................................................... Fabricated metal products............................................................................................................. M achinery......................................................................................................................................... Computer and electronic products................................................................................................ Electrical equipment, appliances, and components.................................................................... Motor vehicles, bodies and trailers, and p a rts ............................................................................. Nondurable goods................................................................................................................................ Food and beverage and tobacco products................................................................................... Petroleum and coal products......................................................................................................... Other nondurable goods 4 Wholesale trade........................ Transportation and warehousing............................................................................................................ Information................................................................................................................................................. Other nonfinancial5................................................................................................................................. Rest o f the world 11 I 32.9 10.0 12.7 4.2 -9 .0 -3 .7 18.9 127.6 29.4 25.3 37.3 35.7 89.5 87.8 10.8 133.9 321.0 1. Consists of finance and insurance and bank and other holding companies. 2. Consists of credit intermediation and related activities; securities, commodity contracts, and other financial investments and related activities; insurance carriers and related activities; funds, trusts, and other finan cial vehicles; and bank and other holding companies. 3. Consists of wood products; nonmetallic mineral products; primary metals; other transportation equipment; furniture and related products; and miscellaneous manufacturing. 4. Consists of textile mills and textile product mills; apparel; leather and allied products; paper products; printing and related support activities; and plastics and rubber products. 5. Consists of agriculture, forestry, fishing, and hunting; mining; construction; real estate and rental and leasing; professional, scientific, and technical services; administrative and waste management services; educational services; health care and social assistance; arts, entertainment, and recreation; accommodation and food services; and other services, except government. N ote . Estimates in this table are based on the 2002 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS). May 2010 Su r v e y of D-45 C u r r e n t B u s in e s s 7. Supplemental Tables Table 7.1. Selected Per Capita Product and Income Series in Current and Chained Dollars [Dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 I Current dollars: Gross domestic product............................................................................................................................... Gross national product................................................................................................................................. Personal income......... Disposable personal incom e....................................................................................................................... Personal consumption expenditures.......................................................................................................... G oo d s........................................................................................................................................................ Durable goods.... Nondurable goods................................................................................................................................ S ervices..................................................................................................................................................... 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Chained (2005) dollars: Gross domestic product............................................................................................................................... 10 11 Personal consumption expenditures.......................................................................................................... G oo d s........................................................................................................................................................ Durable goods.... Nondurable goods................................................................................................................................ Services................. Population (midperiod, thousands).................................................................................................................. 13 14 15 16 17 18 47,375 47,841 40,149 35,450 33,231 11,164 3,593 7,571 22,067 2010 2009 46,364 46,706 39,112 35,526 32,812 10,587 3,366 7,221 22,225 II 46,258 46,584 38,998 35,124 32,587 10,433 3,345 7,088 22,154 46,080 46,381 39,234 35,709 32,560 10,400 3,294 7,106 22,161 I III IV 46,268 46,663 39,001 35,522 32,919 10,696 3,415 7,280 22,223 46,849 47,191 39,212 35,747 33,179 10,816 3,410 7,407 22,362 47,236 39,509 35,813 33,538 11,012 3,463 7,549 22,525 43,671 42,879 42,172 42,011 42,146 42,621 42,238 42,474 42,506 42,934 44,098 42,551 42,288 32,514 32,387 Disposable 32,519 personal incom e....................................................................................................................... 32,436 32,440 32,378 32,815 30,047 30,321 30,479 30,034 29,922 30,059 30,110 10,517 10,211 10,112 10,265 10,313 10,449 10,225 3,647 3,734 3,760 3,582 3,547 3,642 3,490 6,749 6,641 6,707 6,625 6,596 6,606 6,656 19,824 19,791 19,871 19,956 19,799 19,794 19,786 308,521 309,119 304,831 307,483 306,496 307,101 307,815 Table 7.2.1 B. Percent Change from Preceding Period in Real Motor Vehicle Output [Percent] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line M otor vehicle o u tp u t......................................................................................................................... Auto output........................................................................................................................................ Truck o utp ut...................................................................................................................................... 1 2 3 Final sales of dom estic p ro d u c t.................................................................................................................. Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s.................................................................................................... New motor vehicles.................................................................................................................................. Autos...................................................................................................................................................... Light trucks (including utility vehicles)............................................................................................... Net purchases of used autos and used light tru cks............................................................................. Used autos............................................................................................................................................ Used light trucks (including utility vehicles)...................................................................................... 2008 2009 2010 2009 I II III I IV -18.4 -6.9 -25.4 -24 .6 -32 .9 -18.2 -64.5 -77.4 -52.2 13.3 77.8 -15.4 131.8 66.2 187.6 25.2 11.7 33.8 28.5 73.9 6.6 4 -17.8 -19.2 1.5 -12.4 13.6 -12.7 26.9 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 -15.0 -19.7 -10.7 -26.1 -5.3 -5.5 -5.1 -9.1 -12.8 -17 .0 -9 .2 -2 .6 -3 .2 -2 .0 9.6 -1.4 -17.9 14.1 28.6 29.9 27.6 -6.3 -4 .7 -20.1 8.2 -8 .7 -6 .4 -10.4 53.7 111.8 310.3 25.0 -10.2 -1.0 -16.5 -23.8 -31.8 -53.3 -6 .2 -7 .3 1.6 -13.6 -1 .5 1.4 -2 .9 4.8 -6 .0 -10.2 -2 .6 Private fixed in vestm en t............................................................................................................................ New motor vehicles.................................................................................................................................. Autos...................................................................................................................................................... Trucks..................................................................................................................................................... Light trucks (including utility vehicles)........................................................................................... Other................................................................................................................................................. Net purchases of used autos and used light trucks............................................................................ Used autos............................................................................................................................................ Used light trucks (including utility vehicles)...................................................................................... 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 -30.0 -20.4 -13.9 -24.6 -24.9 -23.5 -1.1 1.2 -3.1 -53.5 -32.0 -28.1 -34.8 -35.0 -33.7 1.5 -0 .5 3.3 -82.7 -65.0 -61.8 -67.1 -63.7 -75.2 -31.8 -34.1 -29.9 -4.5 38.4 103.9 1.4 18.6 -39.5 85.8 69.6 100.2 15.4 28.7 11.6 45.1 43.9 49.7 39.2 31.8 45.4 234.5 78.6 48.5 106.2 109.2 95.6 12.7 70.8 -21.4 60.5 16.7 26.8 9.6 16.4 -12.6 -9.6 9.4 -25.2 Gross government in v e s tm e n t................................................................................................................ Autos.......................................................................................................................................................... Trucks......................................................................................................................................................... 21 22 23 -0.4 -6.3 1.6 -32.3 -14.4 -37.7 -50.3 -38.9 -54.2 -48.1 -38.7 -51.6 93.2 70.5 104.2 20.2 5.3 27.1 -37.8 -40.9 -36.5 Net e x p o rts ................................................................................................................................................... Exports....................................................................................................................................................... Autos...................................................................................................................................................... Trucks..................................................................................................................................................... Imports....................................................................................................................................................... Autos...................................................................................................................................................... Trucks..................................................................................................................................................... ?4 25 26 27 28 29 30 6.4 16.6 -4.8 -11.7 -0.6 -22.2 -39.0 -44.1 -32.3 -34.4 -29.2 -40.7 -87.9 -91.9 -80.4 -86.1 -89.3 -79.4 -27.9 -20.7 -35.1 -1.3 7.6 -12.6 190.2 173.1 210.4 352.4 389.6 302.0 139.9 135.9 144.3 86.7 58.6 136.9 16.5 2.7 32.9 -27.5 -49.1 13.1 31 ................... V 33 34 3S 36 V 38 39 40 41 .................. ................... ................... .................. ................... .................. -23.3 -62.8 -94.6 -21.2 -7.9 56.5 79.5 1.0 Change in private in ven torie s...................................................................................................................... Domestic............................................................................................................................................... Foreign................................................................................................................................................... Domestic............................................................................................................................................... Foreign................................................................................................................................................... Addenda: Final sales of motor vehicles to domestic purchasers.............................................................................. Private fixed investment in new autos and new light tru cks.................................................................... Domestic output of new a u to s 2.................................................................................................................. Sales of imported new autos 3.................................................................................................................... 42 43 44 45 -18.8 -20.0 -4.6 -10.4 -21.4 -31.7 -41.6 -17.6 1. Consists of used light trucks only. 2. Consists of final sales and change in private inventories of new autos assembled in the United States. 3. Consists of sales of imported new autos in personal consumption expenditures, in private fixed investment, and in gross government investment. 48.5 26.1 281.4 121.8 -2.0 76.3 63.7 -30.2 6.1 21.4 18.3 7.4 12 D-46 National Data May 2010 Table 7.2.3B. Real Motor Vehicle Output, Quantity Indexes Table 7.2.4B. Price Indexes for Motor Vehicle Output [Index numbers, 2005=100] [Index numbers, 2005=100] Seasonally adjusted Line 2008 2009 2009 I II Seasonally adjusted 2010 III IV I Line 2008 2009 2009 I II 2010 III IV I M otor vehicle o u tp u t...... Auto output.................... Truck output................... 1 2 3 79.505 93.958 71.216 59.924 63.057 58.240 51.533 52.392 51.184 53.168 60.502 49.090 65.605 68.700 63.929 69.391 70.633 68.760 73.874 81.111 69.864 M otor vehicle o u tp u t..... Auto outp ut.................... Truck output.................. 1 2 3 96.404 98.424 95.194 98.632 99.453 98.066 95.916 98.208 94.406 98.366 99.271 97.732 99.455 99.176 99.587 Final sales o f dom estic product 4 81.004 65.490 66.619 64.457 66.549 64.336 68.280 Final sales of d om estic product 4 96.406 98.132 95.726 97.911 98.901 99.989 99.591 b 96.445 95.959 6 96.842 97.958 7 100.164 101.099 93.672 95.987 99.833 94.992 97.828 100.841 96.421 98.169 100.883 98.752 99.848 102.839 99.675 99.487 102.281 8 94.488 95.401 92.957 95.353 95.919 97.375 97.158 9 10 95.731 95.421 92.840 90.262 89.973 88.801 90.555 88.560 93.697 90.187 97.137 93.500 100.171 96.835 11 95.991 94.832 90.877 92.086 96.413 99.951 102.732 12 100.395 109.439 108.189 113.704 111.366 104.499 98.827 100.341 100.825 102.363 13 99.045 100.589 14 100.174 101.155 99.869 100.839 101.062 102.850 15 98.355 100.338 98.188 100.137 100.841 102.188 98.341 102.089 102.296 102.126 Personal consum ption e xpe nd itu re s........................ New motor vehicles.............. A utos.................................. Light trucks (including utility vehicles).............. Net purchases of used autos and used light tru cks........ Used autos........................ Used light trucks (including utility vehicles)........................ 83.126 76.550 87.543 75.590 66.723 72.700 73.692 62.601 66.029 72.502 61.859 62.436 80.732 74.624 88.862 8 69.227 62.880 60.461 61.671 65.208 64.180 64.937 9 10 97.677 87.807 95.165 84.973 98.555 86.058 96.329 84.645 93.771 84.427 92.007 84.761 90.590 82.506 107.298 105.192 5 6 7 110.735 107.732 102.995 99.305 98.645 67.520 80.550 91.578 74.122 31.426 54.745 65.804 48.310 28.573 47.860 55.078 43.673 28.249 51.912 65.817 43.826 29.282 55.292 67.648 48.102 39.601 63.915 74.675 57.641 44.571 66.437 79.241 58.979 16 17 82.738 52.372 53.782 34.723 47.166 34.621 49.222 30.538 53.907 33.781 64.832 39.951 67.334 38.633 18 111.363 113.069 19 102.261 101.721 95.367 85.440 111.348 97.507 120.948 104.484 124.612 119.451 121.513 122.175 120.605 124.574 11 105.450 125.430 137.724 129.694 120.616 Private fixed investm ent......... New motor vehicles............... Autos................................... Trucks................................. Light trucks (including utility vehicles).......... Other............................... Net purchases of used autos and used light trucks......... Used a u to s ........................ Used light trucks (including utility vehicles)........................ 68.688 87.288 63.139 70.488 89.078 64.934 59.838 78.808 54.155 70.551 90.048 64.737 73.874 91.218 68.732 65.616 79.991 61.358 G ross governm ent in vestm en t............................ Autos........................................ Trucks..................................... 21 22 23 105.061 110.196 107.958 110.284 105.611 112.643 109.153 112.824 104.893 109.220 107.514 109.278 144.781 88.283 179.099 100.116 77.984 115.216 93.758 61.504 108.305 76.640 80.605 47.785 76.426 85.940 68.129 47.773 58.573 37.969 70.417 81.089 61.156 47.618 59.658 36.709 91.908 104.243 81.173 69.447 88.740 51.978 114.380 129.192 101.478 81.178 99.588 64.483 118.828 130.049 108.950 74.919 84.106 66.492 E xports................................... Autos................................... Trucks ................................. Imports.................................... Autos................................... Trucks................................. ?4 2b 26 27 28 29 30 102.609 101.871 103.445 103.414 103.113 103.685 20 G ross governm ent investm ent............................. A utos...................................... Trucks..................................... 21 101.473 22 102.013 23 101.317 Change in private in v e n to rie s ... Foreign............................... Addenda: Final sales of motor vehicles to domestic purchasers............ Private fixed investment in new autos and new light trucks.... Domestic output of new autos 2 Sales of imported new autos 3 75.151 68.037 72.931 12 13 14 15 Private fixed in v e s tm e n t........ New motor vehicles.............. Autos.................................. Trucks................................. Light trucks (including utility vehicles).......... O the r.............................. Net purchases of used autos and used light tru cks........ Used autos........................ Used light trucks (including utility vehicles)........................ Exports................................... A utos.................................. Trucks................................. Im ports................................... A utos.................................. Trucks ................................. 75.431 67.807 73.476 ?4 2b 26 27 28 29 30 Change in private inventories. .. 31 V 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 Foreign................................ Domestic............................ 42 79.152 62.233 60.177 58.945 65.066 64.746 65.707 43 44 45 86.765 92.713 102.807 59.244 54.131 84.710 50.749 38.634 78.003 56.761 44.717 78.194 60.152 62.490 95.427 69.313 70.683 87.215 72.752 73.719 88.785 1. Consists of used light trucks only. 2. Consists of final sales and change in private inventories of new autos assembled in the United States. 3. Consists of sales of imported new autos in personal consumption expenditures, in private fixed investment, and in gross government investment. Personal consum ption e xp e n d itu re s ........................ New motor vehicles............... Autos................................... Light trucks (including utility vehicles).............. Net purchases of used autos and used light trucks......... Used a uto s........................ Used light trucks (including utility vehicles)........................ Addenda: Final sales of motor vehicles to domestic purchasers............. Private fixed investment in new autos and new light tru cks.... Domestic output of new autos 2 Sales of imported new autos 3 95.894 115.787 93.478 114.758 95.787 115.224 96.427 116.177 97.885 116.988 97.663 117.659 96.158 96.156 90.251 90.989 88.346 88.688 87.276 87.991 89.333 90.421 96.049 96.856 100.358 100.988 96.155 89.649 88.054 86.684 88.448 95.408 99.899 16 94.746 17 110.764 18 19 20 100.790 100.636 101.158 101.019 100.538 100.376 111.330 111.211 109.939 115.080 113.514 109.449 109.812 110.276 110.093 103.145 103.167 102.131 102.181 104.394 104.384 103.605 103.408 102.975 102.341 104.513 104.951 103.027 102.062 104.222 103.343 102.806 104.122 103.012 102.022 104.236 103.693 103.320 104.224 103.373 102.259 104.733 103.976 103.435 104.755 103.644 102.511 105.025 103.802 102.919 105.015 31 V 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 97.836 99.375 97.222 99.157 100.097 101.024 100.600 43 44 45 97.124 100.890 100.168 98.160 102.674 101.125 96.314 102.315 99.853 97.952 102.803 100.845 98.380 102.370 100.962 99.994 103.208 102.842 99.613 102.477 102.290 1. Consists of used light trucks only. 2. Consists of final sales and change in private inventories of new autos assembled in the United States. 3. Consists of sales of imported new autos in personal consumption expenditures, in private fixed investment, and in gross government investment. May 2010 Su r v e y D-47 C u r r e n t B u s in e s s of Table 7.2.5B. Motor Vehicle Output Table 7.2.6B. Real Motor Vehicle Output, Chained Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of chained (2005) dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Line 2008 2009 2009 I II Line 2010 III IV 2008 I 2009 2009 I 2010 II III IV I M otor vehicle o u tp u t...... Auto output.................... Truck output................... 1 2 3 321.2 139.1 182.2 247.8 94.4 153.5 206.9 77.4 129.6 218.8 90.3 128.5 273.0 102.4 170.5 292.7 107.4 185.3 311.1 123.2 188.0 M otor vehicle o u tp u t..... Auto output.................... Truck output................... 1 2 3 333.1 141.2 191.3 251.0 94.7 156.5 215.9 78.7 137.5 222.7 90.9 131.9 274.8 103.2 171.8 290.7 106.1 184.7 309.5 121.9 187.7 Final sales o f dom estic product 4 330.0 271.1 269.0 266.3 277.7 271.4 286.9 Final sales o f dom estic product 4 342.3 276.7 281.5 272.4 281.2 271.9 288.5 5 6 7 300.6 190.5 85.3 273.3 166.1 70.8 266.5 155.8 64.3 262.2 154.0 60.8 291.9 185.7 86.6 272.8 168.8 71.6 271.7 169.3 71.1 8 104.8 95.2 91.6 93.4 98.8 97.2 98.3 9 10 110.1 48.9 107.3 47.3 111.1 47.9 108.6 47.1 105.7 47.0 103.7 47.2 102.1 45.9 11 61.2 60.0 63.2 61.4 58.7 56.6 56.3 12 13 14 15 99.9 171.5 71.2 100.2 46.5 116.6 51.2 65.3 42.3 101.9 42.8 59.0 41.8 110.5 51.2 59.2 43.3 117.7 52.6 65.0 58.6 136.1 58.1 77.9 65.9 141.5 61.6 79.7 16 17 81.7 19.1 53.1 12.6 46.6 12.6 48.6 11.1 53.3 12.3 64.0 14.5 66.5 14.1 Personal consum ption e xpe nd itu re s........................ New motor vehicles.............. A utos.................................. Light trucks (including utility vehicles).............. Net purchases of used autos and used light tru cks........ Used autos........................ Used light trucks (including utility vehicles)........................ Private fixed in v e s tm e n t........ New motor vehicles.............. A utos.................................. Trucks................................. Light trucks (including utility vehicles).......... O ther.............................. Net purchases of used autos and used light tru cks........ Used autos........................ Used light trucks (including utility vehicles)........................ b 6 7 289.9 184.5 85.4 261.9 162.5 71.6 249.2 149.3 64.2 248.6 150.4 61.3 281.0 182.1 87.4 8 99.1 90.9 85.1 89.1 94.7 y 10 105.4 46.6 99.4 42.6 99.8 42.5 98.2 41.7 98.9 42.3 Personal consum ption 268.9 270.4 e xp e n d itu re s ........................ 168.3 168.2 New motor vehicles............... 73.6 72.7 Autos................................... Light trucks (including 94.6 95.6 utility vehicles).............. Net purchases of used autos 102.2 100.6 and used light trucks......... 44.4 44.0 Used a u to s ........................ Used light trucks (including utility 56.6 57.8 vehicles)........................ 11 58.7 56.8 57.3 56.5 56.6 12 13 14 15 100.3 169.9 71.3 98.6 50.9 117.3 51.8 65.5 45.9 100.6 42.8 57.8 47.7 110.8 51.6 59.2 48.4 118.6 53.1 65.4 61.4 139.2 59.7 79.5 16 17 77.4 21.1 50.8 14.6 43.4 14.5 46.4 12.8 51.1 14.3 62.4 17.0 18 19 -69.6 -32.2 -66.4 -30.4 -54.7 -24.8 -63.1 -28.1 -70.2 -30.9 -77.7 -37.8 20 -37.4 -3 6.0 -29.9 -35.1 -39.3 65.1 144.3 63.0 81.3 18 19 -72.4 -33.5 -73.5 -33.3 -62.0 -28.0 -72.4 -31.9 -78.6 -34.2 -81.0 -39.1 -79.0 -40.0 -39.9 Private fixe d investm ent......... New motor vehicles............... Autos................................... Trucks................................. Light trucks (including 64.7 utility vehicles).......... Other............................... 16.6 Net purchases of used autos -79.2 and used light trucks......... -40 .4 Used a uto s........................ Used light trucks (including utility -38.8 vehicles)........................ 20 -38.9 -40.2 -34.0 -40.5 -44.4 -41.8 -3 8 .9 21 22 23 15.3 3.5 11.8 10.4 3.0 7.4 10.6 3.1 7.6 9.0 2.7 6.3 10.7 3.1 7.5 11.2 3.1 8.0 9.9 2.8 7.1 G ross governm ent investm ent............................ A uto s...................................... Trucks..................................... 21 22 23 16.1 3.7 12.4 11.4 3.4 8.0 11.5 3.4 8.1 10.0 3.1 6.9 11.9 3.6 8.3 12.4 3.6 8.8 10.9 3.0 7.9 G ross governm ent in vestm en t............................ Autos........................................ Trucks..................................... Net e xp o rts................................ Exports................................... A utos.................................. Trucks................................. Im ports................................... A utos.................................. Trucks................................. 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 -76.3 65.3 37.2 28.1 141.6 77.7 63.9 -53.1 40.1 20.9 19.2 93.2 54.9 38.2 -37.5 34.7 17.9 16.8 72.2 41.7 30.5 -40.0 31.9 16.9 15.0 71.9 42.7 29.2 -63.6 41.6 21.7 19.9 105.2 63.8 41.4 -71.3 52.0 27.0 25.0 123.3 71.7 51.7 -59.5 54.2 27.2 27.0 113.6 60.2 53.4 Net e x p o rts ................................ E xports................................... Autos................................... Trucks................................. Imports.................................... Autos................................... Trucks................................. 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 -73.3 63.7 36.6 27.1 136.9 75.3 61.7 -51.0 38.8 20.4 18.4 89.8 53.3 36.6 -36.2 33.6 17.5 16.0 69.8 40.7 29.0 -38 .6 31.0 16.6 14.4 69.6 41.5 28.1 -61.0 40.4 21.3 19.1 101.4 61.7 39.8 -68.3 50.3 26.4 23.9 118.6 69.3 49.3 -57 .2 52.2 26.6 25.7 109.4 58.5 50.9 Change in private in ve n to rie s ... A utos........................................... N ew ........................................ Dom estic........................... Foreign.............................. Used....................................... Trucks......................................... N e w ........................................ Domestic........................... Foreign............................... Used 1.................................... 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 -8 .8 4.5 6.2 4.2 2.0 -1 .7 -13.3 -12.8 -13.9 1.0 -0 .5 -23.2 -10.6 -13.0 -9 .7 -3.3 2.4 -12.6 -14.0 -11.5 -2 .6 1.4 -62.1 -26.9 -24.1 -18.4 -5 .7 -2 .8 -35.2 -28.3 -21.2 -7 .2 -6.9 -47.5 -13.6 -14.6 -12.3 -2.3 1.0 -33.9 -34.6 -30.2 -4.5 0.7 -4.7 -11.0 -14 .4 -9 .3 -5.1 3.4 6.3 0.6 1.8 -1 .2 5.7 21.3 9.0 1.1 1.3 -0 .3 7.9 12.3 6.4 3.7 2.7 5.9 24.3 13.4 2.1 3.0 -0 .8 11.3 10.9 6.6 6.3 0.3 4.3 Change in private inventories. .. Autos............................................ New.......................................... Domestic............................ Foreign................................ U se d ........................................ Trucks... New.. Domestic............................ Foreign................................ Used 1..................................... Residual... 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 -9 .0 4.4 5.9 4.0 1.9 -1.7 -13.6 -13.0 -14.1 1.0 -0 .5 0.7 -23.8 -10.8 -12.5 -9.2 -3 .3 2.5 -13.0 -13.9 -11.4 -2.5 1.4 -2.5 -63.6 -27.4 -23.3 -17.7 -5 .6 -3.1 -36.2 -28.6 -21.4 -7 .0 -7 .7 -3.1 -48.1 -13.8 -13 .9 -11.6 -2 .3 1.2 -34 .3 -34.2 -29.8 -4 .4 0.9 -2 .9 -4.6 -11.0 -13.7 -8 .8 -4 .9 3.8 6.5 0.7 1.9 -1 .2 6.3 -2 .5 21.0 8.8 1.0 1.3 -0.3 8.2 12.2 6.3 3.7 2.6 6.1 -2 .0 23.5 12.9 2.0 2.8 -0 .8 11.2 10.6 6.4 6.2 0.3 4.3 -2 .2 42 406.3 324.2 306.5 306.2 341.3 342.7 346.3 43 415.3 326.5 315.7 309.3 341.4 339.7 344.7 43 44 45 148.8 100.9 88.9 102.6 60.0 74.0 86.1 42.7 67.2 98.0 49.6 68.1 104.3 69.1 83.2 122.1 78.8 77.4 127.7 81.6 78.4 Addenda: Final sales of motor vehicles to domestic purchasers............. Private fixed investment in new autos and new light tru cks.... Domestic output of new autos 2 Sales of imported new autos 3 44 45 46 153.2 99.9 88.8 104.6 58.3 73.2 89.6 41.6 67.4 100.2 48.2 67.5 106.2 67.4 82.4 122.4 76.2 75.3 128.4 79.5 76.7 Addenda: Final sales of motor vehicles to domestic purchasers............ Private fixed investment in new autos and new light trucks.... Domestic output of new autos 2 Sales of imported new a u to s 3 2. Consists of final sales and change in private inventories of new autos assembled in the United States. 3. Consists of sales of imported new autos in personal consumption expenditures, in private fixed investment, and in gross government investment. 1. Consists of used light trucks only. 2. Consists of final sales and change in private inventories of new autos assembled in the United States. 3. Consists of sales of imported new autos in personal consumption expenditures, in private fixed investment, and in gross government investment. N ote. Chained (2005) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2005 currentdollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines, excluding the lines in the addenda. D-48 May 2010 B. NIPA-Related Table Table B.l presents the most recent estimates of personal income and its disposition. These estimates were released on May 3, 2010. Table B.1 Personal Income and Its Disposition [Billions of dollars; monthly estimates seasonally adjusted at annual rates] 2009 2008 2010 2009 Feb. March April May June July Aug. 12,026.1 7,786.6 6,284.1 5,101.7 1,063.1 658.1 4,038.6 986.5 3,052.1 1,182.4 11,937.1 7,798.4 6,301.0 5,129.4 1,105.5 680.4 4,023.9 1,002.8 3,021.1 1,171.5 11,882.7 7,756.0 6,260.3 5,085.5 1,090.7 672.1 3,994.8 992.7 3,002.1 1,174.8 11,969.8 7,804.2 6,303.6 5,123.0 1,077.4 668.0 4,045.5 989.7 3,055.8 1,180.6 12,146.9 7,820.1 6,317.0 5,132.0 1,066.2 660.5 4,065.8 991.0 3,074.8 1,185.0 12,029.7 7,823.6 6,318.9 5,131.4 1,059.7 657.4 4,071.8 987.1 3,084.6 1,187.4 11,975.2 7,742.7 6,242.0 5,057.4 1,043.3 645.7 4,014.1 973.6 3,040.5 1,184.6 12,011.9 7,762.6 6,259.5 5,073.7 1,045.2 646.2 4,028.6 978.7 3,049.9 1,185.8 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. r Feb. r 12,095.6 7,776.7 6,269.6 5,081.6 1,037.7 646.5 4,043.9 977.4 3,066.5 1,188.1 12,148.1 7,780.0 6,271.8 5,081.0 1,034.2 644.7 4,046.8 976.7 3,070.1 1,190.8 12,196.1 7,828.5 6,305.8 5,107.9 1,041.0 649.9 4,067.0 981.9 3,085.1 1,197.9 12,203.2 7,839.2 6,313.5 5,114.7 1,037.7 648.8 4,077.0 985.0 3,092.0 1,198.8 Mar. p Personal In co m e ............................................................... Compensation of employees, received........................... Wage and salary disbursements................................. Private industries....................................................... Goods-producing industries................................ Manufacturing.................................................... Service-producing industries............................... Trade, transportation, and utilities.................. Other services-producing industries.............. Government................................................................ 12,238.8 8,042.4 6,545.9 5,404.6 1,206.5 742.0 4,198.1 1,048.3 3,149.8 1,141.3 Supplements to wages and salaries........................... Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance fun d s..................................................... Employer contributions for government social insurance................................................................ 1,496.6 1,502.5 1,497.4 1,495.7 1,500.6 1,503.1 1,504.7 1,500.7 1,503.1 1,503.2 1,505.1 1,507.0 1,508.2 1,522.7 1,525.7 1,528.9 1,023.9 1,043.9 1,037.8 1,038.9 1,040.6 1,042.0 1,043.4 1,045.0 1,046.2 1,047.2 1,048.6 1,049.7 1,051.0 1,053.3 1,055.8 1,057.9 472.7 458.5 459.6 456.8 460.0 461.1 461.3 455.7 456.9 456.0 456.4 457.3 457.2 469.4 470.0 471.0 Proprietors’ income with IVA and C C A dj........................ Farm ................................................................................ Nonfarm........................................................................... 1,106.3 48.7 1,057.5 1,041.0 29.3 1,011.7 1,036.2 26.1 1,010.1 1,027.1 25.0 1,002.1 1,026.0 27.1 998.9 1,026.8 29.1 997.7 1,031.2 30.6 1,000.6 1,035.0 28.2 1,006.8 1,038.4 25.8 1,012.6 1,040.2 23.5 1,016.7 1,050.5 29.3 1,021.2 1,062.2 35.2 1,027.0 1,068.1 41.1 1,027.0 1,066.1 35.9 1,030.1 1,062.8 30.7 1,032.1 1,065.5 25.5 1,040.0 12,028.7 12,049.5 7,749.1 7,762.6 6,245.9 6,257.5 5,070.7 5,061.8 1,038.0 1,033.9 642.8 642.8 4,036.7 4,023.8 978.7 978.1 3,045.2 3,058.7 1,184.1 1,186.9 12,239.2 7,856.0 6,327.1 5,126.5 1,039.9 649.1 4,086.6 987.7 3,098.9 1,200.6 Rental income of persons with CCAdj............................ 210.4 268.1 245.9 249.7 255.4 261.9 268.7 273.3 277.9 282.6 285,0 286.7 288.3 290.2 292.0 293.9 Personal income receipts on assets................................ Personal interest in com e.............................................. Personal dividend income............................................. 1,994.4 1,308.0 686.4 1,792.6 1,238.5 554.2 1,845.5 1,243.4 602.1 1,797.1 1,225.8 571.2 1,785.2 1,233.5 551.8 1,773.4 1,241.1 532.3 1,761.5 1,248.7 512.8 1,762.3 1,241.8 520.5 1,763.1 1,234.9 528.2 1,763.9 1,228.0 535.9 1,776.2 1,231.2 545.0 1,788.5 1,234.4 554.1 1,800.8 1,237.6 563.2 1,792.5 1,238.3 554.2 1,784.1 1,238.9 545.2 1,775.8 1,239.6 536.2 Personal current transfer receipts.................................... Government social benefits to persons...................... Old-age, survivors, disability, and health insurance benefits................................................ Government unemployment insurance benefits.... O the r........................................................................... Other current transfer receipts, from business (net).. Less:Contributions for government social insurance.... 1,875.9 1,843.2 2,104.8 2,072.0 1,979.7 1,947.2 2,016.2 1,983.6 2,068.3 2,035.7 2,236.1 2,203.4 2,116.6 2,083.9 2,123.4 2,090.6 2,133.7 2,100.9 2,155.3 2,122.4 2,138.7 2,105.8 2,146.8 2,113.8 2,176.2 2,143.3 2,202.2 2,169.0 2,209.5 2,176.2 2,234.4 2,201.0 1,070.3 50.6 722.4 32.6 990.6 1,156.7 122.0 793.3 32.7 966.9 1,129.1 92.4 725.7 32.5 968.6 1,136.0 108.3 739.3 32.6 963.3 1,148.4 113.9 773.4 32.6 969.3 1,145.7 121.6 936.1 32.7 971.4 1,159.1 132.0 792.8 32.7 971.9 1,158.4 131.5 800.7 32.8 961.5 1,162.8 137.4 800.7 32.8 963.8 1,176.3 138.1 808.0 32.8 962.3 1,175.7 129.9 800.2 32.9 963.5 1,181.5 127.1 805.2 32.9 965.2 1,187.0 143.8 812.6 33.0 965.3 1,185.5 137.2 846.3 33.3 983.4 1,188.6 135.0 852.7 33.3 984.4 1,193.7 146.8 860.5 33.3 986.4 Less: Personal cu rre nt taxe s......................................... 1,432.4 1,102.5 1,189.5 1,156.4 1,094.4 1,083.0 1,070.5 1,071.7 1,072.4 1,068.8 1,067.3 1,069.3 1,070.6 1,139.3 1,142.1 1,145.8 Equals: D isposable personal in c o m e ......................... 10,806.4 10,923.6 10,747.7 10,726.3 10,875.4 11,063.9 10,959.3 10,903.5 10,939.5 10,959.8 10,982.2 11,026.3 11,077.5 11,056.8 11,061.1 11,093.4 Less: Personal o u tla ys.................................................... 10,520.0 10,458.7 10,386.0 10,353.1 10,340.3 10,350.4 10,420.6 10,437.7 10,567.3 10,503.3 10,557.0 10,604.8 10,636.2 10,670.6 10,728.9 10,789.5 Personal consumption expenditures................................ Goods.............................................................................. Durable goods........................................................... Nondurable goods.... Services........................................................................... Personal interest payments1............................................. Personal current transfer payments................................. To government................................................................ To the rest of the world (net)......................................... 10,129.9 3,403.2 1,095.2 2,308.0 6,726.8 237.7 152.3 87.9 64.5 10,089.1 3,255.2 1,035.0 2,220.2 6,833.9 213.9 155.7 92.2 63.5 10,011.3 3,219.7 1,030.2 2,189.5 6,791.6 220.4 154.2 90.4 63.8 9,978.9 3,190.3 1,014.3 2,176.0 6,788.6 219.7 154.6 90.7 63.8 9,968.1 3,166.8 1,000.6 2,166.2 6,801.3 218.2 154.1 91.0 63.1 9,979.3 3,179.4 1,011.5 2,167.9 6,799.9 216.7 154.5 91.4 63.1 10,050.6 3,235.1 1,022.5 2,212.6 6,815.6 215.2 154.8 91.7 63.1 10,068.4 3,245.0 1,038.7 2,206.2 6,823.4 215.3 154.0 92.1 61.9 10,197.4 3,353.6 1,102.7 2,250.8 6,843.8 215.5 154.4 92.5 61.9 10,132.8 3,278.4 1,012.4 2,266.0 6,854.5 215.6 154.8 92.9 61.9 10,188.6 3,304.9 1,034.5 2,270.3 6,883.7 209.4 159.1 93.8 65.3 10,241.8 3,355.8 1,058.6 2,297.3 6,886.0 203.1 159.8 94.6 65.3 10,278.8 3,350.6 1,062.9 2,287.6 6,928.2 196.9 160.5 95.3 65.3 10,310.0 3,374.5 1,052.1 2,322.5 6,935.5 198.2 162.4 95.9 66.5 10,366.4 3,396.1 1,061.0 2,335.1 6,970.3 199.5 163.1 96.6 66.5 10,425.0 3,441.7 1,098.7 2,343.0 6,983.3 200.8 163.7 97.2 66.5 Equals: Personal s a v in g ................................................ 286.4 464.9 361.7 373.2 535.0 713.5 538.6 465.8 372.2 456.5 425.2 421.5 441.3 386.2 332.2 304.0 2.7 4.3 3.4 3.5 4.9 6.4 4.9 4.3 3.4 4.2 3.9 3.8 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.7 9,504.6 9,081.6 9,169.3 9,094.5 9,119.4 9,122.0 9,075.4 9,018.6 9,013.1 9,000.0 9,010.0 9,027.6 9,034.4 9,038.6 9,037.5 9,039.4 Personal saving as percentage of disposable personal in com e .......................................................... Addenda: Personal income excluding current transfer receipts: Billions of chained (2005) dollars ............................... Disposable personal income: Billions of chained (2005) dollars2.............................. Per capita: Current dollars........................................................... Chained (2005 dollars)............................................. Population (midperiod, thousands)3................................ 9,911.3 9,999.0 9,897.0 9,887.0 10,016.5 10,183.3 10,033.1 9,981.3 9,981.5 9,990.4 9,984.0 10,005.3 10,036.1 9,999.9 10,002.8 10,022.9 35,450 32,514 304,831 35,526 32,519 307,483 35,066 32,291 306,495 34,975 32,238 306,688 35,438 32,639 306,885 36,028 33,160 307,095 35,660 32,647 307,323 35,451 32,453 307,562 35,539 32,427 307,815 35,576 32,429 308,068 35,621 32,384 308,304 35,739 32,429 308,526 35,880 32,507 308,733 35,791 32,369 308,930 35,783 32,359 309,119 35,865 32,405 309,306 Personal consumption expenditures: Billions of chained (2005) dollars................................. Goods.......................................................................... Durable goods....................................................... Nondurable goods................................................ Services..................................................................... Implicit price deflator, 2005=100.................................. 9,290.9 3,206.0 1,146.3 2,057.3 6,083.1 109.030 9,235.1 3,144.2 1,101.4 2,037.0 6,087.8 109.250 9,218.9 3,141.3 1,091.8 2,042.5 6,074.9 108.595 9,198.1 3,119.2 1,075.2 2,035.9 6,074.9 108.489 9,180.8 3,095.0 1,059.2 2,026.9 6,080.3 108.575 9,185.1 3,106.1 1,072.5 2,025.8 6,074.3 108.647 9,201.3 3,114.9 1,083.5 2,024.5 6,081.9 109.231 9,216.8 3,130.4 1,106.4 2,019.6 6,082.8 109.239 9,304.4 3,213.3 1,180.6 2,035.0 6,091.3 109.598 9,236.5 3,135.2 1,081.2 2,045.3 6,097.7 109.704 9,262.5 3,158.1 1,103.9 2,047.8 6,101.7 109.997 9,293.4 3,199.0 1,130.2 2,064.1 6,093.8 110.205 9,312.4 3,188.4 1,137.1 2,048.3 6,122.2 110.377 9,324.5 3,198.0 1,133.4 2,060.5 6,125.1 110.569 9,374.5 3,224.1 1,144.9 2,075.5 6,149.6 110.580 9,419.0 3,267.6 1,184.3 2,083.7 6,152.6 110.680 Personal incom e, current d o lla rs ................................. 2.9 -1.7 -0.8 -0.5 0.7 1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0.3 0.1 0.2 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.1 0.3 Disposable personal income: Current dollars................................................................ Chained (2005) dollars................................................. 3.9 0.5 1.1 0.9 -0.7 -1.0 -0 .2 -0.1 1.4 1.3 1.7 1.7 -0.9 -1.5 -0.5 -0.5 0.3 0.0 0.2 0.1 0.2 -0.1 0.4 0.2 0.5 0.3 -0.2 -0.4 0.0 0.0 0.3 0.2 Personal consumption expenditures: Current dollars................................................................ Chained (2005) dollars................................................. 3.1 -0.2 -0.4 -0.6 0.4 0.1 -0 .3 -0 .2 -0.1 -0.2 0.1 0.0 0.7 0.2 0.2 0.2 1.3 1.0 -0.6 -0.7 0.6 0.3 0.5 0.3 0.4 0.2 0.3 0.1 0.5 0.5 0.6 0.5 Percent change from preceding period: p Preliminary r Revised CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment IVA Inventory valuation adjustment 1. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households. 2. Equals disposable personal income deflated by the implicit price deflator for personal consumption expenditures, 3. Population is the total population of the United States, including the Armed Forces overseas and the institutionalized population. The monthly estimate is the average of estimates for the first of the month and the first of the following month; the annual estimate is the average of the monthly estimates. Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. D-49 May 2010 C. Historical Measures This table is derived from the “Selected NIPA Tables” that are published in this issue and from the “GDP and Other Major NIPA Series” tables that were published in the September 2009 issue. (The changes in prices are calculated from indexes expressed to three decimal places.) Table C.1. GDP and Other Major NIPA Aggregates—Continues [Quarterly estimates are seasonally adjusted at annual rates] Billions of chained (2005) dollars Year and Quarter Gross domestic product Final sales of domestic product Gross national product Percent change from preceding period Real gross domestic product Chain-type price indexes [2005=100] Real final sales of domestic product Implicit price deflators [2005=100] Percent change from preceding period Chain-type price index Gross domestic product Gross domestic purchases Gross domestic product Gross national product Gross domestic product Gross domestic purchases Implicit pric e deflators Gross domestic product Gross national product 1959 ...................... 2,762.5 2,764.0 2,780.5 7.2 6.3 18.348 17.972 18.340 18.320 1.1 1.2 1.2 1.2 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... 2,830.9 2,896.9 3,072.4 3,206.7 3,392.3 2,836.6 2,904.6 3,064.9 3,202.6 3,393.7 2,850.6 2,918.6 3,096.8 3,232.8 3,420.4 2.5 2.3 6.1 4.4 5.8 2.6 2.4 5.5 4.5 6.0 18.604 18.814 19.071 19.273 19.572 18.220 18.412 18.654 18.871 19.175 18.596 18.805 19.062 19.265 19.563 18.577 18.786 19.044 19.248 19.546 1.4 1.1 1.4 1.1 1.6 1.4 1.1 1.3 1.2 1.6 1.4 1.1 1.4 1.1 1.5 1.4 1.1 1.4 1.1 1.5 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... 3,610.1 3,845.3 3,942.5 4,133.4 4,261.8 3,590.7 3,806.6 3,923.3 4,119.4 4,248.6 3,639.5 3,873.1 3,971.1 4,164.1 4,291.6 6.4 6.5 2.5 4.8 3.1 5.8 6.0 3.1 5.0 3.1 19.928 20.493 21.124 22.022 23.110 19.507 20.054 20.637 21.508 22.563 19.919 20.484 21.115 22.012 23.099 19.903 20.469 21.098 21.996 23.081 1.8 2.8 3.1 4.3 4.9 1.7 2.8 2.9 4.2 4.9 1.8 2.8 3.1 4.2 4.9 1.8 2.8 3.1 4.3 4.9 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... 4,269.9 4,413.3 4,647.7 4,917.0 4,889.9 4,287.9 4,407.4 4,640.6 4,888.2 4,874.1 4,299.4 4,446.0 4,682.9 4,964.5 4,944.0 0.2 3.4 5.3 5.8 -0.6 0.9 2.8 5,3 5.3 -0.3 24.328 25.545 26.647 28.124 30.669 23.778 25.000 26.112 27.623 30.459 24.317 25.533 26.634 28.112 30.664 24.299 25.515 26.617 28.097 30.643 5.3 5.0 4.3 5.5 9.0 5.4 5.1 4.4 5.8 10.3 5.3 5.0 4.3 5.5 9.1 5.3 5.0 4.3 5.6 9.1 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... 4,879.5 5,141.3 5,377.7 5,677.6 5,855.0 4,926.3 5,120.2 5,344.9 5,639.7 5,841.2 4,921.4 5,191.2 5,433.7 5,733.2 5,930.2 -0.2 5.4 4.6 5.6 3.1 1.1 3.9 4.4 5.5 3.6 33.577 35.505 37.764 40.413 43.773 33.300 35.208 37.586 40.252 43.797 33.563 35.489 37.751 40.400 43.761 33.541 35.472 37.735 40.385 43.745 9.5 5.7 6.4 7.0 8.3 9.3 5.7 6.8 7.1 8.8 9.5 5.7 6.4 7.0 8.3 9.5 5.8 6.4 7.0 8.3 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... 5,839.0 5,987.2 5,870.9 6,136.2 6,577.1 5,878.7 5,959.5 5,923.3 6,172.9 6,495.6 5,913.4 6,052.5 5,939.1 6,202.3 6,639.8 -0 .3 2.5 -1.9 4.5 7.2 0.6 1.4 -0.6 4.2 5.2 47.776 52.281 55.467 57.655 59.823 48.408 52.864 55.859 57.817 59.854 47.751 52.225 55.412 57.603 59.766 47.728 52.206 55.391 57.586 59.749 9.1 9.4 6.1 3.9 3.8 10.5 9.2 5.7 3.5 3.5 9.1 9.4 6.1 4.0 3.8 9.1 9.4 6.1 4.0 3.8 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... 6,849.3 7,086.5 7,313.3 7,613.9 7,885.9 6,838.9 7,098.7 7,296.2 7,607.8 7,867.5 6,893.9 7,116.5 7,342.2 7,650.4 7,924.0 4.1 3.5 3.2 4.1 3.6 5.3 3.8 2.8 4.3 3.4 61.633 63.003 64.763 66.990 69.520 61.553 62.948 64.923 67.159 69.706 61.576 62.937 64.764 66.988 69.518 61.562 62.920 64.749 66.974 69.511 3.0 2.2 2.8 3.4 3.8 2.8 2.3 3.1 3.4 3.8 3.0 2.2 2.9 3.4 3.8 3.0 2.2 2.9 3.4 3.8 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... 8,033.9 8,015.1 8,287.1 8,523.4 8,870.7 8,032.7 8,034.8 8,284.3 8,515.3 8,809.2 8,081.8 8,055.6 8,326.4 8,563.2 8,900.5 1.9 -0 .2 3.4 2.9 4.1 2.1 0.0 3.1 2.8 3.5 72.213 74.762 76.537 78.222 79.867 72.540 74.917 76.724 78.339 79.962 72.201 74.760 76.533 78.224 79.872 72.199 74.755 76.521 78.224 79.874 3.9 3.5 2.4 2.2 2.1 4.1 3.3 2.4 2.1 2.1 3.9 3.5 2.4 2.2 2.1 3.9 3.5 2.4 2.2 2.1 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... 9,093.7 9,433.9 9,854.3 10,283.5 10,779.8 9,073.2 9,412.5 9,782.6 10,217.1 10,715.7 9,129.4 9,471.1 9,881.8 10,304.0 10,812.1 2.5 3.7 4.5 4.4 4.8 3.0 3.7 3.9 4.4 4.9 81.533 83.083 84.554 85.507 86.766 81.674 83.150 84.397 84.962 86.304 81.536 83.088 84.555 85.511 86.768 81.542 83.096 84.558 85.509 86.766 2.1 1.9 1.8 1.1 1.5 2.1 1.8 1.5 0.7 1.6 2.1 1.9 1.8 1.1 1.5 2.1 1.9 1.8 1.1 1.5 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... 11,226.0 11,347.2 11,553.0 11,840.7 12,263.8 11,167.5 11,391.7 11,543.5 11,824.8 12,198.2 11,268.8 11,404.6 11,606.9 11,914.2 12,358.5 4.1 1.1 1.8 2.5 3.6 4.2 2.0 1.3 2.4 3.2 88.648 90.654 92.113 94.099 96.769 88.463 90.123 91.422 93.550 96.400 88.647 90.650 92.118 94.100 96.770 88.645 90.648 92.113 94.096 96.767 2.2 2.3 1.6 2.2 2.8 2.5 1.9 1.4 2.3 3.0 2.2 2.3 1.6 2.2 2.8 2.2 2.3 1.6 2.2 2.8 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... ...................... 12,638.4 12,976.2 13,254.1 13,312.2 12,987.4 12,588.4 12,917.1 13,234.3 13,341.2 13,110.7 12,735.5 13,046.1 13,362.8 13,442.6 13,083.7 3.1 2.7 2.1 0.4 -2.4 3.2 2.6 2.5 0.8 -1.7 100.000 103.263 106.221 108.481 109.745 100.000 103.380 106.408 109.765 109.817 100.000 103.257 106.214 108.483 109.770 100.000 103.260 106.215 108.486 109.764 3.3 3.3 2.9 2.1 1.2 3.7 3.4 2.9 3.2 0.0 3.3 3.3 2.9 2.1 1.2 3.3 3.3 2.9 2.1 1.2 D-50 National Data May 2010 Table C.1. GDP and Other Major NIPA Aggregates—Continues [Quarterly estimates are seasonally adjusted at annual rates] Billions of chained (2005) dollars Year and Quarter Gross domestic product Final sales of domestic product Gross national product Percent change from preceding period Real gross domestic product Real final sales of domestic product Chain-type price indexes [2005=100] Gross domestic product Gross domestic purchases Implicit price deflators [2005=100] Gross domestic product Gross national product Percent change from preceding period Chain-type price index Implicit price deflators Gross domestic product Gross domestic product Gross domestic purchases Gross national product V. 2,710.3 2,778.8 2,775.5 2,785.2 2,714.7 2,761.5 2,795.1 2,784.6 2,727.5 2,795.9 2,793.8 2,804.6 8.3 10.5 -0.5 1.4 8.5 7.1 5.0 -1.5 18.267 18.309 18.369 18.446 17.892 17.936 17.992 18.066 18.281 18.299 18.350 18.427 18.261 18.279 18.331 18.408 1.5 0.9 1.3 1.7 1.6 1.0 1.3 1.7 0.5 0.4 1.1 1.7 0.6 0.4 1.1 1.7 IL V. 2,847.7 2,834.4 2,839.0 2,802.6 2,815.0 2,841.9 2,837.9 2,851.8 2,866.4 2,853.5 2,858.9 2,823.6 9.3 -1 .9 0.7 -5 .0 4.4 3.9 -0 .5 2.0 18.483 18.561 18.646 18.726 18.100 18.177 18.261 18.341 18.505 18.564 18.632 18.684 18.486 18.544 18.613 18.665 0.8 1.7 1.8 1.7 0.8 1.7 1.9 1.8 1.7 1.3 1.5 1.1 1.7 1.3 1.5 1.1 IL V. 2,819.3 2,872.0 2,918.4 2,977.8 2,854.0 2,884.6 2,906.9 2,973.0 2,841.4 2,893.1 2,939.9 2,999.8 2.4 7.7 6.6 8.4 0.3 4.4 3.1 9.4 18.750 18.786 18.835 18.884 18.361 18.383 18.432 18.473 18.727 18.769 18.827 18.892 18.707 18.749 18.808 18.874 0.5 0.8 1.0 1.0 0.4 0.5 1.1 0.9 0.9 0.9 1.2 1.4 0.9 0.9 1.3 1.4 IL V. 3,031.2 3,064.7 3,093.0 3,100.6 3,009.2 3,060.5 3,084.3 3,105.6 3,053.1 3,088.6 3,117.2 3,128.1 7.4 4.5 3.7 1.0 5.0 7.0 3.1 2.8 18.992 19.040 19.091 19.159 18.569 18.627 18.675 18.744 19.004 19.030 19.076 19.136 18.985 19.012 19.058 19.119 2.3 1.0 1.1 1.4 2.1 1.3 1.0 1.5 2.4 0.5 1.0 1.3 2.4 0.6 1.0 1.3 IL V. 3,141.1 3,180.4 3,240.3 3,265.0 3,126.2 3,179.2 3,235.7 3,269.3 3,167.4 3,205.9 3,266.2 3,291.7 5.3 5.1 7.7 3.1 2.7 7.0 7.3 4.2 19.213 19.232 19.266 19.382 18.803 18.827 18.868 18.986 19.180 19.217 19.255 19.402 19.163 19.200 19.238 19.385 1.1 0.4 0.7 2.4 1.3 0.5 0.9 2.5 0.9 0.8 0.8 3.1 0.9 0.8 0.8 3.1 IL V. 3,338.2 3,376.6 3,422.5 3,432.0 3,340.8 3,380.5 3,422.4 3,431.3 3,367.2 3,404.5 3,451.2 3,458.8 9.3 4.7 5.5 1.1 9.0 4.8 5.1 1.0 19.452 19.518 19.614 19.704 19.060 19.129 19.216 19.296 19.460 19.512 19.590 19.686 19.443 19.496 19.573 19.669 1.5 1.4 2.0 1.8 1.6 1.5 1.8 1.7 1.2 1.1 1.6 2.0 1.2 1.1 1.6 2.0 IL V. 3,516.3 3,564.0 3,636.3 3,724.0 3,485.5 3,548.5 3,615.2 3,713.4 3,546.6 3,595.2 3,665.5 3,750.8 10.2 5.5 8.4 10.0 6.5 7.4 7.7 11.3 19.788 19.876 19.963 20.086 19.364 19.450 19.541 19.675 19.785 19.870 19.943 20.071 19.769 19.854 19.927 20.055 1.7 1.8 1.8 2.5 1.4 1.8 1.9 2.8 2.0 1.7 1.5 2.6 2.0 1.7 1.5 2.6 IL V. 3,815.4 3,828.1 3,853.3 3,884.5 3,775.3 3,792.4 3,824.0 3,834.8 3,843.1 3,855.9 3,880.5 3,912.8 10.2 1.3 2.7 3.3 6.8 1.8 3.4 1.1 20.209 20.401 20.591 20.772 19.784 19.973 20.146 20.312 20.201 20.374 20.584 20.773 20.186 20.358 20.568 20.757 2.5 3.9 3.8 3.6 2.2 3.9 3.5 3.3 2.6 3.5 4.2 3.7 2.6 3.5 4.2 3.7 IL V. 3,918.7 3,919.6 3,950.8 3,981.0 3,873.6 3,915.0 3,934.9 3,969.8 3,946.7 3,946.8 3,980.8 4,010.1 3.6 0.1 3.2 3.1 4.1 4.3 2.0 3.6 20.874 21.002 21.194 21.426 20.393 20.518 20.708 20.930 20.868 20.980 21.185 21.419 20.852 20.963 21.169 21.403 2.0 2.5 3.7 4.5 1.6 2.5 3.8 4.4 1.8 2.2 4.0 4.5 1.8 2.1 4.0 4.5 IL V. 4,063.0 4,132.0 4,160.3 4,178.3 4,052.9 4,093.6 4,152.2 4,178.6 4,092.9 4,162.5 4,191.6 4,209.4 8.5 7.0 2.8 1.7 8.7 4.1 5.9 2.6 21.658 21.900 22.111 22.418 21.156 21.377 21.600 21.900 21.653 21.880 22.096 22.407 21.638 21.864 22.080 22.390 4.4 4.5 3.9 5.7 4.4 4.2 4.2 5.7 4.4 4.3 4.0 5.7 4.5 4.2 4.0 5.7 IL V. 4,244.1 4,256.5 4,283.4 4,263.3 4,221.8 4,242.6 4,264.6 4,265.4 4,275.4 4,286.6 4,312.3 4,292.1 6.5 1.2 2.6 -1 .9 4.2 2.0 2.1 0.1 22.644 22.946 23.279 23.571 22.109 22.407 22.724 23.012 22.640 22.932 23.260 23.561 22.623 22.914 23.242 23.542 4.1 5.4 5.9 5.1 3.9 5.5 5.8 5.2 4.2 5.3 5.8 5.3 4.2 5.2 5.8 5.3 Il" V. 4,256.6 4,264.3 4,302.3 4,256.6 4,277.0 4,268.7 4,307.0 4,299.0 4,286.2 4,294.9 4,332.4 4,284.3 -0.6 0.7 3.6 -4.2 1.1 -0 .8 3.6 -0 .7 23.898 24.241 24.432 24.742 23.346 23.670 23.892 24.204 23.895 24.226 24.417 24.730 23.877 24.208 24.399 24.712 5.7 5.9 3.2 5.2 5.9 5.7 3.8 5.3 5.8 5.7 3.2 5.2 5.8 5.7 3.2 5.2 Il" V. 4,374.0 4,398.8 4,433.9 4,446.3 4,352.2 4,382.3 4,420.9 4,474.2 4,406.6 4,433.2 4,465.1 4,479.1 11.5 2.3 3.2 1.1 5.0 2.8 3.6 4.9 25.115 25.451 25.705 25.909 24.563 24.894 25.166 25.378 25.104 25.433 25.689 25.896 25.086 25.416 25.673 25.878 6.2 5.5 4.1 3.2 6.1 5.5 4.4 3.4 6.2 5.3 4.1 3.3 6.2 5.4 4.1 3.2 II". V. 4,525.8 4,633.1 4,677.5 4,754.5 4,536.3 4,611.6 4,653.2 4,761.4 4,560.0 4,666.8 4,714.0 4,790.8 7.3 9.8 3.9 6.8 5.7 6.8 3.7 9.6 26.333 26.486 26.728 27.041 25.775 25.952 26.207 26.514 26.297 26.452 26.708 27.060 26.279 26.435 26.691 27.044 6.7 2.3 3.7 4.8 6.4 2.8 4.0 4.8 6.3 2.4 3.9 5.4 6.3 2.4 3.9 5.4 Il" V. 4,876.2 4,932.6 4,906.3 4,953.1 4,865.8 4,889.7 4,895.7 4,901.4 4,917.9 4,977.0 4,957.9 5,005.1 10.6 4.7 -2.1 3.9 9.1 2.0 0.5 0.5 27.394 27.851 28.383 28.869 26.862 27.368 27.872 28.391 27.380 27.804 28.346 28.907 27.365 27.789 28.330 28.893 5.3 6.8 7.9 7.0 5.4 7.8 7.6 7.7 4.8 6.3 8.0 8.2 4.8 6.3 8.0 8.2 IL V. 4,909.6 4,922.2 4,873.5 4,854.3 4,895.4 4,900.8 4,885.7 4,814.7 4,970.5 4,979.8 4,926.0 4,899.7 -3.5 1.0 -3 .9 -1 .6 -0 .5 0.4 -1 .2 -5 .7 29.465 30.125 31.063 32.022 29.145 29.981 30.903 31.806 29.463 30.166 31.059 31.987 29.445 30.146 31.038 31.964 8.5 9.3 13.0 12.9 11.1 12.0 12.9 12.2 7.9 9.9 12.4 12.5 7.9 9.9 12.4 12.5 IL V. 4,795.3 4,831.9 4,913.3 4,977.5 4,852.4 4,902.1 4,946.2 5,004.6 4,833.4 4,870.4 4,954.8 5,026.9 -4.8 3.1 6.9 5.3 3.2 4.2 3.6 4.8 32.760 33.237 33.857 34.454 32.501 32.991 33.563 34.144 32.729 33.216 33.835 34.433 32.706 33.193 33.814 34.413 9.5 6.0 7.7 7.2 9.0 6.2 7.1 7.1 9.6 6.1 7.7 7.3 9.6 6.1 7.7 7.3 1959: 1960: 1961: 1962: 1963: 1964: 1965: 1966: 1967: 1968: 1969: 1970: 1971: 1972: 1973: 1974: 1975: S urvey May 2010 of C u rr en t B usiness D-51 Table C.1. GDP and Other Major NIPA Aggregates—Continues [Quarterly estimates are seasonally adjusted at annual rates] Billions of chained (2005) dollars Year and Quarter Gross domestic product Final sales of domestic product Gross national product Percent change from preceding period Real gross domestic product Chain-type price indexes [2005=100] Real final sales of domestic product Gross domestic product Gross domestic purchases Implicit price deflators [2005=100] Gross domestic product Gross national product Percent change from preceding period Chain-type price index Implicit price deflators Gross domestic product Gross domestic product Gross domestic purchases Gross national product 1976: I ..................... I I II I IV.................. 5,090.7 5,128.9 5,154.1 5,191.5 5.073.8 5.090.9 5,122.4 5,194.0 5,138.6 5,178.8 5,204.4 5,243.0 9.4 3.0 2.0 2.9 5.6 1.4 2.5 5.7 34.841 35.208 35.680 36.291 34.531 34.905 35.407 35.989 34.807 35.178 35.655 36.300 34.789 35.160 35.639 36.284 4.6 4.3 5.5 7.0 4.6 4.4 5.9 6.7 4.4 4.3 5.5 7.4 4.4 4.3 5.6 7.4 1977: I ..................... I I.................... I ll................... IV.................. 5.251.8 5,356.1 5.451.9 5,450.8 5,242.7 5.327.0 5.383.0 5,426.9 5,310.6 5,413.8 5,509.0 5,501.5 4.7 8.2 7.3 -0.1 3.8 6.6 4.3 3.3 36.901 37.491 38.009 38.652 36.668 37.295 37.864 38.517 36.911 37.438 37.894 38.725 36.894 37.423 37.881 38.709 6.9 6.6 5.6 6.9 7.8 7.0 6.2 7.1 6.9 5.8 5.0 9.1 6.9 5.9 5.0 9.0 1978: I ..................... I I .................... I ll................... IV.................. 5,469.4 5,684.6 5,740.3 5,816.2 5,433.8 5.649.4 5,701.2 5.774.5 5,528.1 5,733.5 5,793.7 5,877.5 1.4 16.7 4.0 5.4 0.5 16.8 3.7 5.2 39.290 40.048 40.741 41.571 39.145 39.900 40.592 41.369 39.292 40.016 40.681 41.540 39.275 40.001 40.667 41.525 6.8 7.9 7.1 8.4 6.7 7.9 7.1 7.9 6.0 7.6 6.8 8.7 6.0 7.6 6.8 8.7 1979: I ..................... I I II I IV.................. 5,825.9 5.831.4 5,873.3 5.889.5 5,792.7 5.792.4 5.876.4 5,903.2 5,888.8 5.901.8 5,957.3 5.972.9 0.7 0.4 2.9 1.1 1.3 0.0 5.9 1.8 42.334 43.364 44.260 45.136 42.169 43.244 44.345 45.429 42.282 43.325 44.263 45.155 42.267 43.307 44.245 45.136 7.5 10.1 8.5 8.2 8.0 10.6 10.6 10.1 7.3 10.2 8.9 8.3 7.3 10.2 8.9 8.3 1980: I ..................... II .................... I ll................... IV................... 5,908.5 5,787.4 5,776.6 5,883.5 5.914.7 5.798.8 5,874.4 5,926.8 5,993.4 5,865.8 5.850.6 5.943.7 1.3 -7 .9 -0 .7 7.6 0.8 -7 .6 5.3 3.6 46.126 47.156 48.232 49.591 46.678 47.827 48.914 50.211 46.105 47.137 48.215 49.551 46.085 47.117 48.194 49.529 9.1 9.2 9.4 11.8 11.5 10.2 9.4 11.0 8.7 9.3 9.5 11.6 8.7 9.3 9.5 11.5 1981: I ..................... I I II I IV................... 6.005.7 5.957.8 6,030.2 5,955.1 5,956.0 5.967.8 5.974.8 5,939.5 6,069.9 6.018.3 6.094.4 6,027.2 8.6 -3 .2 4.9 -4 .9 2.0 0.8 0.5 -2 .3 50.894 51.802 52.754 53.674 51.534 52.460 53.271 54.193 50.808 51.769 52.685 53.646 50.788 51.747 52.666 53.628 10.9 7.3 7.6 7.2 11.0 7.4 6.3 7.1 10.5 7.8 7.3 7.5 10.6 7.8 7.3 7.5 1982: I ..................... I I II I IV.................. 5.857.3 5,889.1 5.866.4 5,871.0 5,922.8 5,920.3 5.881.5 5.968.6 5,925.6 5,965.7 5,931.4 5,933.6 -6 .4 2.2 -1 .5 0.3 -1.1 -0 .2 -2 .6 6.1 54.430 55.105 55.870 56.463 54.906 55.494 56.231 56.806 54.375 55.033 55.816 56.422 54.356 55.013 55.795 56.401 5.8 5.1 5.7 4.3 5.4 4.4 5.4 4.2 5.5 4.9 5.8 4.4 5.5 4.9 5.8 4.4 1983: I ..................... I I II I IV.................. 5,944.0 6,077.6 6.197.5 6.325.6 6,031.7 6,117.1 6,230.5 6,312.4 6,005.9 6.143.5 6.264.6 6,395.3 5.1 9.3 8.1 8.5 4.3 5.8 7.6 5.4 56.946 57.362 57.947 58.366 57.157 57.550 58.113 58.447 56.880 57.296 57.880 58.305 56.861 57.280 57.864 58.290 3.5 3.0 4.1 2.9 2.5 2.8 4.0 2.3 3.3 3.0 4.1 3.0 3.3 3.0 4.1 3.0 1984: I ..................... II.................... I ll................... IV................... 6,448.3 6,559.6 6,623.3 6,677.3 6,354.6 6,471.1 6,530.8 6,626.0 6,512.8 6.624.4 6.687.5 6,734.4 8.0 7.1 3.9 3.3 2.7 7.5 3.7 6.0 59.091 59.624 60.111 60.466 59.172 59.699 60.113 60.431 59.045 59.551 60.029 60.413 59.029 59.535 60.012 60.394 5.1 3.7 3.3 2.4 5.1 3.6 2.8 2.1 5.2 3.5 3.2 2.6 5.2 3.5 3.2 2.6 1985: I ..................... II.................... I ll................... IV.................. 6.740.3 6.797.3 6,903.5 6,955.9 6,738.3 6,789.6 6,899.9 6,928.1 6.785.7 6.845.8 6,943.5 7,000.5 3.8 3.4 6.4 3.1 7.0 3.1 6.7 1.6 61.157 61.471 61.763 62.142 61.009 61.356 61.679 62.169 61.083 61.431 61.683 62.087 61.062 61.415 61.677 62.078 4.7 2.1 1.9 2.5 3.9 2.3 2.1 3.2 4.5 2.3 1.7 2.6 4.5 2.3 1.7 2.6 1986: I ..................... I I II I IV................... 7,022.8 7.051.0 7.119.0 7,153.4 6.999.4 7,052.2 7.151.4 7,192.0 7,061.9 7,079.0 7,150.4 7,174.6 3.9 1.6 3.9 1.9 4.2 3.0 5.8 2.3 62.457 62.769 63.165 63.622 62.511 62.637 63.081 63.562 62.403 62.732 63.089 63.513 62.391 62.716 63.071 63.491 2.0 2.0 2.5 2.9 2.2 0.8 2.9 3.1 2.1 2.1 2.3 2.7 2.0 2.1 2.3 2.7 1987: I ..................... II.................... I ll................... IV................... 7,193.0 7.269.5 7.332.6 7,458.0 7,172.8 7,268.4 7.355.2 7.388.3 7,217.0 7,299.6 7,361.9 7,490.1 2.2 4.3 3.5 7.0 -1.1 5.4 4.9 1.8 64.122 64.482 64.990 65.456 64.191 64.645 65.191 65.668 64.105 64.471 64.977 65.475 64.088 64.458 64.964 65.460 3.2 2.3 3.2 2.9 4.0 2.9 3.4 3.0 3.8 2.3 3.2 3.1 3.8 2.3 3.2 3.1 1988: I ..................... II.................... I ll................... IV................... 7,496.6 7,592.9 7,632.1 7,734.0 7,497.5 7,587.9 7,624.0 7,721.9 7,536.7 7,629.6 7,665.1 7,770.3 2.1 5.2 2.1 5.5 6.0 4.9 1.9 5.2 65.982 66.618 67.408 67.952 66.220 66.854 67.479 68.081 66.012 66.632 67.384 67.895 65.997 66.617 67.368 67.883 3.3 3.9 4.8 3.3 3.4 3.9 3.8 3.6 3.3 3.8 4.6 3.1 3.3 3.8 4.6 3.1 1989: I ..................... II.................... I ll................... IV................... 7,806.6 7,865.0 7,927.4 7,944.7 7,759.2 7,834.5 7,933.2 7,943.1 7.842.3 7.899.3 7,964.5 7,990.1 3.8 3.0 3.2 0.9 1.9 3.9 5.1 0.5 68.662 69.346 69.816 70.256 68.835 69.581 69.958 70.451 68.664 69.340 69.795 70.257 68.652 69.331 69.790 70.254 4.2 4.0 2.7 2.5 4.5 4.4 2.2 2.8 4.6 4.0 2.7 2.7 4.6 4.0 2.7 2.7 1990: I ..................... II.................... I ll................... IV................... 8,027.7 8,059.6 8,059.5 7,988.9 8,029.3 8,032.8 8,048.6 8,020.0 8,070.3 8.103.5 8.096.5 8,057.0 4.2 1.6 0.0 -3.5 4.4 0.2 0.8 -1.4 71.109 71.936 72.604 73.202 71.405 72.070 72.884 73.801 71.106 71.931 72.593 73.176 71.103 71.926 72.589 73.177 4.9 4.7 3.8 3.3 5.5 3.8 4.6 5.1 4.9 4.7 3.7 3.3 4.9 4.7 3.7 3.3 1991: I ..................... II.................... II I I V 7,950.2 8,003.8 8,037.5 8,069.0 7.988.0 8.045.4 8.056.5 8.049.1 8,001.5 8,040.2 8,069.5 8,111.2 -1 .9 2.7 1.7 1.6 -1.6 2.9 0.6 -0.4 73.985 74.503 75.067 75.492 74.308 74.644 75.135 75.579 73.963 74.490 75.069 75.505 73.962 74.487 75.063 75.498 4.3 2.8 3.1 2.3 2.8 1.8 2.7 2.4 4.4 2.9 3.1 2.3 4.4 2.9 3.1 2.3 1992: I ..................... I I.................... I ll .................. IV.................. 8,157.6 8.244.3 8.329.4 8,417.0 8,173.5 8,232.0 8,322.5 8,409.1 8.199.3 8.285.3 8,366.1 8,455.0 4.5 4.3 4.2 4.3 6.3 2.9 4.5 4.2 75.919 76.371 76.710 77.146 76.051 76.525 76.967 77.353 75.889 76.358 76.713 77.149 75.878 76.346 76.700 77.138 2.3 2.4 1.8 2.3 2.5 2.5 2.3 2.0 2.0 2.5 1.9 2.3 2.0 2.5 1.9 2.3 D-52 National Data May 2010 Table C.1. GDP and Other Major NIPA Aggregates—Table Ends [Quarterly estimates are seasonally adjusted at annual rates] Billions of chained (2005) dollars Year and Quarter Gross domestic product Final sales of domestic product Gross national product Percent change from preceding period Real gross domestic product Chain-type price indexes [2005=100] Real final sales of domestic product Gross domestic product Gross domestic purchases Implicit price deflators [2005=100] Gross domestic product Gross national product Percent change from preceding period Chain-type price index Implicit pric e deflators Gross domestic product Gross domestic product Gross domestic purchases Gross national product 1993: 8,432.5 8,486.4 8,531.1 8,643.8 8,403.6 8,474.1 8,540.5 8,642.8 8,480.0 8,525.2 8,577.4 8,670.4 0.7 2.6 2.1 5.4 -0 .3 3.4 3.2 4.9 77.620 78.042 78.409 78.816 77.773 78.204 78.502 78.876 77.610 78.039 78.399 78.829 77.607 78.039 78.402 78.834 2.5 2.2 1.9 2.1 2.2 2.2 1.5 1.9 2.4 2.2 1.9 2.2 2.5 2.2 1.9 2.2 1994: 8,727.9 8,847.3 8,904.3 9,003.2 8,689.0 8,762.2 8,857.2 8,928.4 8,763.3 8,877.5 8,931.5 9,029.7 4.0 5.6 2.6 4.5 2.2 3.4 4.4 3.3 79.250 79.633 80.080 80.503 79.264 79.694 80.245 80.646 79.244 79.621 80.094 80.507 79.247 79.625 80.096 80.510 2.2 1.9 2.3 2.1 2.0 2.2 2.8 2.0 2.1 1.9 2.4 2.1 2.1 1.9 2.4 2.1 1995: 9,025.3 9,044.7 9,120.7 9,184.3 8,966.4 9,019.4 9,126.8 9,180.1 9,063.8 9,086.4 9,145.0 9,222.5 1.0 0.9 3.4 2.8 1.7 2.4 4.9 2.4 80.985 81.346 81.691 82.110 81.110 81.539 81.840 82.208 80.969 81.328 81.710 82.125 80.973 81.334 81.717 82.132 2.4 1.8 1.7 2.1 2.3 2.1 1.5 1.8 2.3 1.8 1.9 2.0 2.3 1.8 1.9 2.0 1996: 9,247.2 9,407.1 9,488.9 9,592.5 9,259.4 9,392.1 9,433.0 9,565.4 9,292.9 9,442.1 9,520.0 9,629.6 2.8 7.1 3.5 4.4 3.5 5.9 1.8 5.7 82.554 82.859 83.269 83.650 82.642 82.920 83.287 83.752 82.600 82.916 83.179 83.638 82.608 82.925 83.186 83.645 2.2 1.5 2.0 1.8 2.1 1.4 1.8 2.3 2.3 1.5 1.3 2.2 2.3 1.5 1.3 2.2 1997: 9,666.2 9,809.6 9,932.7 10,008.9 9,632.6 9,709.3 9,862.5 9,925.9 9,693.2 9,845.8 9,959.7 10,028.3 3.1 6.1 5.1 3.1 2.8 3.2 6.5 2.6 84.075 84.450 84.686 85.007 84.118 84.273 84.463 84.735 84.179 84.375 84.669 84.982 84.184 84.378 84.673 84.982 2.0 1.8 1.1 1.5 1.8 0.7 0.9 1.3 2.6 0.9 1.4 1.5 2.6 0.9 1.4 1.5 1998: 10,103.4 10,194.3 10,328.8 10,507.6 9,988.3 10,157.1 10,274.3 10,448.5 10,133.3 10,221.2 10,340.3 10,521.2 3.8 3.6 5.4 7.1 2.5 6.9 4.7 7.0 85.134 85.344 85.663 85.888 84.689 84.810 85.054 85.297 85.125 85.329 85.656 85.914 85.125 85.327 85.653 85.913 0.6 1.0 1.5 1.1 -0 .2 0.6 1.2 1.1 0.7 1.0 1.5 1.2 0.7 1.0 1.5 1.2 1999: 10,601.2 10,684.0 10,819.9 11,014.3 10,517.3 10,648.2 10,779.7 10,917.5 10,628.0 10,716.6 10,848.9 11,055.0 3.6 3.2 5.2 7.4 2.7 5.1 5.0 5.2 86.252 86.615 86.919 87.275 85.634 86.100 86.509 86.974 86.298 86.602 86.924 87.230 86.295 86.600 86.922 87.229 1.7 1.7 1.4 1.6 1.6 2.2 1.9 2.2 1.8 1.4 1.5 1.4 1.8 1.4 1.5 1.4 2000: 11,043.0 11,258.5 11,267.9 11,334.5 11,027.6 11,158.0 11,206.4 11,278.1 11,078.6 11,297.8 11,302.4 11,396.4 1.1 8.0 0.3 2.4 4.1 4.8 1.7 2.6 87.939 88.386 88.908 89.359 87.778 88.153 88.716 89.204 87.924 88.370 88.903 89.371 87.922 88.367 88.901 89.369 3.1 2.0 2.4 2.0 3.7 1.7 2.6 2.2 3.2 2.0 2.4 2.1 3.2 2.0 2.4 2.1 11,297.2 11,371.3 11,340.1 11,380.1 11,335.1 11,385.2 11,373.8 11,472.8 11,343.3 11,426.4 11,369.9 11,479.0 -1 .3 2.6 -1.1 1.4 2.0 1.8 -0 .4 3.5 89.977 90.603 90.891 91.144 89.738 90.142 90.274 90.337 89.979 90.590 90.874 91.151 89.976 90.587 90.873 91.150 2.8 2.8 1.3 1.1 2.4 1.8 0.6 0.3 2.7 2.7 1.3 1.2 2.7 2.7 1.3 1.2 2002: 11,477.9 11,538.8 11,596.4 11,598.8 11,496.4 11,528.9 11,579.7 11,569.1 11,534.0 11,575.1 11,648.5 11,669.9 3.5 2.1 2.0 0.1 0.8 1.1 1.8 -0 .4 91.469 91.873 92.282 92.828 90.642 91.223 91.621 92.200 91.469 91.881 92.284 92.828 91.466 91.875 92.279 92.821 1.4 1.8 1.8 2.4 1.4 2.6 1.8 2.6 1.4 1.8 1.8 2.4 1.4 1.8 1.8 2.4 2003: 11,645.8 11,738.7 11,935.5 12,042.8 11,616.5 11,743.8 11,933.4 12,005.3 11,701.8 11,809.3 12,005.6 12,140.2 1.6 3.2 6.9 3.6 1.6 4.5 6.6 2.4 93.501 93.780 94.304 94.813 93.105 93.174 93.712 94.207 93.496 93.776 94.304 94.799 93.492 93.771 94.300 94.795 2.9 1.2 2.3 2.2 4.0 0.3 2.3 2.1 2.9 1.2 2.3 2.1 2.9 1.2 2.3 2.1 2004: 12,127.6 12,213.8 12,303.5 12,410.3 12,076.2 12,136.3 12,241.1 12,339.2 12,243.7 12,303.0 12,403.5 12,483.7 2.8 2.9 3.0 3.5 2.4 2.0 3.5 3.2 95.624 96.441 97.146 97.864 95.151 96.002 96.766 97.681 95.626 96.435 97.131 97.862 95.623 96.433 97.128 97.860 3.5 3.5 3.0 3.0 4.1 3.6 3.2 3.8 3.5 3.4 2.9 3.0 3.5 3.4 2.9 3.0 2005: 12,534.1 12,587.5 12,683.2 12,748.7 12,443.2 12,572.0 12,671.2 12,667.2 12,642.6 12,684.5 12,789.5 12,825.6 4.1 1.7 3.1 2.1 3.4 4.2 3.2 -0.1 98.774 99.445 100.470 101.312 98.561 99.333 100.541 101.565 98.766 99.438 100.461 101.309 98.764 99.437 100.463 101.314 3.8 2.7 4.2 3.4 3.7 3.2 5.0 4.1 3.7 2.7 4.2 3.4 3.7 2.8 4.2 3.4 2006: 12,915.9 12,962.5 12,965.9 13,060.7 12,851.3 12,891.0 12,898.3 13,027.8 12,994.2 13,035.4 13,025.1 13,129.5 5.4 1.4 0.1 3.0 5.9 1.2 0.2 4.1 102.071 102.980 103.763 104.237 102.275 103.173 103.910 104.162 102.071 102.973 103.756 104.218 102.076 102.976 103.760 104.217 3.0 3.6 3.1 1.8 2.8 3.6 2.9 1.0 3.0 3.6 3.1 1.8 3.0 3.6 3.1 1.8 2007: 13,099.9 13,204.0 13,321.1 13,391.2 13,086.4 13,179.6 13,290.3 13,381.1 13,160.5 13,275.9 13,451.5 13,563.3 1.2 3.2 3.6 2.1 1.8 2.9 3.4 2.8 105.327 106.026 106.460 107.072 105.229 106.024 106.592 107.786 105.310 106.008 106.447 107.069 105.311 106.007 106.444 107.070 4.2 2.7 1.6 2.3 4.2 3.1 2.2 4.6 4.3 2.7 1.7 2.4 4.3 2.7 1.7 2.4 2008: 13,366.9 13,415.3 13,324.6 13,141.9 13,363.5 13,453.5 13,354.3 13,193.5 13,525.4 13,533.7 13,470.7 13,240.5 -0.7 1.5 -2.7 -5 .4 -0 .5 2.7 -2 .9 -4 .7 107.577 108.061 109.130 109.155 108.678 109.722 110.871 109.790 107.534 108.069 109.172 109.172 107.538 108.076 109.181 109.167 1.9 1.8 4.0 0.1 3.4 3.9 4.3 -3 .8 1.7 2.0 4.1 0.0 1.8 2.0 4.2 -0.1 2009: 12,925.4 12,901.5 12,973.0 13,149.5 13,055.8 13,077.8 13,127.2 13,181.9 13,018.1 12,986.8 13,084.0 13,246.0 -6 .4 -0 .7 2.2 5.6 -4.1 0.7 1.5 1.7 109.661 109.656 109.763 109.902 109.395 109.533 109.895 110.446 109.691 109.686 109.783 109.919 109.678 109.679 109.780 109.917 1.9 0.0 0.4 0.5 -1 .4 0.5 1.3 2.0 1.9 0.0 0.4 0.5 1.9 0.0 0.4 .0.5 13,254.7 13,235.7 3.2 1.6 110.136 110.908 110.160 0.9 1.7 0.9 2001: 2010: I. D-53 May 2010 D. Charts All series are seasonally adjusted at annual rates. The percent changes in real gross domestic product are based on quarterto-quarter changes. SELECTED NIPA SERIES T h o u s a n d s o f c h a in e d (2 0 0 5 ) d o lla rs Dec Nov Nov Mar J a n J Iy J ly Nov Jly Mar Mar Nov Dec* REAL GROSS DOMESTIC 40 - -4 0 35 30 30 25 - 20 r 25 - 15 P e rce n t Dec Nov Nov Mar J a n J Iy J ly Nov Jly Mar M ar Nov REAL G RO SS DO M ESTIC P RO DUCT (PERCENT CHANGE) *The Business Cycle Dating Committee of the National Bureau of Economic Research has determined that a peak in U.S. economic activity occurred in December 2007. The peak marks the end of the expansion that began in November 2001 and the beginning of a recession. U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis D-54 SELECTED NIPA SERIES National Data May 2010 May 2010 SELECTED NIPA SERIES S urvey of C urr en t B usiness D-55 D-56 National Data May 2010 SELECTED NIPA SERIES SHARES OF NATIONAL INCOME 2009 1962 W age and salary Supplem ents to wages W age and salary salaries, 5.3% accruals, 51.2% Supplem ents to wages salaries, 12.2% accruals, 56.6% P roprietors’ income, P roprietors’ income, 10.5% 8.5% Rental income Rental income of persons, 2.2% o f persons, 3.5% Corporate profits, 10.7% Corporate profits, 11.8% Net interest and misc. payments, interest and misc. paym ents, 2.7% 6.4% Other, 0.2% Taxes on production and imports, 9.5% O ther 0 5% SHARES OF G RO SS DO M ESTIC PURCHASES Taxes on Production and im ports, 8.3% 2009 1962 Personal consum ption Personal consumption expenditures, 62.5% expenditures, 68.9% Private nonresidential Private nonresidential investm ent, 8.7% investm ent, 10.2% Private residential Private residential investment, 2.5% investment, 5.0% Federal governm ent,’ 7.8% Federal governm ent,* 12.9% State and local governm ent,* 12.2% State and local governm ent,* 9.4% C o n s u m p tio n expenditures and gross investm ent U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis S urvey of C urr en t B usiness May 2010 D-57 SELECTED NIPA SERIES P e rc e n t P e rc e n t P e rc e n t Dec Nov N