View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

NOVEMBER 1964

survey of




CURRENT
BUSINESS

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
OFFICE OF BUSINESS ECONOMICS

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
NOVEMBER 1964

VOL. 44, NO. 11
U.S.

Department of Com mere
Luther II. Hodges
Secretary
Richard H. Holton
Assistant Secretary for
Economic Affairs

Office of Business Economics
George Jaszi
Director
*
*
*
Louis J. Paradiso—M. H. Schwartz
Associate Directors
Murray F. Foss
Editor
K. Celeste Stokes
Billy Jo Hu
Statistics Editor
Graphics

Contents
THE BUSINESS SITUATION

STAFF CONTRIBUTORS
TO THIS ISSUE

PAGE

Summary

1

Government Programs in Fiscal 1965

3

Changes in Consumer Spending and Saving

5

Business Review and Features:
David R. Hull. Jr.
Charles A. Waite
Rohert B. Bretzfelder
Articles:
John A. Gorman
Imogene C. Petersen
Morris R Goldman
Janet B. Riddle
Martin L. MariAlbert A. Schi
moiit
man
Beatrice N. Vac- Irving Stern
cara
Albert J. Wald<
hang
Margaret F. CanEdward O. Bass*
non
Carolyn G. Ber
Norman Frumhard
kin

ARTICLES
Recent Financial Developments
The Interindustry Structure of the United States
A Report on the 1958 Input-Output Study

NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT TABLES

10
30

Subscription prices, including weekly 81
tistical supplements, are $6 a year for c
mestic and $9.75 for foreign mailing. Sin;
issue 45 cents.
Make checks payable to the Superi
tendent of Documents and send to U
Government Printing Office, Washingtc
D.C., 20402, or to any U.S. Department
Commerce Field Office.

MONTHLY BUSINESS STATISTICS
General

S1-S24

Industry

S24-S10

Subject Index

Inside Back Cover

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE FIELD OFFICES
Albuquerque, N. Mex.,87101, U.S. Courthouse. Phone
247-0311.
Anchorage, Alaska, 99501, Loussac-Sogn Bldg. BR
2-9611.
Atlanta, Ga., 30303 75 Forsyth St. NW. JA 2-4121.
Baltimore, Md., 21200, 305 U.S. Customhouse PL
2-8460
Birmingham, Ala., 35203, 2030 Third Ave. N Phone
325-3131.
Boston, Mass., 02110, 80 Federal St. CA 3-2312.
Buffalo, N.Y., 14203, 117 EUicott St. 842-3208
Charleston, S.C., 29401, No. 4 North Atlantic Wharf.
Phone 722-6551.
Charleston, W. Va., 25301, 500 Quarrier St. Phone 3436196.
Cheyenne, Wyo., 82001, 16th St. and Capitol Ave.
Phone 634-5920.
Chicago, III., 60604, 1486 New Federal Bldg. Phone
828-4400.
Cincinnati, Ohio, 45202, 550 Main Street. Phone 3812200.
Cleveland, Ohio, 44101, E. 6th St. and Superior Ave.
Phone 241-7900.




Dallas, Tex., 75202, 1114 Commerce St. RI 9-3287.
Denver, Colo., 80202, 142 New Customhouse. Phone
297-3246
Des Moines, Iowa, 50309 1216 Paramount Bldg. Phone
284-4222
Detroit, Mich., 48226, 445 Federal Bldg. Phone 226-6088Greensboro, N.C., 27402, 407 U.S. Post Office Bldg.
Phone 275-9111.
Hartford, Conn., 06103, 18 Asylum St. Phone 244-3530.
Honolulu, Hawaii, 96813, 202 International Savings
Bldg. Phone 588-667.
Houston, Tex., 77002, 515 Rusk Ave. Phone 228-0611.
Jacksonville, Fla., 32202, 512 Ureenleaf Bldg. Phone 3547111.
Kansas City, Mo., 64106, 911 Walnut St. BA 1-7000.
Los Angeles, Calif., 90015, 1031 S. Broadway. Phone
688-2833.
Memphis, Tenn., 38103, 345 Federal Office Bldg. 5343214.
Miami, Fla., 33130, 51 S.W. First Ave. Phone 350-5267.
Milwaukee, Wis., 53203, 238 W. Wisconsin Ave. BR
2-8600.
Minneapolis, Minn., 55401, Federal Bldg. Phone 3342133.

New Orleans, La., 70130, 333 St. Charles Ave. Phone
527-6546.
New York, N.Y., 10001, Empire State Bldg. LO 3-3377
Philadelphia, Pa., 19107, 1015 Chestnut St. Phone 5972850.
Phoenix, Ariz., 85025, 230 N. First Ave. Phone 261-3285.
Pittsburgh, Pa., 15222, 355 Fifth Ave. Phone 644-2851.
Portland, Oreg., 97204, 217 Old U.S. Courthouse Bldg.
Phone 226-3361.
Reno, Nev., 89502, 1479 Wells Ave. FA 2-7133.
Richmond, Va., 23240, 2105 Federal Bldg. Phone 6493611.
St. Louis, Mo., 63103, 2511 Federal Bldg. MA 2-4243.
Salt Lake City, Utah, 84111, 125 South State St. Phone
524-5116.
San Francisco, Calif., 94102, 450 Golden Gate Ave.
556-5864.
Santurce, Puerto Rico, 00907, 605 Condado Ave. Phone
723-4640.
Savannah, Ga., 31402, 235 U.S. Courthouse and P.O.
Bldg. AD 2-4755.
Seattle, Wash., 98104, 809 Federal Office Bldg. MU
2-3300.

By the Office of Business Economics

tlon
JJUSINESS activity slowed down
in October because of the General
Motors strike. Total employment, retail trade and industrial production
were lower, and personal income rose
very little. If allowance is made for
the loss in jobs, income and production
in the auto industry and for the decline
in retail auto sales, the situation
appears quite favorable. Since the
strike was fully settled in the second
week of the current month, November
should show a pickup. Whether a
resumption of the underlying upward
trend in total activity will be apparent
is still not clear because of walkouts
in several Ford plants.
Third quarter GNP, income and
profits

April and reflected increases in trade
as well as in manufacturing stocks.
Over the quarter personal consump-

Profits Little Changed in 3d Quarter
OVER THE YEAR
• Before tax profits up 13 percent
• After tax profits up 20 percent
Billion $

70

PROFITS BEFORE TAX*
60

50

40

30

The regular estimates of third quarter
GNP and preliminary estimates of
national income and corporate profits
appear in the tables on pages 30-32 .l
On the basis of more complete data
than were available for last month's
preliminary figures, the third quarter
GNP is now estimated at $628%
billion, a rise of $10 billion over the
second quarter. Both the overall
amount and the broad pattern of
change in final sales were not very
different from the numbers presented
in October. The inventory change,
however, was revised upward; the
rise in inventories during the month
of September was the largest since

1961

1962

1964

PROFITS TAX LIABILITY
30

10
1962

1963

40

PROFITS AFTER TAX
30

20

10
1961

1962

1963

Seasonally Adjusted, at Annual Rate

1. Attention is called to the revision of second quarter 1964
Federal personal taxes and nontax receipts, which have been
revised upward by $1.2 billion on the basis of more complete
information. (See tables.)




1964

• Excludes inventory valuation adjustment
U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics

1964

tion expenditures rose $8% billion,
producers' durable equipment and nonresidential construction were up almost
$1% billion, as were State and local
outlays, and net exports. Residential construction eased, Federal Government purchases were lower and the
rate of inventory accumulation fell.
According to preliminary estimates
corporate profits were little changed in
the third quarter from the very high
second quarter rate. As measured for
national income purposes—before taxes
and including the inventory valuation
adjustment—profits exceeded $58 billion at a seasonally adjusted annual
rate. With prices continuing to show
little change, the inventory valuation
adjustment continued to be almost
negligible and book profits also approximated $58 billion.
The year-to-year
changes are
especially impressive: before taxes book
profits are up $6% billion, or 13 percent, while after tax earnings, which
reflect the further effect of the corporate tax cut, are up $5% billion, or
about one-fifth.
October personal income up,
employment lower

With a substantial drop in payrolls
of the automobile industry and many
of its supplying plants, personal income
increased only $0.7 billion in October,
to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of
$498.6 billion. Total payrolls were
unchanged, however, because of moderate increases in payrolls in other
private industries as a group, and a
rather sharp advance in wages and
salaries of State and local government
1

2
employees. Other types of income
increased more than $% billion over the
month.
For the most part the payroll changes
were a reflection of employment
changes. Employment in nonfarm
establishments was down 65,000 over
the month, with durable goods manufacturing off by 250,000.
The unemployment situation did
not change much from September to
October, according to the regular household survey. Although the survey was
taken while the General Motors walkout was in progress, the figures were
not especially affected by the strike,
since those not working as a direct
result of a work stoppage are classified
as "with a job but not at work."
The October unemployment rate was
5.2 percent, the same as the September
figure; in general this ratio has been on
a plateau since May.

SUKYKY OF (TEKKXT BUSINESS
units, the lowest October total since
1961. This was an annual rate of 5/9
million units, far below the third
quarter average of 8% million. Partially offsetting the reduction in auto
sales was an improvement in sales of
furniture and appliance stores, which
had changed little since early summer.
Construction outlays lower

X o v e m b e r 196 4

after remaining virtually unchanged for
6 months. The October rise brought
the index a little above its beginningof-year level. Advances were widespread, and a large part of the overall
increase was attributable to higher
metals prices. Quotations on steel reinforcing bars went up sharply in midmonth and prices of large-diameter steel
pipe were raised toward month-end.
Prices of tin, lead, copper, and zinc rose
considerably.

Construction expenditures, which rose
through the first three quarters of this
year, now appear to be edging downward. Spending for new construction Consumer prices fairly steady
eased from September to October as a
The consumer price index rose 0.2
further gain in private nonresidential percent in September to 108.4 percent
building outlays was more than offset of the 1957-59 average, an increase
by a drop in public activity and a con- about in line with the usual seasonal
tinuation of the decline in private resi- movement. After a rough allowance
dential building. Total outlays for the for seasonally, it appears that higher
month are estimated at a seasonally food and service costs were offset by
adjusted annual rate of $65/2 billion, declines in clothing and automobile
down about 1 percent from the third prices.
quarter average.
Food costs advanced mainly because
Retail trade reflects auto decline
Private nonresidential construction of higher prices for meats, poultry,
Retail store sales were strong in has been bolstered by the substantial and fish, which reached their high point
October, after allowance for the sharp increases in spending for industrial and of the year. Very heavy marketings
drop in new car sales. While advance commercial facilities. Outlays for in- of cattle dropped wholesale beef quotafigures (seasonally adjusted) show that dustrial construction, now running at a tions during October, and it is likely
overall volume was off 3 percent from $3% billion annual rate, are more than that some reduction in retail prices
September, sales excluding those of 15 percent above the first quarter 1964 also occurred.
auto dealers were up by a comparable average and are at their highest level
Prices of commodities other than
percentage, after a dip in the previous since mid-1957. Commercial construc- food were somewhat lower on balance
month. If there was some diversion tion reached a new peak in October in September. The introduction of fall
of spending from new cars to other despite a further slight decline in apparel lines was not accompanied by
price increases as large as those of other
types of goods last month it does not construction of office buildings.
The downtrend in private residential recent years. New car prices declined
seem to have been very large. October
retail sales, not counting the automo- construction reflects the decline in non- somewhat more than seasonally, as
tive group, did not appear to be un- farm housing starts that has been dealers made intensive efforts to reduce
usually high gaged against the month- underway since early this year. Pri- stocks of 1964 models, and used car
prices edged down again under the
to-month changes since early this year. vate residential construction expenditures reached an annual rate of more pressure of mounting used car invenSales at nondurable goods outlets
than $28 billion in March and have tories. The new 1965 models, whic
reached a new high in October, up about since dropped fairly steadily, to a did not affect the September index,
2 percent from September, with good- $25% billion rate in October.
were introduced at very slightly higher
sized increases in most kinds of business.
prices. It is possible that some firming
Durable goods stores reported a 13- Wholesale prices up a little
in auto prices, both new and used, may
Wholesale prices of industrial com- have come about in October because of
percent decline over the month. Sales
of new domestic cars fell to 566,000 modities rose 0.4 percent in October, the strike.




Government Programs in Fiscal 1965
IN fiscal year 1965 Federal Government
purchases of goods and services—that
part of Federal expenditures in the
GNP—are expected to continue at the
previous year's level, with offsetting
changes occurring in the defense and
nondefense outlays, according to the
Review oj the 1965 Budget, recently
released by the Budget Bureau.
The expected stability of Federal
purchases stands in contrast with a
$2)2 billion rise last year, and annual
increases that have averaged over $8)2
billion since fiscal 1961. Other types
of Federal expenditures, primarily for
transfer payments, grants to State and
local governments, and interest, are
expected to increase over $2% billion,
thereby adding to purchasing power
and spending in other sectors of the
economy.
Table 1, based on the Review of the
1965 Budget, summarizes the fiscal

Change in Federal Purchases
of Goods and Services
Billion $

1959

60

61

62

63

64

65 *

Fiscal Years
Change From Preceding Year
* Estimated


U.S. Department
of Commerce, Office of Business Economics


Data: Budget Bureau & QBE
64-11-2

position of the Federal Government in lagged behind Budget expenditures in
terms of the administrative budget, fiscal 1964, are expected to run ahead
the consolidated cash statement, and in fiscal 1965. Table 2 contains a
the national income and product ac- reconciliation between the various
counts. (See note to this table for budgets.
the principal differences.) Adminisbillion
trative budget expenditures are ex- Federal receipts up
pected to total over $97 billion, $%
The $3K billion increase in Federal
billion less than in fiscal 1964 and receipts on a national income basis for
nearly $% billion less than estimated in fiscal 1965 over the preceding year
last January's budget. Receipts are assumes a continued rise in personal
estimated at $9 1)2 billion, over $2 income throughout the remainder of
billion above fiscal year 1964 but the fiscal year. Nevertheless, personal
$ll/2 billion below the earlier estimate. tax and nontax receipts will not conThe revision from the January estimate tribute to the expansion of Federal
reflects the fact that under the Revenue revenues, because of the estimated
Act of 1964, withholding rates w^ere $9 billion tax cut. These taxes are
reduced one month later than had projected to drop $% billion from fiscal
been assumed in January. In addition, 1964 levels. The decline is not large
certain structural tax changes assumed because, in addition to the anticipated
at that time were not incorporated in rise in personal income, refunds in 1965
the Revenue Act.
on 1964 tax payments will be lower
On a consolidated cash statement than usual and final settlements will be
basis, estimated expenditures of more higher. This is largely because the
than $122 billion are expected to ex- decline in tax liability which became
ceed receipts by about $3K billion. In
terms of the national income and prod- Table 1. — Federal Government Receipts and
Expenditures, 1963-65
uct accounts, expenditures in fiscal 1965
[Billions of dollars]
will rise about $2% billion from fiscal
1964 levels to over $121 billion, slightly
Fiscal years
less than the January estimate. Re1963
1964
1965
ceipts, at $118 billion, will fall short of
Jan.
Nov.
expenditures by nearly $3^ billion, and
1964
1964
Actual
esti- estiwill be more than $% billion below the
mate mate
earlier estimate.
Budget:
On all three bases, the estimated Administrative
91.5
86.4 89.4 93.0
Receipts
97.2
92.6 97.7 97.9
Expenditures
fiscal 1965 deficit is smaller than that
-5.7
-6.3 -8.3 -4.9
Surplus or deficit (— )
in fiscal 1964. The anticipated 1964- Consolidated Cash Statement:
65 decline in the Federal deficit on a
109.7 115.4 119.7 118.8
Receipts
113.8 120.1 122.7 122.2
Expenditures national accounts basis, at about $%
-3.5
-4.0 -4.7 -2.9
Surplus or deficit (— )
billion, may be compared with a drop National Income and Product Account:
of over $2K billion in the administra118.0
109.6 114.7 118.8
Receipts
112.3 118.5 121.5 121.2
Expenditures
tive budget and one of close to
-2.8 -3.9 -2.8 -3.2
Surplus or deficit (— )
billion in the cash statement deficits.
difference between the administrative budget
The smaller decrease in the national andNOTE.—The
the cash budget is largely accounted for by the inclusion
in
the
latter
of
trust
transactions. The national income
income and product deficit reflects the and product accountfund
includes trust fund transactions, but
differs
in
definition
from
the
budget in several important
expected decline in expenditures for respects. Corporate profits cash
taxes are recorded on an accrual
rather
than
a
cash
collections
basis;
transactions are
loans and other financial transactions either omitted or involve differences inloan
timing; the acquisition
of
financial
and
second-hand
assets
are
excluded; and
which are excluded from the national an adjustment for the lag between deliveries and
payments
for
goods
is
incorporated.
income accounts. In addition, deSources: Review of the 1965 Budget, and Office of Business
liveries of military hard goods, which Economics.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
effective with the Revenue Act of 1964
is expected to be less than the drop in
withholding tax collections under the
new 14 percent withholding rate. Net

settlements in the first half of 1965 on
calendar 1964 income are expected to
total between $1 billion and $2 billion
more than they customarily do.

Table 2.—Reconciliation of Estimated Federal Receipts and Expenditures, Budget and
National Income Accounts, Fiscal 1965
[Billions of dollars]

RECEIPTS
Budget receipts

91.5

Less: Intragovernmental transactions
Receipts from exercise of monetary authority
Plus: Trust fund receipts

4. 3
.1
31. 7

Equals: Federal receipts from the public (consolidated cash receipts)

118.8

Adjustments for agency coverage:
Less: District of Columbia revenuesAdjustments for netting and consolidation:
Plus: Contributions to Federal employees' retirement funds, etc
Less: Interest, dividends, and other earnings
Adjustments for timing:
Plus: Excess of corporate tax accruals over collections; personal taxes, social insurance contributions, etc..
Adjustments for capital transactions: l
Less: Realization upon loans and investments, sale of government property, etc

.4
.1
1.

Equals: Receipts—national income accounts

...

-.2

.__

1.1

• _ . _ 118.0

EXPENDITURES
Buget expenditures

97.2

Less: Intragovernmental transactions
Accrued interest and other non-cash expenditures (net)
Plus: Trust fund expenditures
Government-sponsored enterprise expenditures (net)

4. 3
.5
29.3
.3

Equals: Federal payments to the public (consolidated cash expenditures)

121.9

Adjustments for agency coverage:
Less: District of Columbia expenditures-

.4

Adjustments for netting and consolidation:
Plus: Contributions to Federal employees' retirement funds, etc
Less: Interest received and proceeds of government sales
Adjustments for timing:
Plus: Excess of interest accruals over payments on savings bonds and Treasury bills
Excess of deliveries
over expenditures
Miscellaneous 2
Less: Commodity Credit Corporation foreign currency exchanges.-.
Adjustments for capital transactions:1
Less: Loans—FNMA secondary market mortgage purchases, redemption of IMF notes, etc
Trust and deposit fund items
Purchase of land and existing assets

2.1
.3

.6
.3
.5
.1
3. 1
.0
.3

Equals: Expenditures—national income accounts

121.2

1. Consist of transactions in financial assets and liabilities, land and secondhand assets. Acquisition of newly produced
tangible assets are included in expenditures for goods and services as defined in the national income and product accounts.
2. Includes net change in Commodity Credit Corporation guaranteed non-recourse loans and increase in clearing account.
Sources: Bureau of the Budget and U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics.
Table 3.—Federal Government Receipts and Expenditures on National Income and
Product Account Basis, Fiscal 1963-65
[Billions of dollars]
Fiscal years
1963

1964

Actual

Federal government receipts
Personal tax and nontax receipts _
Corporate profits tax accruals
Indirect business tax and nontax accruals _
Contributions for social insurance
Federal government expenditures
Purchases of goods and services
National defense
Transfer payments
To persons
Foreign (net)- _ _ _ _ _
Grants-in-aid to State and local governments
Net interest paid _ _ _
_ _
Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises -_ _
Surplus or deficit (— ) on income and product
account
1. Estimate from Review of the 1965 Budget.

1964

1963
III

1965 i
Jan.
1964
estimate i

Nov.
1964
estimate^

IV

I

II

III

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates

' 112. 3 r> 114. 0
48.2
'47.3
24.4
p 24.4
16.4
16.6
24.2
24.7
120.2
119.2
67.1
65.5
55.2
57.0
30.7
30.8
29.1
29.1
1.6
1.7

109.6
50.1
22.1
15.2
22.1
112.3
63.6
53.9
29.2
27.6
1.6

114.7
51.4
23.5
16.0
23.8
118.5
66.1
56.2
30.4
28.8
1.6

118.8
52.3
24.9
17.3
24.2
121.5
69.1
58.5
31.8
30.1
1.7

118.0
50.7
25.7
16.8
24.8
121.2
66.2
55.8
31.6
30.0
1.6

114.2
52.2
23.0
15.7
23.2
114.9
64.4
55.5
29.6
28.0
1.6

117.2
53.4
24.4
15.9
23.5
116.6
64.9
55.3
30.3
28.6
1.7

114.8
51.2
23.9
15.9
23.9
117.2
64.3
54.0
31.1
29.5
1.5

8.3
7.4

9.8
8.1

9.7
8.5

11.0
8.6

9.4
7.8

9.9
7.9

9.8
8.3

3.7

3.5

3.7

3.6

3.9

—. 7

.6

-2.4

'-7.8

" -5.2

3.8

4.1

2.5

3.8

-2.8

-3.9

-2.8

-3.2

r

Revised.

p Preliminary.


Sources: Bureau of the Budget, Treasury Department, and Department of Commerce.


10.4
8.4

10.6
8.4

November 1964

Corporate profits tax accruals for
fiscal 1965 are expected to rise over $2
billion above fiscal 1964 levels despite a
reduction in the top corporate rate
52 percent to 50 percent in calendar
1964 and from 50 percent to 48 percent
in calendar 1965. There will be no
further change in the current 22 percent rate on the first $25,000 of taxable
income. The mid-year budget estimates assume that calendar 1964
corporate profits before taxes will be
$58 billion, $2 billion above the level
assumed in the January budget and
more than $6.5 billion greater than
profits in calendar 1963.
The anticipated rise in economic
activity should boost indirect business
tax accruals by over $% billion in
fiscal 1965,
$K billion below the
earlier forecast. Returns from excise
taxes on automobiles and liquor, as
well as customs duties, account for a
major part of the increase over fiscal
1964. No reduction or elimination of
current excise taxes is implied in the
projection of fiscal 1965 receipts.
Social insurance contributions are
expected to rise $1.0 billion from fiscal
1964 due chiefly to rising levels of
income. The last statutory increase
in the tax rate for OASI contributions
was in January 1963; the next is
scheduled for January 1966.
Defense purchases decline

Defense purchases are estimated to
edge below $56 billion, off less than
$y2 billion from fiscal 1964. This is
counterbalanced in the total of Federal
purchases by a rise in the nondefense
outlays to a total of about $11^
billion.
The lower defense outlays can be
attributed to the estimated reduction
of nearly $1% billion in expenditures
for military functions of the Department of Defense and for military assistance. The drop reflects the effect of
Congressional reductions in appropriations and the impact of the Department's cost reduction program. Most
of the reduction is in procurement expenditures, where the strengthening of
current strategic retaliatory forces—
Polaris missiles, for example—is nearing
desired levels. Some decline is also
expected in research, development, test
(Continued on page 30)

Changes in Consumer Spending and Saving
CONTINUING to reflect the stimulus
of the tax cut, consumer demand
expanded rapidly during the summer
quarter, increasing $8% billion or more
than 2 percent from the second quarter
rate. This gain exceeded the $5K

Recent Changes in Personal Income
And Its Disposition
Billion $ Change
15

PERSONAL INCOME, TOTAL
10

2

3 4 I 1 2

3

4 I 1 2

3 4 I 1 2

3

PERSONAL TAXES

Tax cut reflected in stepped up
demand

-5
15

DISPOSABLE PERSONAL INCOME
10

2

10

billion rise in disposable (after-tax)
income in the quarter, and personal
saving fell $3 billion. Thus, the saving
rate fell after its sharp rise the quarter
before.
Auto buying, after hesitating toward
the end of the second quarter, was up
$1K billion in the summer and accounted for one-fifth of the entire
third quarter rise in consumer expenditures. Domestic car sales were at a
record 8% million seasonally adjusted
annual rate. Sales of a wide variety
of nondurable goods, especially food
and clothing, continued to increase
vigorously. On the other hand, sales
of durables other than autos were little
changed after three successive rapid
quarterly gains. Consumer services
continued to advance at a slightly
faster pace, with the rise exceeding $2%
billion or 1 percent per quarter.

3

4

M

2

3

4

l

l

2

3

4

l

l

2

3

CONSUMER EXPENDITURES

SAVING

2 3 4 l l
1961

2 3
1962

2

3

4

1963

Change From Preceding Quarter
Seasonally Adjusted, at Annual Rate
U.S. Department ot Commerce, Office of Business Economics




l

2
1964

3

Since the closing quarter of 1963—
the quarter preceding the tax cut—disposable income has risen $24% billion,
or 6 percent. About two-thirds of the
recent increase is traceable directly to
the continued strong advance in personal income and about one-third to the
tax cut. During this period, consumption expenditures have risen $23% billion, or more than 6 percent. Only
once before—during the period of scare
buying early in the Korean War—was
there a larger three-quarter gain.
The vigorous advance of consumer
demand over the last 9 months has
been strong enough to absorb most of
the large increase in disposable income.
At $31 billion in the third quarter,
personal saving was up only $1%
billion over this period. The saving
rate, after approaching 8 percent in the
spring, fell back to about 7 percent in
the summer. The latter was about
equal to the rate in the fourth quarter

of 1963 and was only slightly different
from the post-Korean average of 7.2
percent.
Recent Saving Rate Swing is
Typical
The large rise in the saving rate in
the second quarter and the subsequent
decline in the latest quarter are broadly
typical of the saving rate swings that
have occurred in other postwar periods
when there has been an exceptionally
large gain in DPI in one quarter and a
more moderate advance in the next.
Usually quarterly changes in disposable income and the associated changes
in the saving rate are comparatively

Response of Personal Saving Rate to
Spurts in Disposable Personal Income
Saving rate jumps initially ami
then usually falls back
Percent*
SAVING RATE

1958-

1955

-3

-2

-1

0**

1

2

3

Qtrs. before peak gains in

Qtrs. after peak gains in

Disposable Personal Income

Disposable Personal Income

*Saving as a percent of Disposable Personal Income
**Peak gains in Disposable Personal Income are defined as those
in which DPI increased by 2 1/4 percent or more
U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics

64-1

6

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964

Saving Rate arid Large Increases in
panied by an increase in the saving rate
Disposable Personal Income
of 1 percentage point. The chart on
[Change from preceding quarter]
page 5 shows the personal saving rate
Quarter of large increase
for the five post-Korean War quarters
Subsequent
quarter
in which disposable income has inDisposable Saving rate Saving rate
creased by more than 2% percent.
Year and quarter
personal (percentage (percentage
income
points)
The following text table gives similar
points)
(percent)
data for these five quarters and for the
four quarters between the close of the 1947 III
4.6
2 5
— 4
II
52
1 4
33
Second World War and the opening 1948
1948 III
3.1
1 4
— 6
19501
6.1
—1 7
4 8
of the Korean War, in which there were
1955 II
3.1
— 5
1 0
large income gains.
5
1956 II
2.3
1 2
11
2 4
1958 III
— 7
To round out the picture—it is 1959 II
1
2.5
— 9
9
2.6
interesting to note that in each of the 1964 II
3.5
Average
— 4
1 8
seven postwar quarters when disposable
income declined, the saving rate also
NOTE.—Includes all quarters 1947-64 (excluding the Korean
War) in which disposable personal income increased by 2H
fell. Thus, changes in the saving rate percent
or more.
in the short run serve to absorb much
of the large increases and some of the
decreases in spendable income; con- The third quarter 1964 decline in the
versely, the income changes are reflected saving rate of 0.8 percentage points was
more gradually in personal consumption. also approximately in line with postwar
experience. (See table and chart.) In
seven of the nine quarters following the
initial large jumps in income and saving,
Consumer Demand Sharply Higher This Year
the saving rate fell back. In many of
these quarters, the drop in the ratio
Billion Dollar Change (Average Per Quarter,
reflected a sharp rise in consumer buying of durable goods. Thus, in a
typical sequence, a large gain in disPERSONAL
DISPOSABLE
posable income seems to be reflected
CONSUMPTION
PERSONAL
EXPENDITURES
INCOME
initially in a large gain in the saving
rate and, in the following quarter, in
11961-E 1962
a jump in spending on durable goods.
If 1962-ff 1963
However
no regularity of behavior has
H1963-IE1964
been observed in the saving rate beyond
the first quarter following the large
increases in income.
In the third quarter of 1948—one of
the two atypical quarters in which the
saving rate did not fall back—income
rose by a large amount for the second
successive time. In the other excepServices
TOTAL
Goods
Autos
TOTAL
Excluding Autos
and Parts
tional case—third quarter of 1956—
and Parts
consumer spending on durables was
Seasonally Adjusted, at Annual Rates
falling back from the abnormally high
levels of late 1955-early 1956.

small. During the postwar period most
quarterly changes in income have
varied in a rather narrow range—from
slightly less than % percent to approximately 2 percent. The changes in the
saving rate in these quarters have fallen
mostly in the range between % and
minus \% percentage points. For all
of these particular quarters taken
together, changes in the saving rate
have averaged close to zero.
"Large" quarterly increases in DPI
have been comparatively rare in the
postwar. If the entire Korean experience is disregarded, there have been
only nine quarters when disposable income has increased by more than 2%
percent. In all but one of -these nine
quarters the saving rate has increased
by more than a full percentage point.
In the second quarter of this year a
2% percent rise in DPI was accom-

U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics




Q

by JOHN A. GORMAN

Recent Financial Developments
i

NVESTMENT, saving, and borrowing have shown little change in the
aggregate over the first nine months of
this year despite wide swings in components. Among the various investment categories, business fixed asset
spending moved up sharply, while
inventory investment and residential
construction declined. A $10 billion
rise in total private saving was matched
by a shift of similar amount from a
Government surplus to a deficit on
national income and product account.
So far this year, this pattern of
stability in aggregate measures and
wide swings in components has been
evident also in financial flows. As
compared with the final quarter of
1963, there were increases in corporate
security issues, consumer credit, oneto four-family residential mortgages,
and Federal Government borrowing,
but reductions in bank lending to
business, multifamily residential and
commercial mortgages, and State and
local security issues.
There was little movement in interest
rates over this period: at the end of
September both short- and long-term
interest rates were little changed from
the levels reached at the beginning of
the year.

securities and resumed purchasing taxexempt securities on a substantial scale.
With a higher portion of credit expansion taking the form of demand
deposits this year than in other recent
years, a larger volume of Federal Reserve open market purchases was required to maintain an adequate level
of bank reserves.
Corporations step up investment

Nonfinancial corporations stepped up
their fixed investment by an average

Output, Money, and Interest Rates
Since I960 the money supply has accelerated relative, to output, . .
Billion $
800




(ratio scale)

Billion $

600

Gross National Product
at annual rates ^
(left scale)

400

300

225

^_-

_-^'--'"

^
150

Money Supply, Including
Time Deposits
end of quarter

150

(right scale)

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I l I I I ! I I II
1946
48
50

I I I I I I I I I 1I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ! I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
52
54
56
58
60
62
64

100

Seasonally Adjusted

Monetary policy easy

During the first three quarters of
1964, the Federal Reserve continued
its stimulative credit policy. It supplied reserves to the banking system
by purchasing Treasury securities in
quantities adequate to permit a nearrecord growth in bank credit, without
increases in bank borrowing from the
Federal Reserve.
The ready availability of reserves
encouraged banks to continue to extend
credit at a near-record pace (see chart).
Loans rose sharply during the second
quarter, but as demand eased during
the summer quarter, banks rebuilt
their holdings of U.S. Government

of $1 billion per quarter during the
first nine months of the current year
at seasonally adjusted annual rates.
This was the fastest rate of increase
since the 1956-57 investment boom.
The pace of corporate spending quickened in all major industries, but was
particularly sharp in manufacturing.
Public utility investment spurted, with
the rate approaching the previous
record set in 1957.
The increase in fixed investment was
almost exactly matched by a wide-

diul the rise in long-term interest rates IKIS moderated
Percent

Percent

5

5

Yield on Long-Term
U.S. Government Taxable Bonds

i i I i i i I i i i I i i i I i i i Ii i i | i i iI
56
58
60
62
Data: OBE-FRB
U.S. Department ot Commerce, Office ot Business Economics

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

8
spread decline in the pace of corporate
inventory buying. Total corporate purchases of physical assets were thus approximately unchanged over the period
under review.
Since the start of the year, the rate
of increase in total corporate internal
funds was the sharpest recorded during
the postwar era except for the initial
quarters of recovery from cyclical lows.
The cut in corporate taxes was a major
factor in this rapid increase but continued growth in business activity also
contributed to the advance.
With internal funds expanding and little
change in total investment outlays, corporations continued to add substantial

Bank Credit Easy
With substantial credit available .

8

TOTAL LOANS AND INVESTMENTS

TOTAL LOANS

4usmg their Federal security portfolios
to absorb short-term swings
U.S. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

i

i

I

i

i

i

I

1962

1963

1960

1961

1962

1963

1964

1960

1961

1962

I

i

i

1962
1963
Change From Preceding Quarte

Seasonally Adjusted
U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business



1963

46.2

52.3

59.2

62.5

23.3

20.3

27.1

29.3

28.3

22.9

32.0

32.1

33.3

29.1

29.7
5.6
24.1

35.2
7.7
27.5

36.8
8.0
28.8

15.1
3.8
11.3

14.3
2.4
11.8

17.6

13.5

18.3
4.0
14.2

20.4
54
15.0

14.0
2.4
11.5

15.5
3.2
12.3

17.6
3.7
13.9

18.7
4.0
14.6

9.8
30

11.8
4 5
5 1
2.2

11.3
2 1
5.0
4.2

10.9
6
5.2
5.0

4.6
16
2.0
1.0

6.5
2 8
2.7
.9

5.9
14

5 0
1.7

2.7
1.7

5.2
.5
2.5
2.2

7.1
2 1
2.9
2.1

5.2
14
3.1
.8

5.3
1.7
2.4
1.3

5.4
6
2.3
2.5

5.7
1
2.8
2.8

7.4
1.3
4.5
-1.6
3 2

10.8
.4
7.4
.7
2 3

12.7
3.0
5.6
.9
3 2

3.6 -.5
14.8
4.3
1.3 — .4
9?
.7
6.8
-2.1
-2.4
1.2
2 5
2.5
13

3.7
.6
1.3

3.7
(5)
2.2
.8
.7

11.3

-.5
2.2

5.8
.8
( 5 ) -1.7
4.6
1.7
-.8 -1.0
2.0
1.9

6.7
2.8
1. 1

9.1
2.4
4.3
1.4
1.0

9.0
4.3
2.2
2.0
.4

43.8

48.8

54.4

58.4

21.7

19.8

25.3

26.2

26.9

22.1

28.9

29.0

32.2

33.3
30.8
2.5

30.9
29.6
1.3

36.4
32.0
4.4

37.5
33.8
3.7

18.7
14.6
4.1

14.5
13.9
.6

19.0
15.1
4.0

18.4
15.4
2.9

20.7 14.5
18.0 16.1
2.7 -1.6

16.4
15.7

17.4
16.9
.5

19.2
18.4
.8

Increase in financial assets, total
10.5
8.6
Receivables
Consumer
18
Other
6 9
Cash and U.S. Government
— 1.7
securities
1.0
Cash (including deposits)
—2 6
U S Government securities
3.5
Other assets

17.8
9.9
1
9 8

18.0
11.3
2 2
9 1

20.8
12.9
2 4
10 5

5.3
2.9
4. 1
2.9
1 —2 0
4. 1
4.8

6.3
5.4
— .3
5.7

7.8
6.3
—.4
6.7

6.2
5.3
— .1
53

12.5
7.0
2. 1
5.0

11.6
5.9
2. 5
3.4

13.0
6.6
2.8
3.8

3.6
3.8
— 2
4.3

2.0
1.8
3
4.7

. 1 -2.6 -2.5 -2.4
3.6
1.9
3.7
.2 -2.4 — 2.6 -2.0
3.0
_ i — 3
1 — 4 —1 0 I — 1
3.5
4.0
1.1 | 2.0
2.4
3.3

4.7
4.2
5
1.1

4.5
4.2
3
1.9

Sources, total
Internal sources, total4 __
Retained profits
Depreciation

. . ..

6.2

22.9

External long-term sources, total
Stocks
Bonds
Other debt
Short-term sources, total
Bank loans
__ _
Trade payables..
Federal income tax liabilities
Other
Uses, total
Increase in physical assets, total
Plant and equipment
Inventories (book value)

(uses

less

2.0 -3.6
1.7 -2.0
4
16
2.4
5.9

—2 4 —3 5 —4 9 —4 1 — 1 6

current advance

STATE AND LOCAL SECURITIES

1961

1961

Corporations more liquid during

and banks have added to tax-exempt holdin

i

1960

Seconc half 3

First hal f 3

Ye ar

amounts to their liquid assets, as they
have throughout the present expansion.
Despite the improvement in corporate liquidity, there was a stepup
in long-term external financing. In
part this heightened use of external
funds reflected the fact that certain
industries which normally rely substantially on external funds—e.g., utilities, and real estate firms—expanded
their investment outlays.

4-

—4

[Billions of dollars]

4.0

— 5 — 1 8 —3 1 — 1 4

7.6
4.5
1.7
2.8

0

—3 1 i

3 1

I

-M

1. Data for 1946-55 may be found in table V-10 of U.S. Income and Output, and 1956-59 estimates are in table 34 of July
1962 Survey.
2. Excludes banks and insurance companies.
3. Since the data are not adjusted for seasonal variation the first halves of successive years are shown together to facilitate
analysis, as are the second halves.
4. Includes depletion.
5. Less than $50 million.
Sources: U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics, based on Securities and Exchange Commission
and other financial data.

bank lending has been high .
8

Table 1.—Sources and Uses of Corporate Funds, Annual, 1960-63; Half Years, 1960-64 12

Discrepancy
sources)

Billion Dollar Change

November 1964

Economics

1964

Data: FRB

Corporations have been more liquid
than they have been in prior periods of
economic expansion. Many factors
have contributed to this difference.
Most striking, perhaps, has been the
continued rise in internal funds throughout the current expansion. During
previous expansions, there was a distinct tendency for profits—and therefore internal funds—to level off and
then decline as the economic advance
matured. This time, profits have
tended to rise throughout the business
expansion. A number of Federal
actions affecting taxes during recent
years have also tended to raise internal

funds: during 1962, depreciation rules
were liberalized and the investment
credit instituted; while this year there
was a cut in corporate income tax rate.
A lower rate of inventory accumulation also contributed to greater liquidity
this time; the increase in inventories
has not been enough to keep inventorysales ratios from falling, in contrast to
the rapid buildups which occurred
during prior advances. The rise in
plant and equipment spending this
time has also been somewhat smaller
than in earlier business expansions. In
the current expansion the better profits
position relative to investment requirements has been reflected both in the
reduced importance of external longterm financing and in the buildup of
corporate liquid assets. In earlier periods, firms stepped up their external
long-term financing as the expansion
wore on and drew upon previously
accumulated liquid assets to finance
some of their expanded investment
outlays.
Consumer borrowing continues rise

Neither the marked rise in personal
saving during the second quarter nor

November 1964

the return to a more normal saving
rate in the third seemed to have any
significant effect on consumer borrowing, which continued to rise throughout the period under review. In large
part this reflects the fact that much
consumer borrowing is associated with
the purchase of autos and other bigticket items, which have moved up this
year.
A large part of the increase in borrowing was to finance larger sales of
residential housing. Although housing
starts declined, purchases of new and
existing houses continued to rise, as did
extensions of one- to four-family mortgage debt. With only a moderate
increase in the volume of debt repayments, record amounts have been added
to consumer and mortgage debt this
year.
On the whole, individuals continued
to add substantially to their holdings
of liquid assets during the past three
quarters. There was some shift away
from time deposits and savings and
loan shares toward currency and demand deposits.
There was much evidence of renewed
participation by individuals in the
stock market: several major stock issues
had substantial participation on the
part of small investors and there has
been a marked increase in mutual fund
and odd-lot purchases. Together with
heightened institutional activity, this
expansion of individual interest has
helped to increase stock prices throughout the year. By September, the
Standard and Poor index of industrial
stock prices stood 13 percent above the
level at the opening of 1964.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS


747-577 O - 64 - 2


were higher than accruals, both because
of a speedup in tax payment schedules,
and because a substantial volume of
taxes were being collected on income
taxed at the higher 1963 rates.

to finance the swing in the deficit, had
this deficit been fully reflected in the
cash position of the Government. The
need for borrowing was minimized by
the fact that corporation tax payments

Table 2.—Sources and Uses of Corporate Funds by Industry, 1957-64
(Billions of dollars)
Years ended June 30

Calendar years

1964

1957

1958

1959

1960

1961

1962

1963

1958

1959

1960

1961

1962

1963

18.6

17.0

25.4

19.6

23.8

25.8

28.5

14.9

26.0

21.8

18.6

26.7

27.2

28.5

4.4
9.9
3.1
.4
1.9
-2.5

7.2
10.5
2.3
.4
1.4
6.0

6.7
10.9
1.3
.3
.2
2.9

4.5
11.3
2.5
.4
1.4
.3

6.1
12.6
2.1
-.8
1.8
5.9

6.2
13.8
2.9
-.6
1.6
4.3

8.0
14.4
1.8
-1.0
1.3
4.3

Manufacturing and Mining:
Sources, total

Retained profits l
7.1
Depreciation.
9.6
External long-term sources 2 _ _ - 4.1
Stocks
1.4
Bonds
1.8
Short-term sources 4
-2.3

4.4
10.2
2.9

5.7
11.1
1.6
.4
.5
1.2

5.1
11.7
2.6
-.2
2.0
4.5

6.1
6.8
13.5 14.1
2.4
2.6
-.6 -1.0
1.5
1.8
3.8
5.1

2.2
-.4

7.5
10.6
1.4
.5
.3
5.8

14.0

22.5

16.3

22.2

22.9

25.7

11.6

24.8

18.3

16.5

23.8

24.5

25.4

Plant and equipment
17.0 12.2
Inventories (book value)
.8 -2.3
Receivables and misc. assets. _.
.1
2.6
Cash and U.S. Government
securities.
-.6
1.4

12.9
4.4
3.9

15.3
1.0
2.3

14.5
1.3
5.1

15.5
2.6
3.1

16.5 15.0
2.2 -2.7
4.8

11.9
3.1
5.2

14.3
3.4
2.7

14.9
-.8
2.6

14.9
3.2
4.8

15.9
2.1
5.1

17.7
1.6
4.2

1.3 -2.3

1.3

1.7

4.6 -2.1

-.2

.9

1.4

1.9

-2.7

-3.1

Uses, total

Discrepancy
sources) _

17.4

(uses less

2.2

-.7

-1.2 -3.0 -2.9 -3.3 -1.6 -2.9 -2.8 -3.3 -1.2 -3.5 -2.1 -2.9

Public Utilities and Communications:
Sources, total
Retained profits !
.
Depreciation
External long-term sources 2
Stocks
Bonds
Short-term sources 4
Uses, total

8.2

8.3

8.7

8.3

8.5

9.1

7.9

8.3

8.2

8.6

8.8

8.5

8.4

9.6

.2
2.8
4.9
1.0
3.8
.3

.2
3.1
4.7
2.1
2.6
.3

.5
3.3
3.8
1.5
2.2
1l

.7
3.6
b.5
1.0
2.6
6

5
3.8
3.8
2.2
1.8
4

.8
4.2
3.4
.9
2.5
7

.8
4.5
1.9
.7
1.3
7

(3)

2.9
5.2
1.5
3.7
1

.4
3.2
3.7
1.8
1.9
1.0

.6
3.5
3.5
1.1
2.3
1.1

.6
3.7
4.3*
2.1
2.5
.2

.6
4.0
3.4
1.0
2.4
.4

.8
4.3
2.3
.8
1.7
1.0

.9
4.6
3.8
2.1
1.8
.2

9.3

9.4

9.0

9.4

9.4

10.1

9.3

9.8

9.1

9.0

10.1

9.1

9.8

11.0

Plant and equipment
9.2
Inventories (book value)
Receivables and misc. assets—
.4
Cash and U.S. Government
securities
— 3

8.7
-.1
.5

8.3
.1
.5

8.8

8.7

9.1

9.1

8.6

8.9

9.1

10.0

.2

.5

.3

.5

8.5
.1
.4

8.7

.7

9.4
.1
.2

.4

.3

.4

.6

3

1

6

6

4

4

1

(3)

10

—.1

.2

.3

1.0

1.2

3

9

1.1

14

1.5

.9

.4

1.3

.7

1.4

1.4

.7

.4

7

4

5

7

10

2

.8

.6

.3

.6

.9

.7

.9
-.2
-.1

.9
-.2

— 2
.8
-.1

— 2
.8
-.2

_ 2
1.0
-.2

_ 2
1.0

— 2
.9
2

— i
.9
-.2

2
.9
-.1

-.3
.8
-.2

-.2
.9
-.2

-.2
1.0

-.2
1.0
-.1

-.2

-.2
.1

-.2
.2

-.1

-.1
.1

-.2

-.3

-.1
.2

2
ll

.1

Discrepancy
sources)..

(uses

less

Railroads:
Sources, total
Retained profits 1
Depreciation,
_ _
External long-term sources 2
Stocks
Bonds _
._
Short-term sources 4

-i
.9

11

(3)
(3)

(3)

.1

(3)

.1

(3)

1.0

.7

1.0

.8

8

9

14

.5

1.3

1.0

.6

.9

1.1

1.5

Plant and equipment ._
1.4
Inventories (book value)
Receivables and rnisc. assets. ._ -.1
Cash and U.S. Government
securities
-.3

.8
-.1

1.0

1.0

.7

.8

1.1

1.2

.7

.8

.8

.9

1.3

(3)

(3)

(3)

.1

1.0
•1

(3)

-.2

.1

.1

.3

-.5

.5

-.1

-.3

.2

.2

.1

.4

.4

.2

.5

.3

.5

.3

.3

.3

.2

".8

1.9

2.5

1.7

2.1

2.3

1.7

1.9

2.2

2.1

(3)

1.7
.1

.1
1.8
.3

1.2
.5

-.1
1.4
.4

-.1
1.4
.4

.1
.1

.3
.4

(3)

(3)

Uses, total

Discrepancy (uses less
sources) __
_
_ __

Government finances

The Federal Government cut taxes
quite sharply early this year. As a
first result of this stimulative move, the
Government's income and product surplus of $K billion in the final quarter of
1963 was reduced to a deficit of $2K
billion in the first quarter of 1964, and
fell further to a deficit of about $8
billion in the second. Rising business
activity and a small decline in expenditures brought the deficit to about $5
billion in the third quarter.
Federal borrowing moved up over
this period. However, the rise was
much less than would have been needed

9

.4

.3

1.5

1.6

(3)

.3

(3)

(3)

(3)

-.1

Transportation other than rail:
Sources, total
Retained profits !
Depreciation
External long-term sources 2
Stocks
Bonds
Short-term sources 4
Uses, total

1.1
.3
.3

1.2
.5
(3)

2.5

1.7

1.9

-.1
1.4
.3

-.1
1.5
.3

.5
.7

.3
.1

.3
.2

(3)

1.3
.5

(3)

1.1
.5
(3)

.4
.1

.4
.3

(3)

(3)

.1
.3

1.7
.2
-.1
.2
.3

1.6
.1

.1
1.8
.3
.3
-.1

1.6

1.3

2.3

2.0

2.0

1.9

1.8

1.3

2.0

2.2

2.0

1.9

2.0

1.9

Plant and equipment _.
1.5
Inventories (book value)
.1
Receivables and misc. assets...
Cash and U.S. Government
securities

1.3

1.8

1.7

1.7

1.8

1.6

1.5

1.4

1.9

1.6

1.8

1.7

1.9

(3)
.1

.4

.2

.3

2

.2

(3)
.1

.3

.3

.1

-.1

-.2

.3

.1

(3)

-.4

-.1

Discrepancy
sources) .
1
2
3
4

(uses less
___ .

.2

.1
-.4

-.2

(3)

.3

-.7

(3)

.3

2

(3)

.1

-.1

-.1

.3

.3

-.2

-.2

Includes depletion.
Also includes long-term bank loans, mortgages, and other long-term debt.
Less than $50 million.
Includes short-term bank loans, trade payables, Federal income tax liabilities, and miscellaneous liabilities.
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics, based on Securities and Exchange Commission, and
other financial data.

by MORRIS R GOLDMAN, MARTIN L. MARIMONT, and BEATRICE N. VACCARA

The Interindustry Structure oi the United States
A Report on the 1958 Input-Output Study
1_ HIS report presents preliminary
results of the 1958 Interindustry Relations Study. The 1958 study is part
of a major new program of the Office of
Business Economics which involves the
periodic preparation of a set of interindustry (input-output) tables as part
of an integrated system of national
accounts.1 Such an expanded system
of integrated national accounts permits
a much more comprehensive understanding of the interaction between the
various industries and final markets of
the economy.
The program was instituted in the
latter half of 1959 in response to a
recommendation of the National Accounts Review Committee which was
set up at the request of the Bureau of
the Budget to evaluate the national
accounts work of the United States.
One of the principal recommendations
made by the Review Committee was
that input-output accounts be prepared
regularly as an important and integral
component of the national accounts.2
The relationship of input-output to the
income and product account.
1. The development of the input-output tool of economic
analysis and the actual construction of the first input-output
tables were the work of Wassily W. Leontief. Professor
Leontief constructed such tables for the United States for
1919, 1929, and 1939. These tables appear in Leontief's
work, The Structure of the American Economy, 1951. The
Bureau of Labor Statistics prepared an input-output table
for 1947 which was released in 1952. These tables were not
integrated with the National Income and Product Accounts.
2. The findings of this committee were published in The
National Fconomic Accounts of the United States, Hearings
Before the Subcommittee on Economic Statistics of the
Joint Economic Committee, Congress of the United States,
1957.
NOTE.—A study of this magnitude requires the efforts of a
large number of people. Important contributions were
made by staff in the Farm Income Branch of the Department
of Agriculture's Economic Research Service and in the
Division of Economic Analysis of the Bureau of Mines.
Within the Office of Business Economics, responsibility for
the estimates centered in the National Economics Division
with important assistance from staff of the National Income
Division.


10


The 1958 input-output table was
prepared as an integral part of the U.S.
national economic accounts. To understand the relationship, it is useful to
review briefly the National Income and
Product Account which provides the
takeoff point for the input-output
account.
The National Income and Product
Account presents the output of the
Nation both in terms of final product
flows and in terms of the basic income
types generated in its production. The
final product flows are show in terms of
sales to consumers (personal consumption expenditures), sales to investors
and inventory change (gross private
domestic investment), sales to government and net sales to foreigners. The
income, referred to in this article as
value added, is shown separately for
compensation of employees, proprietors' income, rental income of persons,
corporate profits, net interest, capital
consumption allowances, indirect business taxes, business transfer payments
and current surplus of government
enterprises less subsidies. The flows
of raw materials, semi-finished products,
and services among the various industries are cancelled. The values of these
flows are reflected in the final output.
The input-output table also shows
final product flows and value added.
The final product flows are shown as
sales by each industry to the same
final markets (consumers, investors,
government and foreigners). The value
added is shown by industry in which
it originates. However, the inputoutput account extends the data to
cover the flows of raw materials, semifinished products and services among
industries as well. In fact, it is the
tracing of these flows which forms the
basis of the major contribution of
input-output.

Usually, input-output data are presented in a table in which each industry
is represented by a row and a column;
each final market by a column; and
value added by one or more rows. The
row for an industry shows the distribution of its output to itself and to other
industries and final markets; the column
shows its consumption of goods and
services of the various industries and
its value added.
Because the 1958 interindustry accounts have been constructed as a
conceptually and statistically integrated
complement of the national income and
product accounts, the measurement of
total GNP as well as of the flows to
each of the final markets (personal
consumption, gross private domestic
investment, government purchases, and
net exports) will be the same in the
two sets of accounts.3 The detail of
the two accounts will differ, however.
In the interindustry accounts the detail
of these various final demand columns
will be by industry (Table A shows the
percent which each industry's sales is
of the total sales to that final market).
For the national income accounts other
types of breakdown are shown.
With respect to value added, 'the
income and product accounts show the
several components separately, e.g.,
compensation of employees, corporate
profits, capital consumption allowances,
etc. The input-output tables included
in this report combine all the components into a single "value added"
row.
While the value added total for
all industries will be identical in the
input-output and the national income
3. The dollar estimates of final markets and value added
implied in the 1958 input-output study will, however, differ
from those which appear in the July 1962 Survey of Current
Business. In the course of developing the 1958 estimates,
both for the input-output table and the national income and
product benchmark, a number of statistical, conceptual, and
definitional changes have been introduced. A revised time
series on National Income and Product which incorporates
these changes will be forthcoming at a later date.

November 1964

accounts, the industrial distribution
will differ. A detailed industry-byindustry reconciliation will be included
in a subsequent publication.
Uses of

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
Table A.—Industrial Composition of Purchases by Final Demand Categories, 1958
(Percent)
Final demand categories 1
Producing industry

input-output

Input-output analysis has a variety
of applications including such diverse
uses as evaluating an individual firm's
sales potential and probing the implications of broad economic programs.
For example, a businessman can compare his company's marketing position
with that of the industry as a whole
and note possible areas of additional
market potential. Moreover, while
companies frequently know the industries which use their products and
services, they less frequently know the
industries which use the products and
services of their customers. Furthermore, their knowledge diminishes rapidly as these relationships are extended
to the customers' customers, and so on.
An approach, such as input-output,
which traces these myriad purchase and
sale relationships permits an understanding of the probable changes in
demand for the products of any given
industry that may result from expected
changes in other industries or markets
which are seemingly unrelated.
Input-output is a powerful tool for
analyzing changes in the economy because it provides a series of links between the demands of final markets and
the outputs of industries. Consequently, it brings into focus the possible
repercussions of changes in gross national product or its components on the
output of each of the industries. For
example, it permits identifying the
industries which are affected directly
and indirectly (and the extent to which
they are affected) by specified changes
in consumer expenditures, by increasing
exports or imports, by changes in the
level of defense expenditures, or by an
expansion of Federal road building
programs.
By use of supplementary data on
the employment required per unit of
output, the output requirement from
each industry can, in turn, be translated
into requirements for employment. In
a parallel fashion, supplementary information on capital and capacity might
be used to shed light on the possible
Digitized
FRASER
needsforfor
additional plant and equiphttp://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
ment.
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

11

Total
1. Livestock and Livestock Products
2 Other Agricultural Products
3. Forestry and Fishery Products
__
4. Agricultural, Forestry and Fishery Services..
5 Iron and Ferroalloy Ores 'Mining
6 Nonferrous Metal Ores Mining
7. Coal Muiing
8. Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas...
__
9 Stone and Clay Mining and Quarrying
10. Chemicals and Fertilizers Mineral Mining . _ . _ _ _ .
11. New Construction
_
12 Maintenance and Repair Construction
13. Ordnance and Accessories
..
14. Food and Kindred Products
.. _
15 Tobacco Manufactures
16. Broad and Narrow Fabrics, Yarn and Thread Mills
17 Misc Textile Goods and Floor Coverings _ _
_
18 Apparel
19 Miscellaneous Fabricated Textile Products
20. Lumber and Wood Products, Except Containers
21. Wooden Containers
_
-22 Household Furniture
23 Other Furniture and Fixtures
_
__ _
24 Paper and Allied Products, Except Containers..
25 Paperboard Containers and Boxes
26 Printing and Publishing
27 Chemicals and Selected Chemical Products
28 Plastics and Synthetic Materials
_
29 Drugs Cleaning and Toilet Preparations
30 Paints and Allied Products
31 Petroleum Refining and Related Industries
32 Rubber and Miscellaneous Plastics Products. . _
33 Leather Tanning and Industrial Leather Products
34 Footwear and Other Leather Products
35 Glass and Glass Products
36 Stone and Clay Products
__ _ . . 37 Primary Iron and Steel Manufacturing
38 Primary Nonferrous Metal Manufacturing
_
3 9 Metal Containers
.___-_
40. Heating, Plumbing and Structural Metal Products
41 Stampings Screw Machine Products & Bolts
42 Other Fabricated Metal Products
- -43 Engines & Turbines
44 Farm Machinery & Equipment
45 Construction Mining & Oil Field Machinery
46 Materials Handling Machinery & Equipment
47 Metalworking Machinery & Equipment
48 Special Industry Machinery & Equipment
49 General Industrial Machinery & Equipment
50 Machine Shop Products
51 Office, Computing & Accounting Machines
52 Service Industry Machines
53 Electric Industrial Equipment & Apparatus
54. Household Appliances
-55 Electric Lighting & Wiring Equipment
56 Radio Television & Communication Equipment
57 Electronic Components & Accessories
58. Misc. Electrical Machinery, Equipment & Supplies
59 Motor Vehicles & Equipment
60 Aircraft & Parts
61. Other Transportation Equipment
_. _ _
62 Scientific & Controlling Instruments _
63 Optical Ophthalmic & Photographic Equipment
6 4 . Miscellaneous Manufacturing
___
_
65 Transportation & Warehousing
66. Communications; Except Radio & T.V. Broadcasting..
67 Radio & T V Broadcasting
68 Electric, Gas, Water & Sanitary Services _. - 69 Wholesale & Retail Trade
70. Finance & Insurance
_
___
_ ._
71. Real Estate & Rental ...
72 Hotels; Personal & Repair Services Exc. Auto
73. Business Services
-_ - _ _ __
74 Research & Development
75. Automobile Repair & Services
76. Amusements
77. Medical, Educational Services & Non-Profit Org
78. Federal Government Enterprises
79 State & Local Government Enterprises
80. Gross Imports of Goods & Services
81. Business Travel, Entertainment & Gifts
82. Office Supplies
.
83. Scrap, Used, Second Hand Goods
__ 84. Government Industry
85. Rest of the World Industry
86. Household Industry
87. Inventory Valuation Adjustment 3

Personal
Gross
Gross
Federal State and
consump- private
Net
exports of Governlocal
tion
fixed inventory2 goods and ment
governexpendi- capital change
services purchases ment
formation
tures
purchases

100. 00

100. 00

100.00

100.00

100.00

100.00

.73
.85
.10

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
59.23
0
0
0
0
0
.07
0
0
.01
0
.20
1.28
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.08
0
.01
0
0
0
0
.02
1.13
0
.27
.92
2.68
2.11
.56
1.85
2.35
1.68
0
1.63
1.53
2.59
.15
.04
1.62
.04
.13
5.73
.57
1.89
.85
.26
.45
.81
.58
0
0
6.01
0
1.94
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.02
0
0
-1.32
0
0
0
0

40.29
28.74
1.29
1.34
-1.54
-2.18
-1.50
-2.70
.24
-.09
0
0
5.64
16.63
-1.71
-6.97
-1.78
-8.27
-.07
4.19
-.63
-.43
.04
-.17
-.08
.71
-1.63
-2.92
3.75
-.25
-12. 48
-2.18
-.17
2.16
-.36
1.85
-10.71
-.65
.90
-4.60
-4.47
-3.22
-4.03
-1.49
4 93
-1.60
-8.81
-7.15
5 46
-.70
-.98
-2.40
-8.92
-4.26
-1.97
-4.79
3 22
-1.64
-35. 46
17 56
-5.05
-.53
.36
2.28
10.30
0
0
0
4.63
0
0
0
0
0
0
1.47
0
0
0
.54
0
0
-13. 78
0
0
0
-20.86

.16
7.52
.13
.01
.17
.02
1.41
.12
.10
.24
.01
0
.07
4.82
1.86
.90
.20
.60
.08
.47
.01
.06
.08
1.11
.08
.40
2.88
1.44
1.38
.12
2.79
.90
.12
.15
.29
.42
2.28
1.30
.11
.96
.12
1.07
.90
.80
3.02
.33
1.41
1.57
1.17
.06
.58
.58
1.20
.70
.27
.86
.38
.30
3.91
2.38
1.27
.78
.38
.49
9.77
.27
.04
.15
5.99
.09
1.09
0
.72
0
0
1.10
.03
.26
.01
.83
0
0
.89
0
18.46
0
0

-.01
2.09
-.26
.08
0
.36
0
0
.02
.02
6.32
1.98
4.24
.41
0
.09
.01
.07
.19
-.01

.03
.07

0
0
0

.09
0
.01
(*)
0
0
.05
15.77
1.46
.25
.26
3.85
.38
.05
0
.83
.04
.29
.01
.84
.07
(*)
1.28
.01
2.50
.45
0
.90
.04
.07
.01
(*)
0
.02
.09
.13
.04
(*)
0
0
.01
.01
0
0
.02
.09
.01
.83
.11
.47
.05
.09
3.17
.01
.25
.12
.16
.87
2 98
1.35
0
2.78
21.22
4.07
13.78
3.26
.65
0
1.51
1.12
7.05
.22
.11
1.33
0
0
(*)
0
-.40
1.21
0

(*)
.05
.05
.13
.01
.17
1.38
.01
.25
.01
1.35
.22
0
.04
(*)
.01
.21
.62
.03
(*)
.17
.21
.45
.01
.15
.25
.32
.06
.37
.08
.14
.12
.34
.04
.03
2.61
.44
.17
.57
12.13
1.22
1.02
.25
.07
2.70
.32
0
.65
1.23
(*)
.21
.46
1.07
9.66
.24
.03
.22
.11
.21
5.07
0
.14
.22
37.24
-1.16
0
0

(*)
-.17
0
0
.15
0
-.03
.03
29.75
8.28
.01
.67
(*)
.02
(*)
.23
(*)
(*)
(*)
.14
.31
.01
(*)
.43
.60
0
.44
(*)
.94
.18
0
(*)
0
.01

(*)0

0
0
.01

.11

.01
.04
.05
.12
.01
.07
.01
.09
.22
.05
.01
(*)

.02
.15

(*)

.08
1.08
(*)
.09
.21
.04
.44
.99
.47
0
1.20
.45
.47
.58
.22
1.37
0
.20
-.11
.77
.17
.01
.01
0
.33
.84
46.99
0
0
0

1
The industrial distribution of final purchases is based on producers' prices. Final purchases are shown net of sales; this
can 2result in negative percents where sales exceed purchases.
The industrial distribution of inventory change represents the change in inventories of primary products of an industry
(wherever
held), rather than the change in all inventories held by an industry.
3
For the input-output table, the inventory valuation adjustment has been made in total only.
*Less than .005 percent.
NOTE.—Detail may not add to total due to rounding.
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, QBE.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

12

Producing Industries Ranked by Percent of Output
Sold Directly to Final Demand, 1958
Percent

20

40

60
—I—

11
84
85
86
74
77
34
22
72
18
15
61
23
54
14
44
48
69
71
45
80A
29
56
76
52
51
59
75
64
60
63
13
46
19
66
43
31
62
70
68
47
65
49
53
58
17
12
32
2
7
26
78
55
57
27
82
42
10
3
73
6
40
24

SOB 6


U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Note: For industry titles see page 17.
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

80
—I—

100

November 1964

A simple example may serve to
clarify the way in which input-output
can be useful in analyzing changes in
the economy. Suppose there is an
increased demand by consumers for
passenger cars. We know that the
increased output of the automobile
industry will generate a series of
increased demands for output of a
large number of other industries.
There will be increased demand for steel
which in turn will require more chemicals, such as sulfuric acid, more iron,
more limestone, and more coal. There
will be more demand for upholstery
fabrics which will require more natural
fibers from agriculture, more synthetic
fibers from the chemical industry, and
more plastics. The chemical industry
will also be called upon to supply more
synthetics such as nylon and rayon for
the tire industry. These are only a
few of the resulting demands occasioned
by the single change in consumer
requirements. The input-output tables
permit tracing this complicated and
highly intricate chain reaction through
our industrial structure and measuring
the demands, both direct and indirect,
imposed upon each of the industries.
In conjunction with auxiliary information on the geographic distribution
of industries, input-output analysis can
be used to shed light on the regional
implications of many national programs.
Input-output information is also
useful in price analysis. By providing
a chain of relationships and a set of
weights for these relationships, it
enables one to examine, for example,
the possible impact on other industries
of a given change in wages and/or
prices in a specified industry.
Many of the uses of input-output
involve the simplifying assumption that
the relationships developed in the basic
table are appropriate for other years
and through a limited range of output
levels. It is recognized that there are
theoretical limitations to this assumption. However, for the most part, it
is close enough to reality to yield
satisfactory results.4 Where significant
4. Further discussion of the nature and implications of the
assumption is contained in the unpublished document available, upon request, from OBE. In addition, while the Office
of Business Economics has applied the input-output technique to a limited extent in the course of developing the basic
estimates, further analytical studies aimed partly at shedding
light on the validity of the assumptions under varying conditions are planned for the future.

November 1964

changes in relationships do occur,
proper use of the input-output technique requires that such changes be
introduced.
Description of the tables
Three basic tables on 1958 input-output relationships—the output distribution table, the direct requirements
table, arid the total requirements table—are presented in this first report
on the 1958 input-output study.5 These
tables and some of the important economic relationships which they reveal
are described below.6
Output distribution table (table 1).
Table 1 provides information on the
1958 market patterns for the output
of each of the industrial categories of
goods or services. Each row of this
table shows the distribution (in percentages) to each of the industries and
final users of the goods and services
of the industry. It provides the data
needed by a firm to compare its sales
pattern with that of its industry, thus
identifying potential markets.
It can be noted from table 1 that
the direct relationship between the
production of an industry and its
sales to final users varies considerably.
Some industrial categories such as
tobacco manufactures (15) and household furniture (22) sold over threefourths of their total output to final
users and are, therefore, directly affected by changes in final markets. On
the other hand, other industrial cate5. This report does not include one of the standard tables
for the presentation of input-output relationships—the transactions or flow table. This table shows the dollar values of
the transactions among the various industries, of the value
added, and of the final markets of the economy. The sum
of the appropriate final demand columns in such a table is
equivalent to gross national product in the year of the table.
The preliminary estimates of GNP for 1958 developed as
part of the input-output analysis are subject to modification
in the course of the development of the revised time series
on GNP. Until the time series is completed, the 1958 dollar
values cannot be considered as final. However, changes in
these values would not affect the interindustry structural
relationships presented in this article.
6. It should be noted that information presented in these
tables is influenced by the concepts and conventions adopted
for the 1958 input-output study. Thus, the various patterns
are based on producers' prices. The information does not
show sales to wholesale and retail trade for resale but shows
the flow of goods directly from producer to user. Some of
the distributions do not represent actual sales (or purchases)
but reflect "fictitious sales" (transfers) of secondary products
to the primary producing industries. Consumption does not
distinguish between domestic production and imports when
the two are su^stitutable. The distributions to other industries represent actual consumption and do not include
purchases for inventory accumulation or on capital account.
Such purchases are included in the final demand categories,
net inventory change and gross private fixed capital formation, respectively. The concepts and conventions are deDigitized
FRASER
scribed for
briefly
in the final section of this article.



SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
gories such as agricultural services (4)
and iron and ferroalloy ores mining
(5) sold virtually all of their output to
intermediate consumers. For such industries the connection between production and final markets is remote
and can be traced only through the
sales of their customers. Of the 86
separate industries examined, 51 sold
over half of their output to intermediate users; as many as 36 sold more than
three-fourths of their output to industrial users. The wide range in the
percentage of total output sold directly
to final demand is shown in the chart
on page 12 which arrays the 86 producing industries by the proportion of
their output which was sold directly to
final users.
It can also be noted from table 1 that
there are wide differences amongst industrial categories in the degree of
diversity of their intermediate distribution patterns. For example, while the
primary iron and steel manufacturing
industry (37) and the metal container
industry (39) both sold over 90 percent
of their output to other producing
industries, the former sold its output to
55 intermediate industries no one having
purchased more than 20 percent of its
output, while the latter sold its output
to only 12 industries with one industry,
food and kindred products (14), having
absorbed 73 percent of its output.
It is important to bear in mind that
the output distributions shown in table
1 refer to 1958 and, therefore, reflect the
demand, prices, and product mixture
for that year. This output distribution
pattern is likely to fluctuate over time
as a result of changes in relative importance of industrial markets. Thus,
this pattern should be applied with
caution to other years.
Direct requirements table (table 2).
Table 2 relates each of the inputs of an
industry to its total output. Each
column of table 2 shows the inputs that
the industry named at the top of that
column required from each of the industries named at the beginning of the rows
to produce a dollar of its output. For
example, to produce a dollar of output,
the chemicals manufacturing industry
(col. 27) required 19 cents of its own
production, 5 cents from the petroleum
refining industry (row 31), 3 cents from
the chemical mining industry (row 10), etc.

13
The information in table 2 reflects the
relatively complex and specialized nature of the United States production
process. The table shows quite clearly
the heavy interdependence amongst the
various producing industries. Ours is
not a production process characterized
by a simple structure which combines
basic raw materials with labor and
machines to turn out products which are
sold to the final user. Rather, it is
characterized by a highly specialized
system which fabricates semiprocessed
goods and various business services for
combination into still further advanced
stages of fabrication.
Almost all industries required inputs
from at least 25 different industries.
As many as 58 producing industries required inputs from over 50 different
industries. The chemicals industry
(column 27) for example, required inputs from 71 different industries and
only 8 of these supplying industries can
be considered producers of basic raw
materials.
The data in table 2 permit the tracing
of the interconnections among the
various industries and final demand in a
systematic way. For example, assume
that the household furniture industry
produces $1 million of furniture for sale
to consumers. By reference to column
22 it is seen that the household furniture
industry would require slightly under
$15,000 ($1,000,000 X .01488) from
itself. Thus, industry 22 would have
to produce a minimum of $1,015,000.
Continuing the example, this amount of
output would require almost $58,000
($1,015,000 X .05685) of fabrics from
industry 16, a little over $125,000
($1,015,000 X .12421) of wood products
from industry 20 (and so on down the
column).
Next we can calculate the output
required by each of the supplying industries to meet the requirement placed
on them. For example, industry 22
has so far placed a demand on industry
16 for $58,000 of fabrics. In order to
produce this value of fabrics, calculating in a similar fashion, industry 16
imposes a demand of $20,000 ($58,000
X .34664) on itself, and for the resulting
output requires almost $7,000 ($78,000
X .08465) of man-made fibers and other
plastic materials from industry 28, and
so on.

SUEVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

14

November 1964

Table B.—Total, Direct, and Indirect Output Attributable to Each Category of Final Demand, 1958
(Percent)
Producing Industry

Personal consumption
expenditures

Gross private fixed
capital formation

Net inventory change

Federal government
purchases

Gross exports

State and local
government purchases

Total Direct Indirect Total Direct Indirect Total Direct Indirect Total Direct Indirect Total Direct Indirect Total Direct Indirect
1
2
3.
4.

Livestock & Livestock Products
0
8.0
89.9
81.9 1.4
Other Agricultural Products
0
76.2 10.5
65.7 2.9
Forestry & Fishery Products. __
0
64.1 19.4
44.7 25.3
Agricultural, Forestry & Fishery Services
-0
0
80.6
80.6 3.8
5 Iron & Ferroalloy Ores Mining
32.1
0
0
32.1 37.2
6 Nonferrous Metal Ores Mining
0
0
26.0
26.0 26.6
7 Coal Mining _ _
_ __
0
9.5
53.9
44.4 14.9
8 Crude Petroleum & Natural Gas
0
72.1
0
72.1 9.0
9 Stone & Clay Mining & Quarrying _
0
24.2
1.1
23.1 46.5
10. Chemicals & Fertilizers Mineral Mining . 46.6
0
.2
46.4 11.8
11 New Construction
0
0
0
70.5 70.5
12. Maintenance & Repair Construction
0
0
60.7
60.7 5.4
13 Ordnance & Accessories
0
7.0
3.4
3.6 2.8
14 Food & Kindred Products
0
94.0 70.2
23.8 1.0
15 Tobacco Manufactures
0
.5
90.3 71.5
18.8
16. Broad & Narrow Fabrics, Yarn &
Thread Mills
0
6.5
89.9
83.4 3.0
17. Misc. Textile Goods & Floor Coverings. _ 80.5 29.7
1.8
50.8 9.3
18 Apparel
-__ __ 97.5 78.1
0
.6
19.4
19. Miscellaneous Fabricated Textile Products
0
86.6 48.1
38.5 3.6
20. Lumber & Wood Products, Except Containers
.1
27.7
1.8
25.9 45.2
21 Wooden Containers
0
0
73.1
73.1 12.4
22 Household Furniture. __
78.1 73.2
3.8
4.9 13.3
23 Other Furniture & Fixtures
14.2
8.6
5.6 66.6 53.4
24. Paper & Allied Products, Except Containers
0
68.2
8.1
60.1 12.9
25 Paperboard Containers & Boxes
0
73.9
1.0
72.9 11.4
26 Printing & Publishing
_
0
73.1 19.3
53.8 10.2
27. Chemicals & Selected Chemical Products
0
53.3
1.8
51.5 12.0
28 Plastics & Synthetic Materials
.2
0
63.5
63.3 12.5
29. Drugs, Cleaning & Toilet Preparations .. 82.6 55.9
0
26.7 2.3
30 Paints & Allied Products
0
52.2
.9
51.3 19.4
31. Petroleum Refining & Related Industries
0
70.9 40.3
30.6 9.3
32. Rubber & Miscellaneous Plastics Products
- - - _ _ _ _ _ 62.9 19.0
.8
43.9 16.1
33. Leather Tanning & Industrial Leather
Products
0
0
88.7
88.7 2.9
34. Footwear & Other Leather Products
95.3 83.6
.7
.2
11.7
35 Glass & Glass Products
68.2
0
5.9
62.3 14.5
36 Stone & Clay Products
50.6
20.0
2.8
0
17.2
37. Primary Iron & Steel Manufacturing
.1
31.4
0
31.3 39.6
38. Primary Nonferrous Metal Manufacturing
.1
28.2
0
28.1 32.6
39. Metal Containers
__ __
84.5
0
84.5 3.8
.5
40. Heating, Plumbing & Structural Metal
Products
11.9
.9
11.0 60.0
8.8
41. Stampings, Screw Machine Products &
Bolts
47.1
6.7
40.4 26.4
0
42. Other Fabricated Metal Products
5.8
42.7
36.9 30.6
2.5
43. Engines & Turbines
21.1
5.7
15.4 46.1 26.1
44 Farm Machinery & Equipment
13.3
.3
13.0 73.0 65.1
45. Construction, Mining & Oil Field Machinery
8.3
0
8.3 57.8 42.8
46. Materials Handling Machinery &
Equipment
_ , __ _ _
_ _ _ . 6.8
0
6.8 57.6 32.1
47. Metalworking Machinery & Equipment
_ _- _
19.0
.8
18.2 48.7 31.5
48. Special Industry Machinery & Equipment
13.0
.8
12.2 67.3 57.8
49. General Industrial Machinery & Equipment
_
__
14.4
0
14.4 56.0 28.0
50 Machine Shop Products
29.0
0
29.0 20.9
0
51. Office, Computing & Accounting Machines
23.5
2.6
20.9 55.0 45.0
52. Service Industry Machines - _ __ _
24.9
11.0
13.9 57.6 42.4
53. Electric Industrial Equipment & Apparatus
.3
16.1
15.8 56.1 31.3
54. Household Appliances
75.8 67.2
8.6 11.4
2.6
55. Electric Lighting & Wiring Equipment. 33.7 13.6
20.1 36.5
1.1
56. Radio, Television & Communication
Equipment
32.3 22.5
9.8 21.9
16.7
57. Electronic Components & Accessories. . _ 35.7
5.6
30.1 18.8
1.0
58. Misc. Electrical Machinery, Equipment
& Supplies 53.4
16.7
5.4
36.7 20.3
59. Motor Vehicles & Equipment
64.7 39.2
25.5 24.4
15.2
2
60. Aircraft & Parts _ _
_
_
3.9
3.7 5.5
2.8
61. Other Transportation Equipment
11.4 38.4
30.6 19^2
31.2
62. Scientific & Controlling Instruments
9.7
31.2
21.5 26.7
14.7
63. Optical, Ophthalmic & Photographic
Equipment
59.1 28.9
30.2 15.2
10.1
64. Miscellaneous Manufacturing
75.1 45.7
29.4 11.0
5.0
65. Transportation & Warehousing
61.9 25.4
36.5 13.7
1.5
66. Communications; Except Radio & T.V.
Broadcasting
76.6 42.1
34.5 11.0
3.9
67. Radio & T.V. Broadcasting
0
0
65.8
65.8 15.4
68. Electric, Gas, Water & Sanitary Services. 79.4 39.7
0
39.7 7.4
69. Wholesale & Retail Trade
80.6 64.6
16.0 11.1
3.9
70. Finance & Insurance
0
86.7 44.6
42.1 6.1
71. Real Estate & Rental
89.6 64.5
25.1 5.2
2.0
72. Hotels; Personal & Repair Services Exc.
Auto92.1 77.7
14.4 2.5
0
73. Business Services _
65.9
7.7
0
58.2 15.6
74. Research & Development _ 0
1.8
.5
0
1.8
75. Automobile Repair & Services .
83.9 55.4
0
28.5 6.8
76. Amusements - __
89.2 58.0
2.2
0
31.2
77. Medical, Educational Services & Nonprofit Organizations
94.3 90.1
0
.7
4.2
78. Federal Government Enterprises
15.4
76.0
0
60.6 9.2
79. State & Local Government Enterprises. 76.4
6.5
0
69.9 8.3
80. Gross Imports of Goods & Services
62.5 18.9
43.6 10.4
.1
81. Business Travel, Entertainment & Gifts 65.5
0
0
65.5 16.8
82. Office Supplies
0
0
61.3
61.3 10.9

"Less than± .05 percent.
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, OBE.


1.4
2.9
25.3

3.4
3.0
1.8

2.3

1.1
1.2
.5

3.0
10.3
5.0

.1
7.5
2.1

3.8
37.2
26.6
14.9
9.0
46.5
11.8
(*)
5.4
2.8
1.0
.5

4.1
-4.5
-4.4
-1.8
-1.3
.2
-.5
0
.1
1.4
.6
-.5

1.3
-1.8
-2.4
-.8
-.4
.2
-.2
0
0
1.8
.4
-.4

2.8
-2.7
-2.0
-1.0
-.9

7.3
13.5
9.1
19.1
6.6
4.5
20.5

.2
3.3
.3
12.1
.3
1.4
9.8

.1
-.4
.2
-.1

(*)
2.5
1.7
2.5
9.2

7.4

3.0 -2.3
7.5 -1.7
.6 -1.1

-1.0
-1.1
-.9

-1.3
-.6
-.2

4.9
5.2
1.4

(*)

-.3

2.5

.7
-2.1
2
(*)

.1
.5
-.1
-.1
2
-.2
-.1

3.8
6.3
.9
1.8
6.8
5.1
3.7

3.6

-.3

45.1
.8
12.4 -1.6
9.5 -.3
13.2 -.1

1.8
1.3

(

2.0 3

-.2
-.2
(*)
-.5
-2.3
.8
-.6

-.2
-1.0
.8
-.2

-.3
-1.3
(*)
-.4

9.3 -1.0

-1.0

(*)

15.3 -1.0

-.5

12.9
11.4
10.2
12.0
12.5
2.3
19.4

(*)
(*)

2.9
1.4
6.3
2.8
2.9 -5.3

(*)
4.7
-9.4

1.4
1.6
4.1

.9
1.3
9.1

1.7
7.3

7.1
10.2
8.8
7.0
6. 3
3.1
10.7
(*)
2.5
1.3
.8
1.9

7.1
12.8
35.6
6.3
7.8
8.2
13.1
6.5
9.4
86.7
1.0
.3

2.9
0
14.5
0
0
.6
1.9
6.5
6.3
48.6
.3
0

4.2
12.8
21.1
6.3
7.8
7.6
11.2
(*)
3.1
38.1
.7
.3

-2.9
8.9
7.1
7.6
5.8
16.4
8.5
23.0
21.9
.4
.9
.2

1.9
1.8
1.0

3.0
3.4
.4

3.1
4.4
.7

.5
.2
.3

2.6
4.2
.4

1.4
2.3
.9

.8

1.7

6.5

4.5

2.0

1.1

1.3
.6
.5
1.2

2.5
5.7
.4
.6

6.7
6.1
3.7
4.9

-.1
.4
.8
1.7

6.8
5.7
2.9
3.2

15.8
3.7
4.3
12.6

2.4
.5
.7

4.4
4.6
3.0

6.6
5.9
6.2

.7
.1
.7

5.9
5.8
5.5

13.2
14.0
6.3
5.1

5.6
7.9
4.9
1.5

7.6
6.1
1.4
3.6

14.6
7.8
4.1
8.9

6.1
.1
2.0
.1

8.5
7.7
2.1
8.8

(*)
.1
(*)
-4.4
0
0
2.2
0
-.7
2.1
23.0
19.9
.1
.4
(*)
.1
(

*?6

(*)

.9
1.2
9.1
1.5
8.9
7.1
5.4
5.8
17.1
6.4
(*)
2.0
.3
.5
.2
1.3
2.3
.3
1.1

L7
8.5

15.8
3.6
2.6
4.1

5.7
3.9
6.8

.1
(*)
1.4

5.6
3.9
5.4

7.4
4.5
3.9
15.0

2.0
0
2.7
(*)

5.4
4.5
1.2
15.0

(*)

6.8

3.6

3.2

8.1

4.0

4.1

5.9

2.1

3.8

-.5

7.2

3.1

4.1

9.6

1.7

7.9

5.2

1.1

4.1

.5
2.9
.5 1.1
14.5 -.7
50.6 (*)
39.6 -2.7

-.3
1.0
-.2
.4
-.8

.8
.1
-.5
-.4
-1.9

5.4
1.5
6.9
3.6
10.1

3.1
1.2
3.1
1.3
2.8

2.3
.3
3.8
2.3
7.3

1.7
1.1
6.4
8.3
12.5

0
.7
.1
.1
.6

1.7
.4
6.3
8.2
11.9

.8
.3
4.7
17.5
9.1

0
.1
0
(*)
(*)

.8
.2
4.7
17.5
9.1

32.6 -1.6
3.3 1.0

-.1
.6

-1.5
.4

10.1
4.8

3.0
1.2

7.1
3.6

22.3
3.6

3.3
.8

19.0
2.8

8.4
2.3

0
0

8.4
2.3

51.2 -1.1

-.9

-.2

4.1

2.8

1.3

7.0

(*)
2.5
1.7
10.8
.2

7.0

18.1

0

18.1

18.2
11.9
19.7
2.9

15.7
10.2
8.9
2.7

4.9
8.1
2.1
1.7

26.4 -3.7
28.1 -1.9
20.0 -3.8
7.9 -.9

-1.8
-.7
-2.7
-.9

-1.9
-1.2
-1.1
(*)

7.1
8.6
14.8
10.0

.8
3.8
9.6
7.3

6.3
4.8
5.2
2.7

.1
.7
.1
.7

4.8
7.4
2.0
1.0

15.0 -3.0

-2.4

-.6

26.9

23.0

3.9

6.1

2.6

3.5

3.9

.7

3.2

25.5 -2.6

-2.2

-.4

9.4

7.0

2.4

17.2

12.4

4.8

11.6

4.5

7.1

17.2 -4.9

-3.6

14.0

9.0

5.0

20.6

4.7

15.9

.1

2.5

-.6 17.5

14.6

2.9

4.3

-1.3

3.1

2.7

1.2

1.5

5.3
2.6

10.0
36.4

4.5
5.9

.1
2.2

4.4
3.7

7.7
7.1

3.3
2.9

4.4
4.2

6.5
4.7

3.9
.9

2.6
3.8

4.4
.9
2.7

17.0
7.0
14.5

3.5
.6
.8

13.5 4.7
2.4
6.4
13.7 11.7

.1
(*)

4.6
2.4
11.3

3.3
3.4

1.5
4.2

40.7
38.9

23.1
8.8

17.6
30.1

1.9
2.1

1.0
(*)

.9
2.1

8.9
6.4
6.1
10.1
7.3

4.6
3.9
4.4
7.9
5.1

4.3
2.5
1.7
2.2
2.2

15.1
4.6
86.7
20.9
30.2

5.8
1.3
51.0
17.3
15.2

9.3
3.3
35.7
3. 6
15.0

5.1
3.2
.3
2.3
5.3

2.1
1.9
(*)
1.0
2.4

3.0
1.3
.3
1.3
2.9

7.4
3.6
9.9

5.6
2.1
6.7

1.8
1.5
3.2

15.4
4.0
8.9

8.4
.6
4.2

7.0
3.4
4.7

2.7
5.8
5.3

.9
3.2
1.2

1.8
2.6
4.1

2.8
4.6
2.6
2.7
1.9
1.8

.7
.6
.2
1.5
.1
.4

2.1
4.0
2.4
1.2
1.8
1.4

5.3
7.1
5.6
3.0
2.5
1.9

1.8
0
1.7
.7
(*)
.2

3.5
7.1
3.9
2.3
2.5
1.7

4.4
7.2
5.2
2.6
2.8
1.5

2.0
0
2.4
.2
.7
.4

2.4
7.2
2.8
2.4
2.1
1.1

.7
4.1
.2
1.9
6.7

0

.7
0
0
4.6

.7
3. i
.2
1.9
2.1

3.3
7.2
97.4
3.9
1.6

2.0
2.3
97.0
1.6
.3

1.3
4.9
.4
2.3
1.3

1.5
7.3
.1
3.4
-.2

.7
2.3
0
1.0
-.8

.8
5.0
.1
2.4
.6

.2
4.3
3.5
5.4
4.4
3.2

(*)
1.5
.1
1.0
0
0

.2
2.8
3.4
4.4
4.4
3.2

3.2
5.7
7.5
18.7
9.0
11.2

.5
1.4
2.4
13.3
0
5.5

2.7
4.3
5.1
5.4
9.0
5.7

1.6
5.0
4.4
3.3
4.8
13.6

1.4
1.6
,1
(*)
0
9.7

.2
3.4
4.3
3.3
4.8
3.9

9.5 -4.8

-4.2

28.0 -3.6
20.9 -1.8

-2.2
-.7

-1.4
-1.1

13.4
7.0

7.3
.9

6.1
6.1

15.3
39.0

10.0 -.8
15.2 -2.0

-.6
-1.6

2
-A

8.1
7.7

6.0
6.0

2.1
1.7

24.8 -3.7
8.8 -2.0
35.4 -1.9

-2.6
-1.8
-1.3

-1.1
-.2
-.6

9.8
5.4
5.5

5.4
4.5
2.8

5.2 -1.6
17.8 -3.1

-1.2
-1.8

-.4
-1.3

4.8
7.6

14.9
9.2
2.7
7.2
12.0

-2.8
-3.3
-2.5
-2.3
-.7

-1.6
-2.3
-2.1
-2.0
-.2

5.1
6.0
12.2

.2
.5
.3

.3
.6
.4

-1.2
-1.0
-.4
-.3
-.5
i

7.1
15.4
7.4
7.2
6.1
3.2

-.1
-.1
-.2
(*)
(*)
(*)
-.1
1
(*)

2.5
15.6
.5
6.8
2.2
.7
9.2
8.3
10.3
16.8
10.9

'.5
(*)
-.2
-.1
-.3
-.5
-.2

0
0
0

.1

0
0

0
0
0
0

-!i
-.1
j

-A
-.2
i
(*)'
(*)
-.1
-.1
(*)

.4

0
0
0

(*)0
0

.1
(*)

2

-!l
-.3
-.5
_ 2

2.6

1.2

November

1964

This chain of repeated calculations
of output requirements which spread
through the economy can be traced,
and the total amount of output required from each industry to produce
$1 million of household furniture for
consumers can thus be derived. This
is a very laborious and time-consuming
procedure unless performed on an electronic computer. However, there is
an alternative, table 3, for which the
relationships in table 2 have been
completely traced and summarized.
Total requirements table (table 3).
Each column of table 3 shows the
amount of output required both directly and indirectly from the industry
named at the beginning of each row
for each dollar of deliveries to final
demand by the industry named at the
head of the column.7 Table 3 is set
up to measure the toal requirements
(direct and indirect) per dollar of delivery to final demand. This table
permits calculating the impact on the
various industries of the economy which
result from stipulated changes in the
final demand.
Returning to the example of the
household furniture described above,
we see that instead of the laborious
tracing of the impacts from industry to
industry, it is possible to calculate the
impacts quite simply. Thus, the column for industry 22 shows that to
provide final demand with an additional $1 million of household furniture,
$1,016,000 ($1,000,000 X 1.01602) is
required in total from industry 22,
almost $99,000 ($1,000,000 X .09888)
from industry 16, almost $183,000
($1,000,000 X .18274) from industry
20, etc.
As a further illustration of the link
provided by input-output between final
demand and the output of each industry, a series of calculations were performed using table 3. The results of
these calculations appear in table B,
which shows the percentage of output
of each industry which was attributable, directly or indirectly, to each
category of final demand in 1958.
7. The mathematical procedures for converting direct requirements to total requirements are described in Interindustry Economics by Chenery and Clark, Input-Output
in National Accounts by Richard Stone, and other similar
texts. The total requirements shown in table 3 were calculated using a program for electronic computers developed
at the Harvard Economic Research Project.




SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
A number of interesting observations
emerge from this table. For example,
it is seen that while only 8 percent of
the output of the paper industry (24)
was sold to persons, 68 percent of its
output was attributable to total consumption by persons. The table also
shows that almost 13 percent of the
paper industry's output was indirectly
associated with fixed investment (including residential construction) by all
industries. Reading further, we find
the 10 percent of chemical mining (10)
which was exported directly was augmented by an additonal 11 percent of
output which was attributable to the
exports of other commodities.
The information in table B showing
the percentage of total output of each
industry attributable to each final

15
demand category, has been summarized
in the chart below. As would be
expected, most industries are heavily
dependent on consumer expenditures.
Of the 82 industries included in this
chart, 50 attribute half or more of their
output to consumer purchases. Another 12 attribute more than half of
their output to fixed investment and
only 3 attribute more than half to
Federal Government. The remaining
eighteen industries depend on more than
one final demand category for the bulk
of their output. The maximum share
of the output of any industry attributable to State and local governments was
under 25 percent.
While table 3 is more convenient for
calculating total requirements, table 2
will sometimes be preferred, because it

Extent to Which
Each Category of Final Demand
Generated Output of Industries,
1958

This category
of final demand,
directly and
indirectly
generated . . . this percent
of output . , . in this number of industries
0

]

20

75 & Over
Personal
Consumption
Expenditures

50 - 74.9
25 - 49.9
24.9 & Under

^^^^
75 & Over
Gross Private
Fixed Capital
Formation

50 - 74.9
25 - 49.9
24.9 & Under

75 & Over
Gross
Exports

50 - 74.9
25 - 49.9
24.9 & Under

75 & Over
Federal
Government
Purchases

50 - 74.9
25 - 49.9
24.9 & Under

75 & Over
State & Local
Government
Purchases

50 - 74.9
25 - 49.9
24.9 & Under

0

40

60

80

permits flexibility in the computation
and it permits modifying the relationships which are used. Moreover, table
2 can be used in conjunction with table
3 to split the total requirements into
their direct and indirect components.
Supplementary data requirements

To use table 3 (or table 2) for questions involving the impact of changes
in level and composition of GNP on
each of the industries, the first step is to
formulate a bill of goods. A bill of
goods is nothing more than a set of final
demands expressed in the classification 8
and other terms of the table. That is,
the specifications must agree in classification and coverage with the table;
8. The industry classification scheme utilized in the 1958
study is shown in page 17 of this article.

they must be expressed in 1958 prices;
and they must represent producers'
prices. The amount of trade margin on
all items of the bills of goods is separately specified as a requirement from
the trade industry.
Similarly the
amount of transportation cost involved
in delivery to final markets of all items
in the bills of goods is separately entered
as a requirement from the transportation industry.
Some of the supplementary data
useful in preparing bills of goods are
presented in this article. Table A
(see page 11) shows the industrial composition of each category of final
demand in 1958. These percentages
may be used to distribute projections
of each of the categories of final demand
which are made in the aggregate only.

Table C.—Industrial Composition of Personal Consumption Expenditures, 1958 by
Major P.C.E. Category
Producing
Industry
Number

Producing
Industry
Number

Percent 1

P.C.E. IV
Housing

P.C.E. I

Producing
Industry
Number

Percent *

Producing
Industry
Number

Percent 1

P.C.E. VI
Medical care and death
expenses

Food and Tobacco

P.C.E. IX
Recreation

100. 00

100.00

1

2.48
2.57
.32
(')

2
3
10
14
15
27
65
69
80

96.58

71
72
77

3.22
.20

P.C.E. V
Household operation

55.54

5.16
.02
3.40

29.47
1.04

P.C.E. II
Clothing, Accessories and
Jewelry

7
9
16
17
18
19
22
23
25
9A

100.00

16
17
18
19...
24
32
34
62
64
65
69^ .
70
72
77
80
83

1.15
.05

37.34

.15
.11
.79
8.59
.50
2.64
1.46

35.25
.01
11.17
.10
.78
09

P.C.E. Ill
Personal Care

19
29
32
42
54_.
64
65
69
72
80_._

100. 00
.03

25.38

.06
1.83
1.22
1.55
1.13

24.85
43.75
.20

27
9ft

29
30
31
32
34
35
36
37
38
40
41
42
44
47
48
51 _
52
53
54
55
58
61
62
63
64
65
66
68
69
70
72
73 _
78
79
80
83
86

___

100. 00
.62
.03
.87
1.70
.02
2.31
.35
5.72
.31
1.64
.09
.74
.30
.02
2.54
.04
4.75
.44
.04
.31
.39
.04
.03
.17
.59
.64
.02
.07
.05
.14
.55
.03
5.57
.58
.12
.01
.17
.01
1.26
2.35
9.21
19.07

23.58

__

_ _

.31
1.73
.15
1.35
.16
.47
.05
8.29

100. 00
.03
.65
(*)
8.10
.27
.27
.04
.02

9
24
27
29
32
36
54
55
62
65
69 _ _
70
71

_ _ __.

.73
. 78
.45
10.74
6.34
1.36
5.69

64.52

77

P.C.E. VII
Personal Bu siness
100. 00
.15

66
70
73
76
77
78
80

78.20

14.40
.05
6.38
.54
.28

1 _ _

2
3
13
17
19
24 _
26
27
09
34
43
55
56
58
60
61
63
64
65
69
70
72
73
76
77
80
83

25.82

1.11
10 43
27.12
4.51
12.31
.69
.03

100. 00
.44
2.13
.10
1.00
.06
.21
.03
13.47
.07
.23
.15
.09
.80
.01
.31
8.41
.94
.28
.17
2.06
2.07
7.24
1.70
24,54
.01
6.53
1.13
20.58

5.09
.26
-.11

100. 00
100. 00

77

19
27
29
31
32
42
52
55
56
58
59
61
65
69
70
75
79
83

______

P.C.E. 3C
Private Educal ion and
Researc i

P.C.E. VIII
Transportation
100. 00
.12
.15
.06
14.74
2.25
.03
.04
.04
.09
.46

Percent J

P.C.E. XI
Religious and Welfare
Activities
100. 00
100. 00

77

P.C.E. X II
Foreign Trav<'land
Remittances--Net
65
69
80 and 85

100. 00
17.25
10.14
72.61

* Less than.005 percent.
1 The industrial distributions shown in this table are based on producers' prices.
NOTE.—Final purchases are shown net of sales. This can result in negative percents where sales exceed purchases.

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, QBE.

http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
16
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Further, table C classifies each industry's sales to consumers by the twelve
major categories of personal consumption expenditures and shows the percent
which that industry's sales is of the total
for the category.9 These percentages
may be used to translate estimates of
consumer expenditures at the twelve
category level to the classification of
the input-output table.
In addition to the auxiliary data provided in this article, one may require
other information such as detailed
factors for converting purchasers' prices
to producers' prices and price deflators.
The QBE will include detailed producer-purchaser price factors in a
future publication. With respect to
price deflators, the most comprehensive
source is the price information included
in the Consumer Price Indexes and the
Wholesale Price Indexes of the U.S.
Department of Labor. In addition,
selected price deflators which are consistent with the personal consumption
expenditure time series will have been
developed as part of the benchmark
revisions, and these will be made
available to the extent possible.
Concepts and Conventions of
the 1958 Interindustry Tables 10
Trade. The input-output tables do not
trace actual flows to and from the trade
industry. If trade were shown as buying and
reselling, the detailed connections would be
between trade and the producing industries
while the consuming industries would purchase
most of their inputs from a single source—
trade. To show the links between producing
and consuming industries or final markets,
commodities are shown as if moving directly
from producer to user, bypassing trade.
Therefore, the output of trade is measured in
terms of total margins; that is, operating
expense plus profit.
Valuation of transactions. The valuation
underlying the tables in this report is based
on producers' prices.11 Such prices exclude
the distribution costs which make up the
difference between producers' and purchasers'
prices. Under a system of producers' valuations, the individual inputs into a consuming
industry are valued at producers' prices while
the trade margin and transportation costs
associated with all of these inputs appear as
aggregate inputs from the trade industry and
transportation industry, respectively.
9. These tables relate the input-output classifications to
the consumer expenditures as they will appear in the revised
benchmark data. Since the estimates for the benchmark are
not yet completed, the percentages are subject to revision.
10. This section of the report is discussed much more
fully in an unpublished document which is available upon
request to the OBE.
11. Producers' prices have been defined to include Federal
and State and local excise taxes collected and paid by the
producer.

Classification of industries. All productive
activities of the U.S. economy have been
grouped into 86 industries. Most of these are
combinations of industries as defined in the
Standard
Industrial
Classification (SIC)
Manual, 1957 edition. Three are "dummy"
industries established to simplify the estimating procedures. A list of the industrial categories and their composition in terms of the
SIC, where relevant, are given on this page.
Secondary products or activities. In most
cases, secondary products were treated as if
sold by the producing industry to the primary
industry and added to the output of the
primary industry.12
In those industries in which secondary production was large and, at the same time,
considerably different from the primary output, the secondary products, and their associated inputs, were subtracted from the producing industries and added to the primary
industry.
Imports. Imports used for production (intermediate goods and services) which are
substitutable for domestically produced goods
and services 13 were treated in a parallel
manner to secondary products; that is, they
were shown as if purchased by the industry
producing the substitutable item and added
to that industry's output.
Imports used in production which have no
domestic counterparts and imports purchased
by final demand in substantially the same
form in which they were imported were shown
as purchased directly by the consuming industry or final market.
Gross output and gross input. Gross output
of an industry represents the sum of the
values of the following elements: (a) the
total production by the industry, including
both primary and secondary products or
services; (b) the producers' value of the
secondary products or services of other industries which are primary to the given industry; and (c) the domestic port value of
imports which are distributed as part of the
output of the given industry.
Gross input of an industry is equal to the
sum of the values of the following elements:
(a) total consumption of goods and services
required for the industry's total production;
(b) value added by the industry; (c) the producers' value of the secondary products or
services of other industries which are primary
to the given industry; and (d) the domestic
port value of imports which are distributed
as part of the output of the given industry.14
Gross output, the row total, equals gross
input, the column total.
12. The basic unit of classification in the SIC is the establishment. An establishment is classified in an industry
based on its principal activity. However, once an establishment is classified in an industry, its entire output, subsidiary
as well as principal, is counted as part of the output of the
industry. Its principal output, that which determines its
industry classification, is called primary output; its other
(subsidiary) output is called secondary.
13. Substitutability was determined on a judgmental
basis using the following guide: the import should be interchangeable with a domestically produced item without any
changes in the technology of the consuming industry or the
resultant product.
14. Secondary products and imports are added to both
the inputs
and outputs.


http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
747-577 O Bank
- 64 - 3of St. Louis
Federal Reserve

Inventories. The inventory change shown
for each industry represents the change in
inventories of the industry's products regardless of which industry actually owns or holds
the inventories. (This is different from the
customary industry inventory figures which
represent inventories held by each industry.)
Inventories are so classified in the inputoutput table in order to provide the balance
between the output of each industry and the
total consumption of its products. Current
production includes products which end up in

inventories and are therefore not reflected in
consumption. On the other hand, consumption may come from inventories of the producer, of the consumer, or of trade companies
as well as from current output. To the
extent it comes from inventories, it is not
included in current production. Therefore,
adding inventory increases of products of the
industry to, and subtracting depletions from,
the consumption of that industry's products
achieves the balance with gross output of the
industry.

Industry Numbering for the 1958 Input-Output Study

Industry No. and Industry Title
Agricultural, forestry & fisheries
1 Livestock & livestock products

Related SIC
Codes (1957
Edition)

Industry No. and Industry Title

&
equipment.
Metalworking machinery & equipment.
2 Other agricultural products
48 Special industry machinery &
equipment.
49 General industrial machinery &
3 Forestry & fishery products
equipment.
4 Agricultural, forestry & fisheries ser50 Machine shop products
vices.
51 Office, computing & accounting
machines.
Mining
52 Service industry machines
5 Iron & ferroalloy ores mining
1011, 106
53 Electric transmission & distribution
6 Nonferrous metal ores mining
102, 103, 104, 105,
equipment, & electrical industrial
108, 109
apparatus.
7 Coal mining
11, 12
54 Household appliances
8 Crude petroleum & natural gas
1311, 1321
55 Electric lighting & wiring equip9 Stone & clay mining & quarrying
141, 142, 144,
ment.
145, 148, 149
56 Radio, television, & communication
10 Chemical & fertilizer mineral mining- 147
equipment.
Electronic components & accessories.
Construction
Miscellaneous electrical machinery,
11 New construction
138, pt. 15, pt.
equipment, & supplies.
16, pt. 17, pt.
Motor vehicles & equipment
6561
Aircraft & parts
12 Maintenance & repair construction. _ pt. 15, pt. 16,
Other transportation equipment
pt. 17
Professional, scientific, & controlling
Manfacturing
instruments & supplies.
13 Ordnance & accessories
19
Optical, ophthalmic, & photograph14 Food & kindred products
20
ic equipment & supplies.
15 Tobacco manufactures
21
64 Miscellaneous manufacturing
16 Broad & narrow fabrics, yarn & 221, 222, 223, 224,
Transportation,
communication, electric,
thread mills.
226, 228
gas, & sanitary services
17 Miscellaneous textile goods & floor 227, 229
65
Transportation
& warehousing
coverings.
18 Apparel
225, 23(exc. 239),
Communications,
except radio &
66
3992
television broadcasting.
19 Miscellaneous fabricated textile
67
Radio
&
T.V.
broadcasting
products.
68 Electric, gas, water, & sanitary
Lumber & wood products, except 24 (exc. 244)
services.
containers.
Wooden containers
Wholesale & retail trade
244
Household furniture
69 Wholesale & retail trade
251
Other furniture & fixtures
25 (exc. 251)
Paper & allied products, except con- 26 (exc. 265)
tainers & boxes.
25 Paperboard containers & boxes
265
Finance insurance & real estate
26 Printing & publishing
27
27 Chemicals & selected chemical 281 (exc. alumina 70 Finance & insurance
pt. of 2819),
products.
71 Real estate & rental..
286, 287, 289
28 Plastics & synthetic materials
282
Services
29 Drugs, cleaning, & toilet prepara- 283, 284
72 Hotels & lodging places; personal &
tions.
repair services, except automobile
30 Paints & allied products
285
repair.
31 Petroleum refining & related in- 29
73
Business
services
dustries.
32 Rubber & miscellaneous plastics 30
products.
33 Leather tanning & industrial leather 311, 312
products.
34 Footwear & other leather products.. 31 (exc. 311, 312)74 Research & development
75 Automobile repair & services
321, 322, 323
35 Glass & „glass .products
324, 325, 326, 327, 76 Amusements
36 Stone & clay products..
77
Medical, educational services, &
328, 329
nonprofit organizations.
37 Primary iron & steel manufacturing. 331, 332, 3391,
3399
Government enterprises
38 Primary nonferrous metals manu- 2819 (alumina
78 Federal Government enterprises
facturing.
only), 333, 334, 79 State & local government enterprises.
335, 336, 3392
Imports
3411, 3491
39 Metal containers
80 Gross imports of goods & services
40 Heating, plumbing & fabricated 343, 344
Dummy industries
structural metal products.
81 Business travel, entertainment, &
41 Screw machine products, bolts, nuts, 345, 346
gifts.
etc., & metal stampings.
42 Other fabricated metal products
342, 347, 348, 349 82 Office supplies
83 Scrap, used & secondhand goods
(exc. 3491)
Special industries
43 Engines & turbines
351
44 Farm machinery & equipment
352
84 Government industry
45 Construction, mining, oil field ma- 3531, 3532, 3533
85 Rest of the world industry
chinery & equipment.
86 Household industry

013, pt. 014, 0193,
pt. 02, pt. 0729
Oil, 012, pt. 014,
0192, 0199, pt.
02
074, 081, 082, 084,
086, 091
071, 0723, pt 0729
085, 098

46 Materials handling machinery
47

Related SIC
Codes (1957
Edition)
3534, 3535, 3536,
3537
354
355
356
359
357
358
361, 362

363

367
369
371
372
373, 374, 375, 379
381, 382, 384, 387

383, 385, 386

39 (exc. 3992)
40, 41, 42, 44, 45,
46,47
481, 482, 489
483
49

50 (exc. manufacturers sales
offices), 52, 53,
54, 55, 56, 57, 58,
59, pt. 7399
60, 61, 62, 63, 64,
66,67
65 (exc. 6541 &pt.
6561)
70, 72, 76 (exc.
7694 & 7699)

6541, 73 (exc.
7361, 7391, &
pt. 7399), 7694,
7699, 81, 89
(exc. 8921)
75
78,79
0722, 7361, 80, 82,
84, 86, 8921

A more complete discussion of the 1958 input-output study, with special emphasis on the technical and conceptual aspects, is contained in an unpublished document available upon request from the Office of Business Economics.
17

Crude petroleum & natural
gas

4

5

6

7

8

1
2.
3.
4
5.

Livestock & Livestock Products
Other Agricultural Products
_ _ _
Forestry & Fishery Products..
_ _ ._
Agricultural, Forestry & Fishery Services
Iron & Ferroalloy Ores Mining
_

6
7.
8
9
10.

Nonferrous Metal Ores Mining
Coal Mining
_
_ _ _ _
Crude Petroleum & Natural Gas
Stone & Clay Mining & Quarrying
Chemical & Fertilizer Mineral Mining.

11.
12
13
14.
15

N e w Construction
Maintenance & Repair Construction
Ordnance & Accessories
Food & Kindred Products
Tobacco Manufactures

_
______

_

_ _

__ __
.. _ _ _ _

100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0

15 9
28 1

65
30
0
56 2

o

08
(*)
o
1

o
o
0
o

5.1

0
0
0
0
(*)

16
.2

17 5
(*)

_ _ _ _ _ _
-

__

_ __

16. Broad & Narrow Fabrics, Yarn & Thread Mills. __
17 Miscellaneous Textile Goods & Floor Coverings
1 8 Apparel
_
__
_ _ _ _
19 Miscellaneous Fabricated Textile Products
20 Lumber & Wood Products, Except Containers
._ _ _
21 Wooden Containers
22 Household Furniture _
__
_ _ . __
23 Other Furniture & Fixtures
24 Paper & Allied Products, Except Containers
25. Paperboard Containers & Boxes
_
__ _
__ _ _
26. Printing & Publishing ._
._ _
27 Chemicals & Selected Chemical Products
28. Plastics & Synthetic M aterials
___ ___
__
29 Drugs Cleaning & Toilet Preparations
30 Paints & Allied Products
31 Petroleum Refining & Related Industries
32. Rubber & Miscellaneous Plastics Products _ _
33 Leather Tanning & Industrial Leather Products
34 Footwear & Other Leather Products
35. Glass & Glass Products
._
__
_ __
36 Stone & Clay Products
37 Primary Iron & Steel Manufacturing
38. Primary Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing
_
39 Metal Containers
40 Heating Plumbing & Structural Metal Products
41. Stampings, Screw Machine Products & Bolts _
42 Other Fabricated Metal Products
43 Engines & Turbines
4 4 . Farm Machinery & Equipment
__ . _ _ _ _ _ .
45 Construction Mining & Oil Field Machinery
46 Materials Handling Machinery & Equipment
47. Metalworking Machinery & Equipment
48. Special Industry Machinery & Equipment
_ _
_
49. General Industrial Machinery & Equipment _ _
50 Machine Shop Products
51. Office, Computing & Accounting Machines
5 2 . Service Industry Machines.
__ __
___
53. Electric Industrial Equipment & Apparatus .
5 4 . Household Appliances.- _
__
_
_ _ _ .
55. Electric Lighting & Wiring Equipment
56. Radio, Television & Communication Equipment _
57. Electronic Components & Accessories
58. Misc. Electrical Machinery, Equipment & Supplies
59. Motor Vehicles & Equipment _
60. Aircraft & Parts
_
61. Other Transportation Equipment
_
62. Scientific & Controlling Instruments- _ , _
63. Optical, Ophthalmic & Photographic Equipment
64. Miscellaneous Manufacturing
65. Transportation & Warehousing
66. Communications; Except Radio & T.V. Broadcasting
67. Radio & T.V. Broadcasting
68 Electric Gas Water & Sanitary Services
69. Wholesale & Retail Trade .__ _ __
70 Finance & Insurance
71. Real Estate & Rental
72. Hotels; Personal & Repair Services Exc. Auto
73 Business Services
7 4 . Research & Development
_ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _
75. Automobile Repair & Services
76. Amusements
77. Medical, Educational Services, & Non-Profit Organizations
78. Federal Government Enterprises _
79. State & Local Government 1Enterprises
80A. Directly Allocated Imports
__. _ _ _
__
_
__
SOB. Transferred Imports l
81. Business Travel, Entertainment, & Gifts..- ... ._
82. Office Supplies
83. Scrap, Used & Secondhand Goods
84. Government Industry
. __
85. Rest of the World Industry
86. Household Industry


http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank
18 of St. Louis

100 0
100.0
100 0
100 0
100.0

100.0
100 0
100 0
100.0
100 0
100.0
100 0
100.0
100 0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100 0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100 0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100 0
100.0
100.0
100 0
100 0
100.0
100 0
100 0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100. 0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100 0
100.0
100 0
100.0
100.0
100 0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0

o
31 5
o
o
2
o
(*)
o
o

14
0
4 5

o

0
0

2

4
(*)
0
0

o

0

.4

(*)
3
0
4
0
3
.3

o

(*)
.2
(*)

o

(*)
2

o

.6
4

o
2
o
o

0
0
0

1
0
0
0
0
(*)
0

o

.5
.1
0
0
0

n( )

1.5
.6
0
5
1.0
7
.5
0
2
0
.8
0
.6
.1
(*)
.1
1.8
.3
.1
0
0
0
0

o
o
(*)
o

4 1
50

o
2 2
o
(*)
o
.1
11

o

15
(*)
22 2
0
0
0
.1
.1
9 4
0
0
0
5.0
2.3
0
.1
0
3
0
(*)
7

o

0

6
0
7.6
0
0
0
0
0
.2
0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
1.4
.1
0

1
1i
11

o
o
o
o
o

(*)

1

.3
(*)
(*)

o
o

1
.1
.1

o
(*)
o
o
o
o
o
o
o

(*)

(*)
0

0

o
o
o
o
(*)
o
o
o

(*)

(*)

(*)
(*)
0

(*).1 (*)

.2

o
o
0
o

o
o
o
o
o

(*)
.1
(*)
o
(*)

0

(*)

0

.1

0
0

0
0

o

0
0

(*)
(*)

.8
0
.8
1.0
11

(*)
0

(*)

(*)

(*)
0
0

(*)
0

.1

(*)

0

.4
0
0
0

R(*)

(*)
0
(*)
0
0
0

(*)
(*)

0
2.5

(*)
(*)
0

(*)

(*)

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

(*)

(*)

0

.3
0

(*)

(*)
(*)

o

.1

(*)
0

1
3
.1

o
(*)
(*)

w
(*)

0
.9
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
0
0

.1

0

(*)

(*)
0

•(*)

.1

(*)
(*)

(*)

(*)
(*)
0

(*)

n1 (*)
(*)
.1

(*)
(*)

(*)
n
6

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

0

0

0
.8

o

(*)

0

(*)
(*)
o
(*)

o

0
0
0

0
0

0

(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
o
(*)

(*)

o
o

o
o
o

(*)
.8

2.9
0
3.2
0
.6
0
.1
.1
(*)
2.4
2.7
.4
.2
0
0
0
0

o
o

o
o
(*)
(*)
o
o
0
(*)
(*)
o
o
o
o
o
(*) (*)
5
5
o
o
0
0
o
o
o
o
o
o
.1 (*)
o
o
o
o
o
(*)
o
0
o
o
o
o
o
o

0
0
0
.5
0
0

.1

o
o
o
o
(*)
o
o
(*)
o

«a

(*)

(*)
.1

(*)
0

.1

0
0

n
0
0

(*)

ncc*))
c*)
0

.1

(*)

(*)1

.1
(*)
(*)

.1

(*)
0
0

(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
0

3.2

.1

(*)
(*)
0
0
0

(*)

r*>
0
0

(*)

R(*)

0
2.2
.1
(*)
(*)
0
0
0

o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
17 1 (*)
o
2 2
1 o
o
(*)
o
o
(*)
(*)
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
(*)
1
o
o
o
o
o
0

1

.2

0

o
o

.1

(*)
(*).4

0
0
(*)
.1
.3
0
(*)
0

.1
.1
.2

0
(*)
.4
.2
0
0
3.2
1.0
.3
0
.1
(*)
0
0

.1

0
.2
0
0
(*)
( ;

o

.3

V
.1
(*)
0
.3
.1
.1
.1
(*)
.1
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
0

(*)
.2
(*)
0
0
0

o
o
o

IO

9

10

11

12

13

o
0
o
o
o
o
.1
o
7
o
o
(*)
o
o
o
o
(*)
o
o

0
0
0
0
0

o
10
o
o
o
o

o 56 7
o
o 20 1
o
o
o 19 0
o
o
0
o
o
o
o
o
o
15
o
o
2
81 o
o
o
15
o
o
o
14
(*)
(*)
o
18 o
o
o 16 2
o
o
o
o
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
3
o
(*)
o
4 4
(*)

*i?
O> 03

a
os
cr

CO

.2
.8
.7
0
1.3
0
(*)
k
4
2.1
(*)
0
0
.6
0
(*)
0
.4
.1
(*)
0
0

M(*)

.2
(*)
0
.4
.1
.4
2.3
(*)
1.4
0
.2
(*)
(*)
0
.1
0
8.6
1.0
.2
7.9
0
0
0

6
59

38 5
0

o
(*)
o
(*)
o

0
(*)
1
(*)

(*)

38.9

o
o
o

o
o
o

.1
.1

0

.1

(*)

(*)

(*).1

o

(*)

(*)

0

.3
.3
.5
0
(*)
(*)
1
(*)
.1

o

o
o
1
o

(*)
(*)
(*).4
(*)

0
(*)

(*)

o

.3
.4

o

(*)
0

(*)
.1

(*)
o
(*)

(*)

(*)
(*)

n

2.5
2.1
(*)
0
.1
(*)
0
0

.1

0

o
o
o

o

(*)

(*)
(*)

(*)

o
(*)
o

(*)
(*)
o
(*)
0

(*)
.1

(*)
o
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)

0
.5
.3
(*)
0

(*)

(*)
0
0

.1

0

(*)

(*)

0
0

0
0

(*)
(*)

(*)
(*)

(*)

w

p

(*)

(*)

0

(*)
(*)
0
.2
.1
.1
.1
(*)
.1
0

(*)
(*)

0

(*)

$
0

.1

(*)

(*)

(*)
(*)
(*)
0
0

(*)
(*)
(*)

ft (*)
(*)

0
.9
.1
(*)
.3
0
0
0

(*)

0

.5

.1

(*)
0
0
0

9.0
13 7
31
0
.1
30
0

o

1
03

14

15

16

Q

4 6

0 4
50

Q

o
o
Q

Q

Q

Q

Q

(*)
Q

Q

Q

50

o

0
1i
6
0
(*)
6

o
o

46 9
21
10

(*)
3.9
53 7
11.5
8.6

(*)
3.7
72
14
2 8

64.5
2.4
13.3
.1
.1
5.5
22.8
(*)
0
7.3
.2
0
8.7
8.2
5.7
34.6
.6
.1
.9
(*)
0
.1
5.3
(*)

10 9
.6

5.3
1.2
0
.7
5.2
1.6
.3
0
10.5
0
3.3
0
.3
0
.3
0
0
3.4
1.0
5.2
0
0
0

.9
.2
0
.1
1.4
.2
.1
0
.2
0
.3
0
(*)
0

o

1

«8

0

10.5
5.5
4.5

o

CO

•c<x>

Broad & narrow fabrics,
yarn & thread mills

Coal mining

3

«2

bfl

.aa
B
3>>°
M
a

Tobacco manufactures

Nonferrous metal ores mining

2

fc-,

«8

Food & kindred products

Agricultural, forestry & fishery services

1

>»
3

Maintenance & repair construction

Forestry & fishery products

Total

0

New construction

Other agricultural products

1

For the distribution of output of an industry
read the row for that industry

bJO

aa
a

Chemical & fertilizer mineral mining

Livestock & livestock products

Table 1.—Percent Distribution of Gross Output, 1958
(Producers' prices)

o

o

8

(*)
0
.7
.8
(*)
0
.5
(*)
0
1.0
1.5
1.7
5.4
.4
(*)
.3
(*)
0
0
.4
(*)

(*)

0
0
.6
.2
.9
0
0
0

o
o

o
o
o
(*)
o

1
19 1
(*)

o
o
o

g
Q

1

o
(*\
o
(*)
Q
33 9
60

o

(*)

(*)

(*)

3
(*)

10

21 8

21

0

o
o

o
o

1 35
4 24 2
.1
10
1 15
3
o
2 4
(*)
1
3
1 16
1.6
21

o

o

(*)

(*)
27 5
(*)
(*)
4
72 8

.2
2
3
2.2

o
o

.8
.7
.2
0
0
0
1.4
0
.7
23.2
0
0
1.8
0
2.3
2.4
.1
(*)
4.8
0
2.4
(*)
.1
.2
0
.1
.1
.1
(*)
(*)
2
0
0
(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
0
.1
1.4
.4
(*)
0
0
0

o
o

o
o

7
2
1.9
2 3
.1
1
14
(*)
2.5 21 5
1
4
2
(*)
1
(*)
.1
.6
2
(*)
(*)
(*)
0
1.1
(*)
(*)

o

.1

(*)
(*)

o

0

o
o

4.7
13
0
0

(*)
.1
0
0

(*)
.1
0
0

0

0

0

2.5
(*)
(*)
0
0

o
o

.4
0
(*)
.1
0
0
.2
0
1.0
0
0
.2
0
0
0

(*)
0

7.5
1.7
0
1.8
2.4
1.3
.5
.3
6.6
.1
3. 6
(*)
.3
.7
.6
14.7
10.4
5.2
2.0
0
0
0
0

4

o

(*)

(*)

(*)
0
0

(*)
0
(*)
0
0

o

.1

(*)
0

.1

0
0

(*) (*)
0
0

0
0
0
0

(*)
0
.2

(*)
0
(*)

(*)

(*)
n
1.1
0

(*)
(*)
(*).3
(*)
(*)
.2
.2
.1
0
0
0
0

.7
.2
0
.6
.3
.2
.1
.1
.4
(*)
.1
(*)
.1
.2
.1
.8
1.6
.6
.4
0
0
0
0

Table 1.—Percent Distribution of Gross Output, 1958—Continued
(Producers' prices)

fe

Drugs, cleaning & to
preparations

Paints & allied products

Petroleum refining &
lated industries

Rubber & miscellane*
plastics products

Leather tanning & indust
leather products

Footwear & other leat
products

Glass & glass products

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

30

31

32

33

34

35

0.2
.i
0

0
(*)
9.7
0
0

0
0

0
0
54.2
.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
.1
1.0
0
3.8

0
0
0
0
0

(*)
(*)
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
.2

0
0
0
0
0

0.2
0
.1
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
(*)
0
0
.1

0
0
0
0
0

0
.1
0
0
(*)

0
0
0
0
0

0
.1
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

0
2.7
0
2.2
2.8

0
(*)
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

4.3
2.2
.2
1.2
36.7

0
.8
0
(*)
.1

(*)

(*)
(*)
0
.1
0

0
.3
82.5
3.0
.2

0
.4
0
.4
1.3

0
.1
0
0
.2

0
0
0
0
0

0

0

.1
0
0
0

0
(*)
0
0
0

0
(*)
0
(*)
0

0
(*)
0
0
0

0
.2
0
.1
0

0

0

0
(*)
0
.1
0

0
.2
0

0
(*)
0
.2
0

0
(*)
0

0

0
(*)
0
(*)
0

0
(*)
0
.3
0

0

0

.2
0
(*)
0

(*)
0
(*)
0

(*)

.5
.4
(*)
0
7.8

0
0

0

i}

0

(*)

1.3
17.3
.1
(*)
(*)

0
0
0

0

(*)
0
(*)
(*)
0
0
0
0

0
0
0

o

0

o
.1
o

(*)

(*)

.1
0
0

(*)
0
(*)

(*)
0
0
0

0
(*)
0
(*)
0

3.2
8.4
0
(*)
(*)

35.7
3.1
17.2
7.3
0

6.2
6.2
(*)
6.2
0

0
.1
.1
(*)
28.4

0
0
0
0
1.6

1.7
1.5
(*)
.1
4.5

0
0
0

0
0
0
.1
.6
(*)
(*)
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
1.0
0

0
0
0
.5
1.0
.3
.5
1.3
.1
2.0
.4
.8
0
(*)
.4
.4
(*)
.1
0
0
.3
1.0
0
0
0
.3
(*)
.5
.3
.2
0
0
(*)
0

3.6
0
0
(*)

.1
1.5
(*)
.1
1.6
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
3.6
(*)
1.8
.4
(*)
2.1
.1
.4
.3
0
0
.3
2.9
0
0
0
0
1
.2
(*)
(*)
0
0

0

0

0
0
0

.1
4

(*)
.1
9.1
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
(*)
(*)
0
0
(*)
(*)
0
0
0
0

(*)

.1

(*)
(*)
0
0

(*)
0
(*)
0
0

(*)
0
0
0

(*)
0

.3

.1

2.4
.1
.3
3.4
(*)
(*)
(*)
.3
4.1
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
0
0
0
0
3
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
.5

4.6
1
.1
.3
.1
.1
.5
0
0
0
.1
.2 (*)
.1
.1
.5
.1
.4 (*)
.3 (*)
(*)
(*).1 .3
.1
.6
0
0
0
(*) (*)
(*) (*).1 (*)
(*).1
.1 .6
(*)
(*)
.4
.1
0
2.4
.2
.1
.2
1.4
.2
.1
.1
.7
2.2
.1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Digitized
0 for0FRASER
0

(*)

(*)

(*)
(*)

o

(*)

(*)
0
(*)

(*)
(*)
(*)
0

(*)
0
(*).1
0
0
0

(*)

(*)
0
0
0
0

(*)

(*)

(*)
(*)
0
0

0

0

(*)

0
0
.1
0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0

.1

0
0

.1

1. 1

.2
0
.3
.4
.2
.1
.1
.2
0
.8
(*)
(*)
.1
.1
(*)
4.0
.9
.2
.2
0
0
0

(*)
(*)
(*)
0
(*)

(*)
(*)

(*)
(*)
(*)
0
(*)

(*)
(*)
(*)

(*)
0
(*)

.1

(*)
0
0
0
0

(*)
0

.1

(*) (*)

(*).2 (*)

.2
0
.1
.2
.1
.1
.1
.2
0
.1
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
0
.4
.2
0
0
0
0



.3
0
0
0
.7
0
0

(*)
(*)
1.2
.3

0
0
.7
1.2
.1 0
0
0
0
0
0
2.0
0
0
.9
(*) 18.9 14.7 20.0
1.9
1.2
.8
3. 1
6. 3
.2
12.6
.3
(*)
.1
2.8
1.5 19.4
(*)
.7
.2
2.2
0
(*)
.2
.1
.1
.3
(*)
.5
0
.1 0
1.3
.1
.1
.6
.7
(*)
.2
.2
.9
.3
1.9
0
0
0
0
.2
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
.8
2.5 (*)
0
0
.4
.1 (*)
(*)
(*)
.5
.7
0
0
(*)
1.0
.2
.1 0
.2
0
0
4.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.1
.1 .1 .1
.4
.1
2
.6
.8
15
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.5
0
0
0
0
.1 (*)
1
1
.2
4.5
.5
1.4
(*) 1.1
.1
(*) .1
(*)
(*)
.2
(*) .2
(*)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.1 (*)
.3
(*)
0
0
0
0
0
(*) .5 .1 .1 .1
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
.1
0
0
0
0
3.1 (*)
.4 (*)
.1 (*)
1l
.1 1. 1
4
5
.1 .3
.1
.6
1.7
0
0
0
0
0
.1
.3
1.4
.9
.1 .4
.3
.1
.4
(*) .2 .1 .5 .4
.1
.2
.7
(*) .1
.1
.1
.1
.1 .6 .1 2.3 .6
0
0
0
.5
(*)
.1
.2
.2
(*) (*)
(*)
(*)
.1 (*)
(*) (*).3 .1 2.2
.3
(*) .3
.1
(*)
(*)
(*)
0
0
.4
0
(*)
.3
0
8.6 (*)
2.5
.2
.4
.9
4.3
3.0
.1 .4
.2
2.9
.8
12.2
.2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

(*) (*)
0

.4

(*)
0

.9
(*)
(*)
1.0

.1
0
0
0

(*)

(*)

(*)

(*)

(*)
(*)
(*)

Metal containers

Plastics & synthetic i
terials

21

*o

Heating, plumbing & str
tural metal products

1 Chemicals & selected che
cal products

20

,36

37

38

39

40

41

42

43

44

45

0
(*)
0
0
.7

0
0
0
0
84.0

0
0
0
0
1.6

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
0

0
0
0
0
0

(*)
.1
0
1.5
.1

.3
2.3
0
27.0
1.8

.5
18.4
0
3.4
1.3

60.5
.4
0
.3
.3

0
(*)
0
0
0

0
.1
0
.1
0

0

.1 0
.1
.1
0
0
.1 0
(*) 0

0
.1
0

0
.1
0
(*)
0

*
<
1(

0
(*)
0
0
0

0
(*)
0
(*)
0

0
.8
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

1
1
1,
1
1

c3 ft
03

® "o
O"^

"•8

c/r tn

si
GTS

(*)
0
(*)
0

(*)
0
(*)
.2
0
0
1.8
.6
(*)
9.4
2.7
.5
0
.1
.2
0
(*)
.1
(*)
0
(*)
.2
0
.1
1
0
0
0
0
2
.2
.1
.1
0
0
.1
0
.1
0
0
(*)
0
0
0

(*)
(*)
(*)4

.1
0
.2
.1
.1
(*)
(*)
.2
.2
(*)
(*)
(*)
.5
(*)
0
.3
.1
(*)
(*)
0
0
0

o'

.2
(*)

.1

(*) (*)
0
0
0
(*)

.1
.5
.6
5.5
.2 (*)
5.1 3.3
(*) 5.3
.2
6.2
.2
.4
.1
.1
.1
.9
0
0
(*)
(*)
6.0 0
.1
.2
.1
(*)
(*)
(*)
5.1 4.2
0
0
.6 (*)
8 (*)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
(*)

.1

(*)

(*)

0

(*)

(*) (*)
0
0

0
0

0
.4
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.5
.2
(*)
.9
1.3 (*)
. 1 (*)
(*)
2.5
3.8
.5
0
21.2
0
.6
.3
.1
0
(*)
(*)
.1
6.9
(*)
.1 3.0
.1
0
13.8
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
1.9
0
.1
.3
.2
0
.1
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
0
5.8
0
0
0
0
.2 (*)
(*)
1 1 (*)
2.9
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1 (*)
1
0
0
0
.1 (*)
(*)
1.1 (*)
(*)
0
0
0
0
0
0

(*) 0.1
0
(*) (*) (*)

(*)
0
0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0
0

(*)
0
.2
(*)

.1

4
.2
0
.1
.2
.2
.1
(*)
4.1
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
.3
(*)
.1
.3
.7
.2
(*)
0
0
0

(*)

(*)
0

0
0

(*)
0
0
0

.1

0
.3
0
0
(*)
0
0
0

0

(*).1

.1

(*)

(*).1
0

(*)
(*)

(*).1
(*).1
(*)

.4
1

o'
0
0
0

.3
0
1.3
.2
.4
.2
0
1.4
.1
.2
0
.1
.8
.1
0
5.1
.5
.4
.2
0
0
0

.2
0
.3
.2
.1
.1
.1
.7
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
2.3
.3
.9
.4
.2
0
0
0

0

.2
0
0
.2
10
.1
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
2.5
70.5
8.3
(*)
.1
0
(*)
0
0

2.6
0
0
(*)
4.6
(*)
.7
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
0

(*)4
Q
0
0
0
(*)
0

(*)

(*)

(*)
(*)
0

.4

(*)

4.8
.8
0
(*)
0
0
.2
.1
0
0
0
0

.1

0

.1
.1

(*)
0
(*)

(*)0
(*)

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0
0

(*)
0
0
0

.1 (*)
(*) (*)
(*) (*) (*) (*)
(*)
(*).2 (*)
(*). 1
2.5
.4

.1

.7
1.7
.1
(*)
.3

(*)
0
(*)

(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
0

(*)
0
0
0

.1
.1

.1
0
.1
.1
.1

(*).1
.4
0

(*) (*)
(*) (*)
(*).1 (*).2
(*) (*)
(*) 0
.3

(*)
(*)
0
0
0
0

.1
.3
.2
0
0
0
0

(*)
0

.1

.1

.1
0
.1
.1

0
0

(*) .1
(*) (*).1
(*).2 1.3
.1

(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
0
.4
.3
.1
1.7
0
0
0

.1
.2

2.4
.7
0
0
0
0
.5
1.6
.4
20
.1
.2
1.2
1.4
2.0
.1
.7
.5
.2
.8
.4
.8
.9
.6
0
0
(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
3.9
12.0
.2 20.9
.1
2.7
0
0
0
0
.2
3.1
1.3
4 6
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1 31
.6
(*)
1.3
(*)
8.8
0
0
0
0
.1 1.6
0
0
.2
1.1
0
0
0
0

(*) (*)
0

0
.4
.1
.1

0

(*).1

.3
0
1.0
.2
.3
.1
.1
.4
0
.3
(*)
(*)
.2
.1
.1
.7
1.1
.3
.8
0
0
0

(*)
0
0
0

.1
.1

.2
2.9
.7
0
2.2
.7
.5
.1
.2
.7
.3
.1
(*)
.1
.4
.3
0
2.1
1.3
.6
41.1
0
0
0

(*)
0

.1 0

.2
(*)
.1
.1
0
0
0

R.1

0
0
0

(*)
.2

0

.1

1.7
0
0
.1
9

0
0
.1
.3
.2
.8
.1 .1
.2
.7 0
2.6 (*) (*)
.1 (*)
.1
.4 1.9 1.1
.2 (*)
.2
.1
.4
.2
.1
.1
0
(*) (*)
(*)
(*) 1.4
(*)
.1
.6
.6
.1 4.7 9.4
.2 5.4
29.6
.2 0
0
0
0
1.9
.5 3.2
2.3
.1 3 1
1.4
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
7 10
18
0
0
(*)
.4 1.7
.7
2.0
.6 1.6
0
0
0
0
.6
0
.2 (*) 1.5
0
0
(*)
.3
1.7 (*)
0
0
0
0
0
0
(*) 0(*)
(*)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.1
1.8
(*)
.1
.1
.2
.4
.6
.3
.3 (*)
0
0
0
.1
.2
1.1
.3
.1
.3
.2
.2 (*)
.1
.1 (*)
.1
.1 (*)
.1
.4
.3
.1 0
(*)
.1
.2
(*)
(*)
(*) (*).2
(*)
.1 (*)
.1 (*) (*)
.1 0
0
.1
7.6 (*)
.1 1.0
.7
.3
.3 (*)
2.4
28.8 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

(*)
(*) (*)
(*)

(*)
(*)

(*)

0
0
0

(*)

0
0
0

i

1

(2

ft

5

Primary nonferrous mei
manufacturing

Printing & publishing

19

ft

1

Primary iron & steel ma
facturing

Paperboard
boxes

18

ftOT

6

i

Stone & clay products

Other furniture & fixtures

17

"3

0

containers

Household furniture

Ij

I

Wooden containers

fl

Lumber & wood produ<
except containers

"C

Miscellaneous fabrical
textile products

o

(*)

0

(*) 0(*)
(*)

i

(*)
(*)
0

(*)
0

. 1 (*)
.2 (*)
(*) (*)
0
0
.5

.4
0
0
.2
9

.5
0
0
.1
9

0
0
0

.1
.3
(*)
1.0
.1
.3
(*)
(*)
.2
.4
3.4
2.3
0
(*)
2.7
.9
.2
0
0
0
7
(*)
(*)

.5
.1
(*)
.5
.2
.6
.1
(*)
.1
.6
4.2
3.6
0
0
2.4
38
0
0
0
0
4 2
(*)
.3
.7
0
0
.4
0
.2
0
.1
(*)
0
0
0

(*) (*)

(*)

(*).2

.1
.7
(*)
(*)
(*)
.2
2.4
.2
0
.4
.8
.4
3.5
.1
5.6
0
1 2
0
4.1
.8
0
0
.6
0
.1
0
0
.3
(*)
0
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
.1
0

(*)

0

.2

0
0
.1
(*)
.3
0
(*)
(*)
0
(*)
0

(*)

(*) .1
(*) (•*).1
(*).2 .3

.1
0
.2
.1
.1
.1
(*)
.1
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
0
.2
.6
.2
0
0
0
0

.2
0
.2
.2
.2
.1
.1
.4
0
.1
(*)
(*)
.2
(*)
0
.7
1.1
.4
.9
0
0
0

(*)
0

.1
.1

0

.1

(*)
0
0
0

(*)3 (*)1 (*)1
(*)
(*) (*) (*)
(*).1 (*).5 .2

.1
1.2
.3
(*)
(*) (*)
.1 (*)
.2
.2
1.2 1.9
.2
.7
0
0
(*) 0
1.1 1.9
.1
2
9.1 5.4
3.6
0
.1
0
.2 0
10 11
0
0
1.2 3.7
4.1 2.2
0
0
0
0
.4
.3
.1
0
.1
(*)
0
0
0
0
2.4 1.2
.1
(*)
(*) 0
0
0
.1
(*)
(*) (*)
.1 (*)
. 1 .1
.1
.1
0
0
(*).1 .1
.1
.1
(*)
(*)
.1 .3
.2 0
(*) (*)
(*) (*)
(*) (*)
.1
.1
(*) (*)
0
0
(*) 1.1
.3
.3
.1
.1
.4
.5
0
0
0
0
0
0

(*)
(*)
(*)

Industry number

VI

£

Farm machinery & eqi;
ment
Construction, mining &
field machinery

tu

Miscellaneous textile go<
& floor coverings

cb
fl

Engines & turbines

I

CJ

me

*

•s

Other fabricated
products

•8

•8

.1

.1
.1

(*)
(*).2
0

0::)

(*)
(*).1
(*)
0
(*)

.5
.2
.2
0
0
0

1
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
7
80.
801
8
8
8
8
8
8

Table 1.—Percent Distribution of Gross Output, 1958—Continued
(Producers' prices)

0
0

(*)
0

.1

(*)0

(*)
(*)
(*)

<*)

(*)
(*).3
1
6
1

f*)
(*)
(*)

f*)
(*)
.1

(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)

.1
.1

0
0

0
0

(*)

(*)0
(*)
0

3

13
7

(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)

.1

.3
.3
(*)
(*)
1
11
10
0
.2
.7
.5
(*)
0
0
(*)
.8
4.9
2.8
.5
.1
(*)
1.6
0
(*)
0
0

0
.1
.4
.2
.4
0
(*)
3.7
.3
0
1.4
.9
(*)
0
1.0
0
.1
0
0
.2
0
0
0
(*)
(*)

0
(*)
.7
.2
0
0
0
.3
5.6
.1
2.6
.3
0
0
1.6
0
(*)
0
0
(*)
0
0
0

.1
(*)

.1
(*)

(*)
(*)
0

1
.3
0

1
.3
0
.1
.1
.1
(*)
(*)
0

.1
(*)
.1
(*)
.1
(*)
.1
(*)
(*) 1 (*) 2
0

(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)0

.1

.2
.1
(*)
0
0
0

0
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
.3
.6
.2
.1
0
0
0

(*)0
0
0

(*)
(*)

(*).1

(*).1

.2
.5
.2
.3
0
0
0

(*)0
(*)0

.1

(*)0
0

.1

.2
(*)
<*)
(*)
(*)
.1
.1
.2
.1
(*)
(*)
4
19
.9
0
.3
1.0
.7
.5
0
0
0
1.5
(*)
6.9
.8
0
0
2.6
0
.1
0
(*)
(*)
0
0
0
.4
0
1
.4
0
.1
.2
.1
(*)
(*)
2
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
0

.1

.7
.3
.6
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

(*)0

0

0
0
0
0

(*)

(*)0

<y

(*)
0

.2
0
0
.1
.1

i
I*)0 (*).1
.1 (*)
.3
(*)
o

(*)

(*) 3
6
1.1
0
0
.1
.3
0
0
0
0
.6
0
.1
6.7
0
0
.1
0
.1
0
0

(*)0
0
0

(*)
( )

(*)
(*)
(*)

1
.2
.4

0
0
.7
.2
0
0
0
0
.6
0
.4
.3
8.5
0
.9
0
.4
(*)
3.5
(*)
0
0
0
(*)
(*)

.1

1
.1

(*)

.1

0

.1

.1

(*)
(*)

0

(*).1
(*)

0
0
(*)
0

(*)0

.1

2.4
0
0
.1
.5
(*)
.1

.i

(*)
.6
(*)
.4
(*)
(*)
.2
2
.8
1.1
0
.1
2.1
.8
.1
0
0
0
.2
0
.3
.1
0
4.7
3.7
(*)
.6
0
(*)
(*)
0
0
0
.8

( )

1
.1
0

.1
.1
.1

(*) (*)
(*) 1
(*) 1 (*)
2
0

(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)0

.1

.3
.1
.2
0
0
0

0
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*')

0
.3
.8
.2
(*)
0
0
0

0

(*)
(*)
(*)

(*)0
(*)

.4
.1
(*)
0
0
0

1

68

0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
19.7
10.0
0
0
0
3.3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

Radio & T.V. broaden

55

56

57

58

59

60

61

62

63

64

65

66

67

0
0

0
0

0
0
0
0
0
.3
0
0
0
0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
(*)

0
0

0
(*)

(*)
(*)

0
0
.3
0
.1
0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
0

<*).1

(*)0

.1

(*)0

0
.4
.5
(*)
.1
,8
<*)
.8
.1
.5
.1
(*)
.2
5
15
32
0
.1
2.0
.5
.4
0
0
0
1.4
0
1.1
.5
0
(*)
6.6
0
1.8
(*)
3.9
(*)
0
0
0
2
(*')
(*)
2
.2
0
.2
.2
.1
.1
.1
2
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
.3
(*)
.1
.4
1.6
.5
(*)
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
.1
<*)
(*)
0

.1

4.5
0
0
.1
.9
(*)

.2
.2
(*)
1.1
(*)
1.7
.1
.1
.2
4
14
1.5
0
.1
4.7
1.7
0
0
0
0
.7
(*)
.9
.2
0
3.1
2.5
1.1
1.1
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
2.9
( )
2
.2
0
.1
.2
(*)
(*)
(*)
13
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
.2
(*)
0
(*)
.5
.1
(*)
0
0
0

(*)0
0
0
0
0

(*)0
(*)
0
0
0

.1
1.1

(*)

.1

1.0

(*).6
(*).5
(*)
(*)
3.0
2
.7
1.1
0
0
1.6
.5
0
0
0
0
.3
0
(*)
.2
0
0
.7
0
4.0
0
0
2.9
0
0
0
(*)
(*)
.1
1
.1
0

.1

.2
(*)
(*)
(*) 1
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
0

.1

.4
.1
.1
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
.1
0
0
0
0
(*)
(*)
0
0

(*)0
(*)0

.1

0
4.3
0
.3
.9
.1
.1
1.0
(*)
.1
(*)
.9
.1
(*)
1.2
2
3
1.2
0
(*)
3.0
1.1
0
0
0
0
.7
0

.1

.3
0
.2
1.1
0
2.7
5.5

39.0

(*)
0
0
0
.3
(*)
(*)
2
.2
0
.1
.2
.1
.1
.1
6
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
.4
(*)
0
.3
1.6
.5
.3
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
0

0
0
.2
.1
0
0
(*)
0
0

(*)0

(*)0
0
0
0
0

0
0

(*)0
(*)0

(*)0
(*)

0
0
0
0

0
.4
0

.1

(*).3
(*).3

.4
(*)
.3
.5
(*)
.1
(*)
.3
(*)
(*) 0
3. o
2
.3
1.2
0
(*)
1.7
.5
0
0
0
0
.4
0
(*)
.2
0
0
.2
0
.5
(*)
6.1
0
0
0
0
.1
(*)
(*)
1
.1
0

.1

.2
(*)
(*)
(*)
1.0
(*)
(*)
(*)
2
.2
1.5
0
0
1.0
.1
0
0
0
0
.6
0
.7
.2
0
0
.2
0
1.1
0
.4
3.7
(*)
0
0

n

.2
(*)
.1
(*)
1
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
.2
(*)
.1
(*)
.8
.2
0
0
0
0

CO
(*)
.1
.1
0
(*)
.1
(*)
(*)
(*)
1
0

(*)
(*)
(*).1
(*)0

.2
.3
.1
(*)
0
0
0

1
I1
0
0
0
0
.5
0
(*)
0
0
.4
0
0
0
.4
3.5
.1
6.6
.1
0
0
.3
.8
.7
.1
.3
.6
.3
4.7
.3
9.1
.7
(*)
8

0
0
0
0
.1
0
0
0
0
.1
4.3
0
0
(*)
.2
.1
0
.2
0
0
1.1
(*)
.3
.1
.1
2
.1
.6
.2
1.2
0
(*)
.1
6

10.3

2. 1

2.6
0
.1

3.4
0
(*)
6.6
1.8
.1
0
0
0
6.5
0
3.3
7.8
(*)
(*)
.7
0
.7
5.1
2.8
2.9
.2

10.6

18.8
12.5
2.8
0
(*)
0
7.0
0
2.8
8.4
0
1.2
.6
0
4.0
1.9
.6

21.0
29.0
0

18.9

.1
2.7
.1

(*)
4.4
1.6

.4
12

.5
0
.5
.7
.3
.1
.1

2 3

.2
.1
(*)
.1
.9
.1
(*)
4.9
1.5
.6
.6
0
0
0

.1

3
.6
0
.3
.2
.1
.1
0
2
.2
(*)
0
.1
.3
(*)
0
.4
.8
.7
.4
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
.1
0
(*)
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
(*)
.1
(*)
.1
1.0
0
.7
1.0
.1
(*)
(*)
.1
6
(*)
1.6
.1
.5
.2
(*)
.9
4
2.2
7
0
1.9
.5
1.1
4.5
0
.6
1.2
.5
0
1.5
.8
0
.4
2.4
.5
.5
.1
(*)
.3
.1
0
6.6
.1
(*)

.1
2
.1

0
.1
.2
.1
(*)
(*)
1
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
0
.4
.6
2
'.6
0
0
0

0
0
0

.1

0
0

(*)0
0

(*)0

(*)0
.2
.3
(*)
0

(*)

.2
0
0
.1
.8
(*)
.1
2
(*)
.1
(*)
.6
.3
.1
.5
2
.3
1.4
.4
(*)
1.7
.6
0
0
0
0
1.1
0
.4
1.1
.9
(*)
1.4
0
.5
.3
3.6
(*)
0
(*)
0
5.6
.2
.2
.1
.2
0
.1
.1
.1
.1
(*)
.2
0
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
(*)
.7
1.2
.4
(*)
0
0
0

ftft
o

0
0
0
0
.1
0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
(*1

(*)

(*)0
(*)

0
0
0
.5
.3
(*)
.8
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
.2
(*)
(*)
.7
1
(*)
.4
0
0
.3
2

o'

0
0
0
.2
0
0
0
0
0
.3
0
.2
0
0
(*)
0
0
0

(*)5.3

.2
0
0
0
(*)
0
(*)
(*)
0
0

.1

(*)0
.9
1.4
(*)
.1
1.1
.4
0
0
1.1
5.5
.1
.3
2.8
.1
2.1
.1
1.7
3.6
.8
1.2
.1
.7
2.5
0
0
1.1
1.2
0
0
0
0

.1

(*).1
.7

0

. .1

.6
0
.6
0
.3
(*)
0
(*)
0

<*)0

5. 3

(*)
.1
.1
0

0

.4
(*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
(*)
.6
.2
.1
0
0
0
0

.1
.3
.2
.1
.1
.5
0
.1
(*)
(*)
.2
(*)
.9
1.9
1.0
.4
.4
0
0
0

(*).1
(*)
(*)
(*)

.2
.3

&

54

S

0
0
0
1.0
0
.1
.2
0
7.4
0
.2
0
.1
.6
(*)
.7
.1
3.9
0
0
.3
.2
.6
.3
(*)
.2
2.1
8.4
3.7
.4
(*)
.2

.i

2
.5
0
(*)
.4
.6
3.7
0
0
1.3
.6
0
-.4
.4
.1
.1
.6
0
.3
.3
.9
4.7
.4
1.3
8.0
.7
(*)
.9
6.2
2.9
0
.7
1.1
2.7
1.7
0
2.0
0

10.4

.4
.1
1.0
1.2
5.2
7.5
2.2
3.2
0
0
0
0

0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1.7
0
0
0
(*)
.1
0
.2
(*)
0
0
0
0
0
.9
(*)

o

(*)0

.1

.1

0

(*)0
o
o

.2
0
0
0

(*)0

0
0
0

(*)0
0
0
0
0

(*)0
0
1.9
.2
.3
0
0
.1
(*)
(*)
.2
(*)
.9
0
.3
.1
2
2 i

o'

.7
0
2
.1
(*)
.9
.1
.5
0
.7
2.7
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
0

0

.1

.1
0
0
0
0

.1
.1
.1
0
o
(*)
0

(*)
(*)
0

(*)0
0

o
o

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
.6
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.2

(*)

.7
.3
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
0
.3
0
(*)
5.3
(*)
(*)
(*)
0
0
.5
.1
0
0
0
0

Electric, gas, water &
tary services

2

53

*Less than .05 percent. Not applicable
1
For this table, industry 80 is split into two rows. Row 80A shows the direct allocation
to consuming industries of imported goods and services which are not substitutable for do-


20


_d

11

Communication; e:
radio & T.V. broa<
ing

(*)0

tao

ft to

Transportation
housing

(*)0

0
0
0

itII

03

1

Miscellaneous manuf
ing

.6
0
0
(*)
0
0
0

(*)0

t!

Scientific & controlli:
struments

(*)0

bC

d

Other transports
equipment

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
(*)
(*)
(*)

d

0

Aircraft & parts

0
0

0
0
0
0
(*)
0
(*)
0
0

ft

Misc. electrical mach
equipment & supp]

0
0

0
0

0
0
0
0

<o <n

.a .2

Electronic componei
accessories

52

«

Radio, television &
munication equipn

51

ii

Electric lighting & \
equipment

(*)
0

50

1
T>

Household appliance;

0
0
0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
0
0

(*)
(*)
(*)0

(*)
<*)
(*)

0
0

0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
0

0
0

49

-2*
"30*
Electric industrial <
merit & apparatus

0
0

1
| Service industry ma(

0
0

ott

Office, computing <
counting machines

48

•S

Machine shop produ<

47

i

5

General industrial m*
ery & equipment

2

46

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
(*)
0
(*)
0
(*)
(*)
0
0

$

fl

33

Special industry me
ery & equipment

"S

fe
Metalworking mach
& equipment

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80A
SOB
81
82
83
84
85
86

03

Materials handling
chinery & equipme:

For the distribution o
put of an industry
the row for that ind

ill

.1

0

\*)

(*)
o
(*)
0
1.3

.1

0

(*)0
3
(*)
0
0
0
0
2.4
0
0
0
0
.1
0
0
0
.4
0

.2
0
.1
.1
0

(*)0
0

(*)
(*)0
.1

1.1
.5
0

16.7

.3
.4
.1
0
.9
0
.3
0
.1
1.2
.1
0
.3
.9
1.2
0
0
0
0

mestically produced goods and services. It also shows the distribution to final demand
categories of all imported goods and services which are consumed by final demand in substantially the same form in which they were imported. 48 percent of total imports have been

Table 1.—Percent Distribution of Gross Output, 1958—Continued
(Producers' Prices)

(*)

19.8
0
0
4.1
9.5
1.4
0
0
0
0
3.8
2.3
0
.1
4.6
.6
0
0
.2
0
.5
.1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.8
.3
.2
0
0
.2
(*)
0
1.4
.7
0
0
0
0
.8
1.0

10.9
0
9.4
1.7
6.0
8.2
1.8

19.5
10.4
1.7
.4

10.1
1.1
.3
0

75

76

77

78

79

80A&

O

«

W

ft

0

fc

O

ft

02

81

82

83

84

85

86

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
0
0
0
0
1.4
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
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2.5
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
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
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
4.8
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
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

M rl

J
o
0

ll
£

idustry number

;ate & local govei
ment purchases

CO

sderal Governme
purchases

O

0

ross exports

FQ

a

et inventory
change

to >
O <D

ow

^

3
I

ross private fixec
capital formatiol

•§1

Final Demand
Brsonal consump
tion expenditure

;_,
ao „

ao

Cj

1
_a

ousehold industi

0

b

b

est of the world

1

aC3

overnment indui

CO

a

1
£

ffice supplies

ft

-8

•9

usiness travel, e:
ment & gifts

a
B
;ate & local gov
enterprises

0
.1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.2 0
0
0
.2
0
0
0
0
0
.7 35.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.8 0
0
(*)
1.4 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1.0 0
.7 0
3.1 (*)
0
0
0
.2 0
0
0
.5 1.4
.5
.8
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 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

74

^

g

a

£

a

ederal Governme
prises

0
0
0
9.8
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
4.6
0
(*)
0
0
1.3
0
1.0

73

72

<

[edical, educatio
ices & nonprofit

71

«

aS

musements

70

«

1
utomobile repair
ices

69

W

esearch & develc

«

1

usiness services

^

ft

£

£

'otels; personal .
services exc. aut<

eal estate & rent

,

inance & insurarj

8

'holesale & retail

1

•3
a
£

t—I

SOB
0
0

.1

0

0
.3
0
0
.4
.7
4.4
0
.6
.3

20.4

3.3
0
4.2
0
1.0
.1
.6
8.0
.2
1.1
.1
5.6

24.2
15.8

10.0

7.5
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

.1

0
0
0
0
0
0

.1

1.8

0
1.0
.2
5.0
2.0
0
2.9
0
.6
0
.1
5.9
(*)
0
0
.9
2.0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.2
0

(*)0

1.1

.9
.7
5.7
.1
0
.3
.2
1.4
.5
.1
.8
0
2.7
(*)
.8
1.0
0
.2
.1
.7
0
.1
0
0
0
.4
0
0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
1.8
.1
3.3
.3
.2
8.8
.2
0
0
.2
1.9
6.5
4.6
.3
.7
0
1.2
.5
.7
.9
2.9
1.3
0
1.5
0
.1
.2
.4
0
0
2.3
1.4
3.3
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
1.0
0
0
0
0

.1

0
0
0
0
.6

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

.1

(*).9 (*).1

0
0
0
0
.6
.2
.5
.1
0
.4
0
.6
1.0
0
(*)
0

(*)
0

.2
0
0
0
(*)
4.6
5.3
.6
0
.5
0
0
(*)

3. 6
3.8
(*)
0
(*)
0
0
.3
(*)
0
.5
0

11.9

0
0
0
0

.1

(*)

(*)
0
0

.1

0

(*).2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

(*)
0
0
0
0

.1

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.2
0
0

1.3
.3
2.9
.2
1.2
.4
1.1
1.4
0
2.2
0
1.5
0
(*)

.1
(*)
(*)

.2
0
0
3.2

0
0
0
.3
0
0
0
0
0

16.0

18.1
0
0
0
0

0
0

(*)
(*)
(*)
0
0
0

.1
.1

(*)
0

0
0

0
0
0
0
.3
0
0
0
0
.6
0
0
0
0
.6
(*)
.8
0
0
0
0

(*)
(*)
.1
(*)
0

.1

3.3
.2
4.0
0
(*)
4.4
.5
0
0
0
0
0
1.7
0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
6.5
0
0
.1
0
1.4
0
0
7.6
4.8
0
.3
.4
0
(*)
.2
.6
0
.7
.7
.8
.5
0
.6
0
1.7
0
(*)
(*)
0
0
.4
2
5^2
0
0
0

(*)
0

0
.2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.7
0
0
0
0

.1

0
.2
0
0
0
0
(*)
(*)
.2
0
0
(*)
0
(*)
(*)
0
.3
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

1.5
1.6

.1

.3
0
.2
.1
.5
.5
0
.9
0
0

23.6
(*)
(*)
1.0
0
1.3
.5
0
0
0
0

(*)
(*)
0
0
0
0

(*)0

0
0
0
4.0
0
.3
(*)
(*)
.9
.3
1.5
(*)
0
0
0
.8
.6
2.5
(*)
0
8.9
0
.4
.9
0
.1
.3
(*)
0
0
0
0
.5
(*)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
(*)
.1
0
0
0

(*)

.2
0
.7
(*)
0
.5
7.2
4.5
.6
.4
2.0
0
2.1
.4
1.0
2.5
.9
2.3
.7
.6
1.5
1.3
.4
.3
.1
0
6.7
6.4
(*)
0
0
0

(*)
2.6
0
0
.1
0
1.7
0
(*)
0
0
.1
0
.4
0
0
0
0
.1
0
0
0
0
.3
.2
.3
0
0
0
0

(*)
(*)
0

(*)
0

0
0
0
(*)
0
0
2.9
.2
0
0
0
7.1
(*)
(*)
0
0
.1
(*)
0

(*)
0
0
0

(*)
0
.1

.2
(*)
(*)
(*)
.2
.1
0
0
0

.2
0
0
0
0
0
(*)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

(*)
(*)
0

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

(*)

0
0
0
.3
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

.1

(*)

(*)

(*)
(*)
0

.1

0
0

0
0
0
0
2.1

.1

0

.4
.1
(*)
.1
0
.2
(*)
.4
0
0
.2
(*)
1.8
0
.5
1.5
0
0
0
0

0
0

.1

0
0
0
0

(*).2
.3
0
1.9
(*)
.2
.1
.1
.3
0
.1
0

(*)
.1

(*)
0
0

.2
2.1
(*)
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
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
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

directly allocated to consuming industries and final demand. Row SOB shows the classification of transferred imports according to the industry producing the domestic goods and services for which these imports are substitutes. 52 percent of total imports have been transferred




8.0
10.5
19.4
0
0
0
9.5
0
1.1
.2
0
0
3.4
70.2
71.5
6.5
29.7
78.1
48.1
1.8
0
73.2
8.6
8.1
1.0
19.3
1.8
.2
55.9
.9
40.3
19.0
0
83.6
5.9
2.8
.1
.1
0
.9
6.7
5.8
5.7
.3
0
0
.8
.8
0
0
2.6
11.0
.3
67.2
13.6
22.5
5.6
16.7
39.2
.2
19.2
9.7
28.9
45.7
25.4
42.1
0
39.7
64.6
44.6
64.5
77.7
7.7
0
55.4
58.0
90.1
15.4
6.5
38.0
0
0
0
-1.0
0
-45.0
100.0

0
0

2.3
1.8

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

1.3
1.3

70.5
0
0
0
0
0
1.8
0
0
.1
0
3.8

53.4

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.8
0
.2
0
0
0
0
.5
8.8
0
2.5

26.1
65.1
42.8
32.1
31.5
57.8
28.0
0

45.0
42.4
31.3
2.6
1.1

16.7
1.0
5.4

15.2

2.8

31.2
14.7
10.1
5.0
1.5
3.9
0
0
3.9
0
2.0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.2
0
0
0

-1.8
-2.4

-.8
-.4
.2
-.2
0
0
1.8
.4
-.4

-1.0
-1.1
-.9
(*)

-2.1
-.2
(*)
(*)
(*)
.1
-.2

-1.0
.8
-.2

-1.0
-.5
-.3
1.0
-.2
.4
-.8
-.1
.6
-.9

-1.8
— 7
-2'. 7
-.9

-2.4
-2.2
-3.6
-4.2
-2.2

-.7
-.6

-1.6
-2.6
-1.8
-1.3
-1.2
-1.8
-1.6
-2.3
-2.1
-2.0
-.2
.3
.6
.4
0
0
0
.1
0
0
0
0
0
0
.4
0
0
0
.1
0
0
0

-59.0

-14.7

0
0
0

0
0
0

0.1
7.5

(*)
(*)
4.7
-9.4
(*)
2.9 -4.4
0
0
0
14.5
0
12.1
2.2
.3
0
0
1.4
—. 7
.6
2.1
9.8
1.9
6.5 23.0
(*)
6.3 19.9
0
.1
.4
48.6
.4
1.7
.3
0
7.3
(*)
1.9
.5
.1
.2
1.8
(*)
.3
1.0
.6
4.5
.8
(*)
-.1 (*)
1.3
.4
.6
.1
.5
.8
1.7
1.2
1.7
8.5
2.4
.7
.1
.1
.5
(*)
.7
1.4
.7
6.1
5.6
2.0
.1
7.9
0
2.0
4.9
2.7
.1
1.5
(*)
4.0
3.6
2.1
3.1
1.7
1.1
0
3.1
0
1.2
.7
M
.1
3.1
0
.1
1.3
(*)
.6
2.8
(*)
3.3
3.0
0
1.2
.8
0
2.8
0
(*)
.1
2.5
.8
1.7
.7
3.8
.1
10.8
9.6
.2
7.3
.7
2.6
23.0
.7
12.4
7.0
4.5
4.7
.1
9.0
14.6
1.2
1.2
.1
5.3
7.3
2.6
2.2
.9
3.9
3.3
6.0
2.9
.9
6.0
3.5
.1
5.4
.6
4.5
(*)
.8
2.8
23.1
1.0
3.3
8.8
3.4
(*)
2.1
5.8
4.6
1.9
3.9
1.3
51.0
4.4
(*)
1.0
17.3
7.9
2.4
15.2
5.1
.9
8.4
5.6
3.2
.6
2.1
1.2
4.2
6.7
2.0
.7
1.8
0
0
.6
2.4
1.7
.2
.2
.7
1.5
.7
.1
(*)
.2
.4
.4
.7
2.0
0
2.3
2.3
.7
0
97.0
0
1.6
1.0
0
-.8
.3
4.6
1.4
.5
(*)
1.6
1.4
1.5
.1
.1
2.4
1.9
26.8
(*)
0
0
0
0
0
0
9.7
0
5.5
8.4 24.6
15.0
51.2 48.8
0
0
169.4 -24.3
0
0
0

2.1
.2
3.3
.3

8.8
10.3
1.2
.4
2.4
2.2
.7
4.9
4.7

28.4
0
0

39.6

4.1
2.5
5.0
6.9
1.2
5.4
2.5
7.1
3.8
7.0
5.7
3.4

51.2
8.2
8.4
6.6
6.0
4.8
7.0
1.2
2.8
1.6
4.6
6.3
5.5
2.6
7.5

11.1
8.1

13.9
10.1
11.1
11.7
9.1

11.5
10.3
9.1

25.6
12.5
13.5
14.4
11.7
15.1
12.0
12.9
5.0

18.6
7.4

14.1
10.4
14.5
11.5
4.4

98.9
.3
2.0
3.1
0

10.9

2.3
0
.9
4.4
2.6

23.4
84.5
0

n. a.
0
0
0
0
0
0

1

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80 A
SOB
81
82
83
84
85
86

to domestic producing industries. NOTE: Detail may not add to total due to rounding.
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics.

21

Table 2.—Direct Requirements Per Dollar of Gross Output, 1958

Tobacco
manufactures

Broad & narrow
fabrics, yarn
& thread mills

10

Food & kindred
products

8

Ordnance &
accessories

7

Maintenance
& repair
construction

6

£ j New construction

Crude petroleum
<& natural gas

5

Chemical &
fertilizer
mineral mining

Coal mining

4

Stone & clay
mining &
quarrying

Nonferrous metal
ores mining

3

2

<o

Iron & ferroalloy
ores mining

A
0

Agricultural,
forestry &
fishery services

If
ll
fca

Forestry &
fishery products

73

^

For industrial composition of input into an industry read the
column for that industry

Livestock & livestock products

i

||

(Producers' prices)

12

13

14

15

16

0

. 00452
0
0
. 00025 . 00063 0

0. 00957
0. 24959
. 07365 . 18322 . 10827
. 00424 0
0
0
0
)
0

. 00059 . 00053 0
. 00162 . 00083 (*)
. 00213 (*)
. 00727 . 01642 . 01193 . 00777
. 00041 . 05875 0

o
0
. 00062 00023 . 00144
0
0
0
. 00006
0
. 00007
. 00013

1
2
3
4
5

Livestock & Livestock Products
Other Agricultural Products
Forestry & FisheryProducts
Agricultural, Forestry & Fishery Services. _ _ _
Iron & Ferroalloy Ores Mining

6
7
8
9
10

Nonferrous Metal Ores Mining _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Coal Mining _ _
___ .__
Crude Petroleum & Natural Gas _
Stone & Clay Mining & Quarrying
Chemical & Fertilizer Mineral Mining- . _.

0
0
0
. 00023 . 00002 0
0
0
0
0
. 00003 . 00284 0
(*)
. 00121 . 00005 0

11
12
13
14
15

New Construction
Maintenance & Repair Construction Ordnance & Accessories-- _ _ .. _ _
Food & Kindred Products
Tobacco Manufactures

o
o
0
0
o
o
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00888 . 01607 . 00023 . 00127 . 00053 . 00092 . 00088 . 00039 . 00122 . 00059 . 00013 . 00006 . 00162 . 00358 . 00005 . 00064
. 00010 o
. 01779 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
)
. 00010 . 00032 )
0
0
. 16716 . 00595 . 00216
. 11187 . 00012 . 01706 . 00482 0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00001 . 191020
0
0

16
17
18
19
20

Broad & Narrow Fabrics, Yarn & Thread Mills
Miscellaneous Textile Goods & Floor Coverings
Apparel
- _ _ _ _ _
Miscellaneous Fabricated Textile Products _
Lumber & Wood Products, Except Containers

21
22
23
24
25

Wooden Containers-. _
_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _
Household Furniture
Other Furniture & Fixtures
Paper & Allied Products, Except Containers
_ _ _
Paperboard Containers & Boxes
_ _

o
o
o
0
0
. 00096 . 00151 . 00156 0
0
. 00005 0
. 00427 0
)
. 00002
0
0
o
. 00566 0
.00002 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
o
. 00390 . 00098 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
(*)
. 00564 . 00126 . 00002 . 00039 . 00230 . 00042 . 00836 . 00528 . 00617 . 00404 . 00148 . 00571 .01172 . 00153
0
o
0
. 00341 . 01353 .01182 . 00780
. 00054 . 00005 . 00186 . 00089 0
.00053 . 00011 .00649 . 00393 0

26
27
28
29
30

Printing & Publishing
__
._. __ _ . _ .. _ . _
Chemicals & Selected Chemical Products
Plastics & Synthetic Materials
Drugs Cleaning, & Toilet Preparations
Paints & Allied Products _ _ __
__ ___

- -

. 00019 . 00031 . 00006 . 00002 . 00004 . 00031 . 00027 . 00008 . 00031 . 00005 . 00015 . 00007 . 00202
. 00130 04878 . 00012 . 00020 . 01052 . 03161 . 01593 . 00449 . 01080 . 03173 . 00700 . 00419 . 00225
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00060
. 00007 . 00012 . 00018 0
. 00109 0
. 00008
0
. 00003 (*)
. 00001 . 00015 . 00032 . 00046 0
0
. 00375 . 05211 . 00049
. 00128 0
0

31
32
33
34
35

Petroleum Refining & Related Industries
Rubber & Miscellaneous Plastics Products .._ .
Leather Tanning & Industrial Leather Products
Footwear & Other Leather Products
Glass & Glass Products
_ _
__- _ -

. 00182 . 03829 . 01302 . 00169 . 00832 . 00623 . 01100
. 00080 . 00664 . 00591 . 00117 . 00051 . 00287 . 00826
0
0
0
0
0
. 00003 . 00016 . 00001 (*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
0
0
0
0
0
-_ _ . 00013 0

36
37
38
39
40

Stone & Clay Products
Primary Iron & Steel Manufacturing _ _ _ _ _ _
Primary Nonferrous Metals Manufacturing
Metal Containers
Heating Plumbing & Structural Metal Products

41
42
43
44
45

Stampings Screw Machine Products & Bolts,
Other Fabricated Metal Products
Engines & Turbines
Farm Machinery & Equipment
Construction IViining & Oil Field AdLachinery

46
47
48
49
50

Materials Handling Machinery & Equipment
Metalworking Machinery & Equipment
Special Industry Machinery & Equipment
General Industrial Machinery & Equipment
M^achine Shop Products
_ _

51
52
53
54
55

Office Computing & Accounting Machines
Service Industry IVIachines
Electric Industrial Equipment & Apparatus
Household Appliances
Electric Lighting & Wiring Equipment

56
57
58
59
60

Radio Television & Communication Equipment
Electronic Components & Accessories
Misc Electrical Machinery Equipment & Supplies
IVIotor Vehicles & Equipment
Aircraft & Parts
-

61
62
63
64
65

Other Transportation Equipment
__
Scientific & Controlling Instruments
Optical Ophthalmic & Photographic Equipment
Miscellaneous Manufacturing
Transportation & Warehousing

_

. 16093 0. 07268 0. 05163 0. 13924 0
0
25033 . 03017 . 11284 . 35129 0
0
)
.01102 0
0
0
0
0
. 01868 . 03744 . 01203 . 00105 0
0
. 05144 . 00966 0
0
0
0

- _

_ _ _

-_

-

_

._

-

. 03217 . 17547 0
. 00375 . 00096 .17116 . 00002
0
0
0
. 02225
0
. 00006 . 00051 0
. 00092 . 00002
0

o
. 00033 0
. 00012 . 00138 . 00067 o
0
0
. 00030 0
. 00007 . 00006 . 00010
. 00020 . 00003 o
. 00022 . 00113 . 00801 . 00761 0
0
o
o
0
0
0
0
. 00058
0
0
0
)
o
. 00001 . 00004 0
0
0
0
. 00031 . 00149 0
0
. 00482 . 00101 . 00683 . 00053 . 00002 . 00041 . 06258 . 02476 . 00024
. 00007 . 00007 0
0

. 00004 . 00107 0
0
0
. 00004 . 00003 0
. 00020 . 00063 0
0
0
__ _
. ..

0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
. 00007 . 00012 0

|

. _

_._

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00003 . 00004 . 00007 0

o

0
0

0
0
0
0
. 00028 . 00090 0
. 00090 . 00146 0
0
0

_ _

0
0
0
0
0

o
0
o

0
0
0
0
0

. 00013 . 01408 0
0
0
0
0
. 00004 . 00002 . 00158 . 00032
. 01977 . 01246 . 01606 . 00699
0
0

. 00012 . 00019
. 00001 0
. 00060 0
. 00153 0
. 00006 . 00022

. 34664
. 02289
. 00152
. 00313
. 00012

. 00217
. 00087
. 01773
. 00127
. 00002

. 00076
. 01528
. 08465
. 00214
. 00034

. 00478 . 02795 . 00957 . 01882 . 02222 . 00218 . 00436 . 00045
. 00287 . 01808 . 00479 . 00594 . 00391 . 02422 . 00222 . 00165
. 00004
0
0
0
0
0
0
(*)
. 00004 (*)
. 00001 . 00001 (*)
(*)
(*)
(*)
.
00483
. 00163
. 00091 . 00929 0
. 00004 0
0

. 00239
. 00395
. 00016
. 00003
. 00215

. 00189
. 00338
. 00022
. 00326
. 00009

. 00065 . 00465 . 00228 . 00036 . 06233 . 00051 . 07793 . 03247 . 00272 . 00004 . 00001 . 00018
. 00036
. 01496 . 03873 . 00826 . 00027 . 01375 . 01845 . 04246 . 01622 . 01321 . 00002 0
. 00148 . 00486 . 00602 . 00066 . 00109 . 00322 . 01658 . 01668 . 04822 . 00055 .00115 . 00023
0
. 02341 . 00130 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00005
0
. 00094 . 00035 . 00038 . 00057 . 00001 . 00018 . 09906 . 05223 . 00193 0

.00023 . 00045 . 00571 .00052 .00014 . 00076 . 00168 . 00124
0
0
_ _ _ .00083 0
.00110 . 00164 . 00048 . 00577 .00070 . 00103 . 00510 . 00463 .00058 . 00086 . 01658 . 00309
. 00030 . 00004 .0000
.00031 . 00040 0
. 00009 0
. 00137 (*)
0
)
.00005 0
0
.00001 0
0
0
0
. 00019 . 00834 0
. 01929 . 02190 . 03625 . 00364 04664 . 02620 . 00325 . 00126
0
0
0

66 Communications' Except Radio & T.V. Broadcasting
67 Radio & T V Broadcasting
68 Electric Gas Water & Sanitary Services
69 Wholesale & Retail Trade
- 7 0 Finance & Insurance
_ _. _ _ _
71 Real Estate & Rental
72 Hotels' Personal & Repair Services Exc Auto
73 Business Services
-_ - - 74 Research & Development
75 Automobile Repair & Services
- 76 Amusements
--77. Medical, Educational Services & Non-Profit Organizations. _
78 Federal Government Enterprises
79 State & Local Government Enterprises
80 Gross Imports of Goods & Services
81 Business Travel Entertainment & Gifts
82 Office Supplies
A Adjustment for scrap and by-products l
V A Value added
...
T
TOTAL
_




)

0

. 01402 . 00531 .00477 .0004
.00002 .00011 .00399 0
. 00007 . 00002 . 00002 .0000
.00006 .00054 . 00355 (*)
0
0
0
. 00083 0
(*) 0
.00018 . 00179 . 00175 . 00740 . 00321 . 00143 . 00521 .0011
.00006 . 00007 .00020 . 00007 .00031 . 00018 . 00005 .0000

.00662 . 00268 . 00006 . 00011
. 01029 . 00131 . 00150 . 00082
0
0
. 00103 0
0
0
.00107 0
0
0
. 00043 0
0
0
. 00001 0
.01117 . 00021 . 00006 .00020
.00584
. 00115 (*) 0
. 00634 . 00003 . 00003 .00011
. 07969 . 00001 . 00002 . 00002
0
0
0
0
. 00001 . 00005
0
0
. 00010 .00025

0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00374 .0012
0
0
0
0
0
.00062 . 00364 . 00207 . 00305 . 00183 . 00500 . 00809 .0046
. 00392 .00354
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00030 . 00038 . 00151 . 00006 . 00008 . 00005 .01517 . 00729

. 00086 0
. 00394 (*)
. 02192 .00012
. 00021 0
.01176 . 00034

0
.00070 . 00128
0
0
0
. 001010
.00004 .0000
0
. 00105 0
0
0
. 00019 .00013 . 00010 . 00010 . 00017 . 00010 . 00028 . 00029
. 00044 .00075 . 00206 . 00083 . 00372 . 00223 .00002 .0000
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
. 03435 0
0
0
.00071 0
. 00029 . 00006 . 00001 . 00001
0
0
. 00428 0
0
0
.20606 0

0

. 00197 0
. 00016 . 00032
. 00005 . 00006
. 00001 .00001
. 09059 . 03528

.00418 0
. 00005 . 00005
. 00002 (*)
. 00143 . 00004
. 00748 . 02578

. 00017
. 00020
00006
. 00037
.01610

. 00036
. 00018 . 00365 .0009
. 00006 (*)
(*)
. 00021 . 00160 .0028
. 06426 . 03448 .0176

0
0
.00353 0
. 00002
. 02252 (*) 0
.00002
0
. 00070 0
. 00256 .00047 .00110 . 00153
. 01074 . 04028 . 01220 . 02457

. 00202 . 00308 . 00223 . 00417 . 00129 . 00149 .00072 . 00022 . 00167 . 00194 . 00207 .0010 . 00444 . 00244 .00039 . 00159
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00346 . 00735 . 00032 . 00075 . 01361 . 02252 . 02361 . 00723 . 02419 . 04294 . 00286 .0014 . 00378 . 00546 . 00095 . 01081
. 03550 . 04386 . 01685 .00281 . 01770 . 02727 . 03460 . 01264 . 03824 . 02673 . 09467 .0817 . 02955 . 03691 . 01353 . 03534
. 00716 . 01220 . 02041 .00333 .00489 . 01289 . 00990 . 00997 . 01086 . 00627 .00830 .0029 . 00648 .00529 . 00207 . 00604
.01108 . 07642 . 02692 . 01035 . 06325 . 02898 . 02200 . 12872 . 02512 . 01079 .00400 .0020 . 00441 . 00446 . 00127 . 00452
. 00084 . 00058 . 00042 . 00161
0
.00074 .00082 .00024 . 00004 . 00095 . 00087 0
0
0
0
0
. 00176 . 03384 . 07022 . 00318 .00466 . 00599 . 00494 . 03159 . 00881 . 00734 . 04873 .0035 . 01086 . 02460 . 04480 . 00913
. 00018
o
0
0
. 00008 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00433 . 00031 . 00057
. 00503 .0013 0
0
0
. 00036 . 00133 . 00022 0
0
. 00228 . 00216 0

0

0
0
0
0
. 00538 . 00051 . 00061 . 00057
.
00063
. 00014 . 00013
. 00065
. 00002 . 00003 . 00007 .00011
. 00815 . 02283 . 19281 . 00006
. 00067 . 00114 . 00085 . 00078
. 00003 . 00009 . 00033 . 00007
0
0
-. 00142 0
. 34283 . 50743 . 38995 . 44650
1. OOOOC 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. OOOOC

0
.0000 2. 00002 0
. 00002 .00002 . 00001 (*)
. 00067 . 00082 . 00098 . 00086 .0009 . 00088 .0011 .0005
. 00062 . 00083 0
0
. 00062 . 00076 . 00100 0
. 00007 . 00028 . 00022 . 00040 .0009 . 00032 . 0002, .0001
0
. 28635 . 18669 . 00109 . 08770 . 06348 . 10107 0
. 00393 . 00413 . 00398 . 00626 . 00480 . 00921 . 00429 .0022
. 00017 . 00018 . 00022 . 00026 .0002 . 00042 . 00026 .0001
+. 00232 +.00042 +. 00194 +. 0101 +. 00250 +. 0014C +. 00139 +. 0007
. 35331 . 35927 . 58310 . 61468 .5727 . 52593 . 35493 .6123
1. 00000 1 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 0000 1. OOOOC 1. 00000 1. OOOOC
i

. 00003 . 00002 . 00001 . 00003
. 00098 . 00098 . 00099 . 00104
. 00085 . 00046 . 00212 . 00076
. 00014 . 00045 . 00006 . 00023
. 00203 . 04061 . 00371 . 02406
. 01983 . 00530 . 00173 . 00393
.OOlOf . 00042 . 00015 . 00045
f . 00001 -. 00490 -. 00039 -. 00743
. 34747 . 25615 .48017 . 25511
1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000

Table 2.—Direct Requirements Per Dollar of Gross Output, 1958—Continued
(Producers' prices)

O

PH

<3S

be be

.§•-§ alg

PP

11

£

PH

Is

°3§

p"

£

O~*

I

PH

11
°.»

ll
a'S II&w
£

8

Dotwear 6
leather pi

W

*!

I

•3

rather tax
industria
products

|
^
1

§1
ll

'O X

aints & al
products

I'll
S"

aper & al]
products,
container

8

8

ther furni
fixtures

|l

imber &
products,
container

II

£

ousehold
ture

ft

g
•2

tf~3a

M-§

fc

3

34

35

^

;one & cla
products

be ,
pw

VI

1
3^1 if

CO

*!

,S
£p
1
j

&
|
|
£"~ •§8*3
PH

19

18

21

20

0. 02161
. 02404 I
. 00596 . 00059
. 00982 . 00038 . 09323 1
1
. 00094 1
0
0

o
. 00060 . 00005

. 00003 o
. 00019 1

. 00002
. 00001 . 00002

. 00002
. 00001 o

I
)
)

)
)
)

o
o

o

0
. 00065 o
)
o
I
)

1

o

o
o

0
0
0
0

26

25

24

0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0

28

27

. 001110
. 00122 0
0
0
. 00460 0

0
0
0
. 00699 . 00029 0
0
0
0
0
. 00337 0
0
. 001490

30

29

. 00037 )
0
0
0
0
0
0

31

33

32

)
)
0
0
0
0
. 000150

3
0
)
. 00106 0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
. 00007 . 000090
. 004660
. 00501 . 00537 . 00058 . 00029 . 00053 . 00145 . 00240 0
. 51624 0
0
0
0
0
. 00195 0
0
. 00159 . 00012 . 00055 . 00046 . 00333 . 00087 0
. 00006 . 00110 . 00093 0
. 02898 . 00012 . 00001 0

3
0
0
0
0

36

37

0
. 00052 0
0
0
0
0
. 00118 .05405

. 00004 . 00053
. 00130 . 00825
0
0
.01122 . 06507
. 00029 . 00299

. 00036
. 02615
0
. 00282
. 00039

o
o
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00183 . 00009 . 00057 . 00030 . 00396 . 00357 . 00350 . 00049 . 00620 . 00026 . 00038 . 00141 . 00095 . 00009 00013 . 00044 . 00046 . 00659
o
0
. 00002 0
. 00036 . 00043 0
0
0
. 000060
0
0
0
. 00006
. 00082 . 00035
. 00846 . 00007 . 00620 . 00006 0
. 01020 . 00409 . 02927 . 03143 . 00061 . 00020 . 00227 0
0
. 00001 I
o
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
(*) . 000010
o
o

. 00016 . 00056 00015
(*)
. 00126
0

23

22

. 16500 . 27357 . 44065 (*) 0
. 08356 . 00555 . 07272 . 00019 )
. 00280 . 17243 . 00870 . 00126 . 00002
. 00483 . 01254 . 06310 . 00018 )
. 00001 . 28357 . 37072
. 00001 0

. 05685 . 00192 . 00557 0
. 01320 .01716 . 001550
. 00034 . 00102 . 00066 . 00089
. 00128 . 00099 . 00228 . 00009
. 12421 .05947 . 06285 . 00082

. 00006 . 00008 . 00094 . 00010 . 00021 (*)
. 00141 . 00017 . 00018 0
(*) 0
. 00043 . 00046 . 00035 . 00040 . 00016
(*)
. 00050 (*) . 00008
. 00241 0
(*)
. 00004 . 00254 . 00023 . 00104 . 00080 . 00013

. 02109 . 00006 . 02569 0
. 06671 . 00006 . 01330 . 00005
. 00263 . 00001 . 00560 . 00119
. 00044 . 00153 . 00044 . 00001
. 00870 .01511
. 00162 0

. 00180 0
. 00021 . 00005
. 00077
(*)
. 00044 . 00011
. 00174 . 00102

0
. 00243 . 03646
(*) 0. 00252 (*) . 00297 . 00219 . 00599
0
. 00263 . 00036 .00111
0
. 01039 . 00098 . 01265 . 00692 . 00181
. 00601 . 00619 . 00960 . 00425 . 00222

. 00013
. 01488
. 00748
. 00356
. 01849

. 00005
. 02824
. 01983
. 00339
. 01859

. 00051 . 00055 (*)
0
. 00025 . 00021 0
. 00001
. 00002 0
0
. 00001 0
0
0
0
. 00040 (*) . 00001 0
. 00014 0
0
0
. 18872 . 43174 . 17207 . 00982 . 04524 . 00867 . 00749 . 00320
. 02643 . 03871 . 00502 . 00585 . 00550 . 03027 . 01080 . 00181

. 00204
(*)
. 00007 0
. 00015 0
. 00412 . 00295
. 00728 . 00145

. 00032
. 00032
. 00001
. 00855
. 01234

. 00376 . 00212
. 00710 . 00002
. 00663 0
. 00108 . 00055
. 00447 . 00089

. 00036
. 00006
. 00034
. 00003
. 02034

. 00101
. 00016
.00111
. 00004
. 01640

. 00960 . 00685 . 13035
. 03185 . 00236 . 01430
. 00880 . 00314 0
. 00200 . 00160 . 00049
. 00025 0
0

. 00311 . 00188
. 04681 . 06825
. 14261 0
. 00092 . 02481
. 00018 . 00002

.00543 . 00149
. 00032 . 03789
. 00066 0
. 00033 . 00149
. 00001 . 00004

. 00203
. 02107
. 01097
. 00604
. 00114

. 00241
. 03090
. 00073
.00112
. 00639

. 00031 . 00308
. 05888 . 00380
. 20792 0
. 08361 . 00001
. 00008 . 04826

. 00983 . 00192 . 00353 . 00918 . 00231 . 02830
0
. 00562 . 00002 . 00207 0
0
. 00032 . 00010 . 00189 . 00020 . 00040 . 00217
0
. 04665 . 00676 0
0
0
. 00012 . 00041
. 00053 . 00014 . 00044 0

. 00533 . 00146
. 00227 0
(*)
(*)
. 00223 . 02171
. 07561 . 00957

t-4

03 -3.9

3
P

^

^
17

a

3
P

^
39

38

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00214 0

1

2
3
4
5

. 07906
. 00121
0
. 00044
. 00018

0
. 00018
0
0
0

6
7
8
9
10

0

0
. 00025
0
0
0

11
12
13
14
15

. 00150 0
. 00051 0
. 00051 0
. 00020 0
. 00102 . 00041

16
17
18
19
20

00036
'. 00015
. 00006
0

. 00017
. 00008
(*)
. 00249
. 00079

0
0
. 00001
. 00274
. 00070

. 00048
. 00002
0
. 00435
. 01336

21
22
23
24
25

. 00147
.00954
. 00024
. 00184
. 00078

. 00089
. 00969
.01121
. 00097
. 00073

. 00301
. 00002
. 00097
. 00235
. 01672

26
27
28
29
30

. 01124
. 01021
. 00009
. 00004
. 00078

. 00759 .00414
. 00318 . 00164
0
0
(*)
(*)
. 00006 . 00003

. 00271
. 01458
. 00037
(*)
. 00002

31
32
33
34
35

. 12003
. 00277
. 00193
0
. 00066

.01540 . 00469
. 22710 . 01183
. 01646 . 30357
0
0
. 00248 . 00030

. 00197
. 43903
. 00957
. 00664
.00477

36
37
38
39
40

. 00929 . 01331
.01064 . 00397
(*) 0
. 00003 . 00005
. 00001 0

41
42
43
44
45

.00012 . 00010 0
.00663 . 00714 . 01226
. 00126 .00020
(*)
. 00309 . 00316 . 00680
. 00744 . 00333 . 00475
0
. 00006 0

46
47
48
49
50
51

.00008
.00435
.00012
. 00051

.00020 0
. 00349 . 00103
.00040 .00248
. 00551 .00042

52
53
54
55

.00003 . 00001
.00024 0
.00005 .00001
.00020 . 00186
. 00013 . 00006

.00083 0
.00020 0
.00496 .00001
.00141 . 00002
. 00002 . 00334

56
57
58
59
60

. 00058 0
. 00040 . 00019
.00005 . 00006
. 00137 . 00072
. 02153 . 02531

61
62
63
64
65

. 00243 . 00301 . 00236 . 00257 . 00211 . 00524 . 00406 . 00286 . 00218 . 01273 .00440 . 00268 . 00210 . 00408 . 00131 . 00303 .00289 . 00294 . 00296 . 00339 . 00351 . 00276 . 00100
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00654 . 00316 . 00343 . 00648 . 00772 . 00581 . 00527 . 01796 . 00501 . 00436 . 02341 . 00955 . 00401 .00442 . 01458 . 01031 .00760 . 00331 . 03624 . 02794 . 02402 . 02148 . 00664
. 04995 . 03573 . 04631 . 04341 . 04859 . 05536 . 05366 . 03803 . 03693 . 02380 . 02879 . 01966 . 02705 . 04184 . 01027 . 03456 . 02895 . 02845 . 03894 . 03113 . 03596 . 03387 . 03868
. 00799 . 00663 . 00445 .00627 . 00620 . 00531 . 00519 . 00593 .00635 . 00972 . 00943 . 00701 . 00794 . 00758 . 00633 . 00579 . 00632 . 00740 .00971 . 00993 . 00754 . 00709 . 00620
.00674 . 01134 . 01052 . 00647 . 00935 . 01213 . 01075 . 00407 . 00960 . 03651 . 01001 . 00574 . 00843 . 01199 . 00768 . 01047 . 00303 .00912 . 00722 . 00795 . 00386 . 00390 . 00412
.00111 . 00256 . 00154 . 00183 . 00254 . 00211 . 00164 . 00095 . 00129 . 00137 . 00062 . 00066 . 00051 . 00058 0
. 00129 . 00125 . 00289 . 00172 . 00142 . 00111 .00074 .00086
. 00716 . 00941 . 00625 . 00555 . 00515 . 01673 . 00988 . 01287 . 00472 . 04451 . 01303 . 01257 . 15035 . 01487 . 01954 . 02371 .00440 . 02815 . 01532 . 01406 .00871 . 00774 .00931
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00019 0
0
0
. 00206 . 00281 0
0
0
0
.00039
0
.00091 0
.00088 . 00050 0
. 00051 . 00024 . 00121 . 00771 . 00789 . 00167 . 00184 . 00073 . 00090 . 00104 . 00131 . 00037 . 00059 . 00155 .00104 . 00036 . 00065 .00037 . 00073 . 00327 . 00034 . 00058 . 00040
. 00002 . 00005 . 00003 . 00004 . 00005 . 00005 . 00004 . 00002 .00003 . 00004 . 00002 . 00002 . 00002 . 00002 0
. 00003 . 00003 . 00006 . 00004 . 00003 .00002 .00002 .00002
. 00087 .00115 . 00090 . 00101 . 00107 . 00109 . 00101 . 00093 .00105 . 00110 . 00088 .00091 . 00096 . 00100 . 00090 . 00103 . 00101 .00116 . 00106 . 00104 . 00102 .00091 . 00102
. 00115 . 00181 . 00135 .00039 . 00090 . 00058 . 00098 . 00104 . 00091 . 00704 . 00225 . 00459 .00213 . 00227 . 00176 . 00083 . 00500 . 00224 . 00256 . 00086 . 00079 . 00047 . 00070
. 00020 . 00009 . 00028 . 00064 . 00051 . 00019 . 00016 . 00119 .00011 . 00016 . 00051 . 00032 . 00022 . 00023 . 00037 . 00027 . 00036 . 00009 . 00040 . 00129 . 00070 . 00029 . 00009
. 12095 . 00231 . 00258 . 05274 .01177 . 00015 0
. 09101 . 00093 . 00303 . 02593 . 00838 . 00726 . 00512 . 03171 . 03840 . 03944 . 00333 . 02117 . 01191 . 01183 . 08541 .00019
. 00412 . 00669 . 00685 . 00716 . 00855 . 00863 . 01022 . 00550 . 00656 . 02259 .01614 . 00201 . 00704 . 01250 . 00170 . 00865 . 00360 . 00687 . 00920 . 00939 . 00438 . 00470 . 00357
. 00040 . 00070 . 00056 . 00037 . 00044 . 00078 . 00093 . 00046 . 00062 . 00310 . 00089 . 00009 . 00046 . 00092 . 00028 . 00073 . 00030 . 00097 . 00077 . 00061 . 00045 . 00036 . 00026
+. 01711-. 00064 -. 00041 +. 00031
0
0
+. 01724 -. 00769 -.00411 +. 01362+. 00015 (*) 0
-. 00034 -. 00033 +. 28077 -. 00027 +. 01061 +. 00264 +. 01129 +. 03184 -. 00509
. 24454 . 38580 . 23006 . 32182 . 36345 . 41599 . 44735 . 34789 . 37409 . 47213 . 38606 . 39466 . 41706 .36438 . 20050 . 45535 . 31241 . 43866 . 55467 . 48315 . 39512 . 28204 . 33554
1. OOOOC 1.00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000

66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
A.
V.A.
T.

. 00046
. 00288
. 15957
. 00042
. 00047

. 00095 . 00124
. 00296 . 00012
. 010220
. 00009 . 00073
. 00002 . 00018

. 00040 . 00094 . 00899 . 00611 . 00212 . 00201 . 01147 . 00681 . 00089
. 00164 . 02943 . 00631 . 00122 . 04045 . 00910 . 01361 . 00889 . 00120
0
. 00116 . 001350
0
0
. 00263 . 00001 0
. 00078 . 00263 . 00006 . 00001 . 00031 . 00001 . 00010 . 00014 . OOOC4
.
00004
0
.
03723
.
00188
0
.
00001
.
00117
. 01409
(*)
o
.
00172
.
00468
.
00151
.
00384
.
00258
.
00001
. 00006 . 00001
. 00079
. 00031 . 00007 . 00035 . 00004 . 03985 . 02404 . 09310 . 00010 . 00053 0
)
.
01325
.
00134
. 00022
. 00014 . 00120
. 00851
. 00003 .00115 0
1
o
. 00005 . 00390 (*)
. 00005 . 00001 0
(*) )
.
00004
. 00001 . 00036 . 00051 . 00318 .01271
0
0
0
o
. 00169
. 01399
. 00012
. 00036
. 00074

. 00249
. 19418
. 01981
. 01248
. 00352

. 00099
. 34087
. 02682
. 01062
. 00620

. 00408
. 12509
. 00237
. 06226
. 00206

. 00238 . 00004
. 22945 . 02906
. 12234 . 00083
. 01086 . 00275
. 00157 . 00033

.05439 . 01300 . 00952 . 00900 . 06960
. 00691 . 01762 . 00950 . 00298 . 00038
0
. 00001 0
0
0
. 00001 (*)
. 00002 . 00001 (*)
. 00148 . 00027 . 01995 0
. 00013
. 00307 . 00040
. 00564 0
. 01453 . 00035
. 00693 . 00119
. 00017 . 00023

. 00181
. 00012
. 00015
. 01621
. 00004

. 00391
.00911
. 13837
. 00207
. 00004

. 00028 . 00245 .00210 . 00519 . 00727 . 00147 . 00100 . 00025 .00082 . 00076 . 00322 .00045 .00012 . 00328 . 00077 .00055 .00455 . 00148
. 00011 0
. 00107 . 00121 . 00197 . 00786 .00645 . 06051 . 03646 . 01025 . 00239 .00168 . 00357 . 00134 . 00873 . 00138 . 01047 . 01120 . 00153 . 00765 . 00393 . 01187
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.00001 0
0
. 00067 0
. 00003 0
0
0
0
. 00036 0
0
. 00002 0
0
. 00013 0
.00007 .00021 .00004
. 00001 0
*
. 00033 0
.00003 *
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.00007
0
. 00001 0
*
. 00045 0
. 00061 .00004 0
0
0
0
0
0
.00002 0
.00048 0
.00002
. 00002 0
0
0
.00019 . 00001 . 00018 . 00015 . 00032 .00099 . 00264 . 00077 . 00059 . 00011 . 00068 . 00130 . 00012 . 00010 . 00014 . 00061 .00067 .00009 . 00147 . 00122
. 00063
. 00154 . 00395 . 00287 . 00039 . 00270 . 00367 . 00276 . 00955 . 00130 . 00137 . 00002 0
0
. 00001 0
. 00081
.00080 0
. 00010 . 00001 . 00048 . 00122 . 00030 . 00030 . 00167 . 00054 . 00049 . 00009 . 00033 . 00053 . 00005 . 00017 . 00007 .00087 . 00025 . 00011 . 00137 .00034
. 00007 . 00031 . 00032 . 00011 . 00018 . 00034 . 00026 . 00005 . 00035 . 00027 . 00002 . 00009 . 00002 .80263 . 00014 .00009 .00066 . 00046
. 00003
. 00001 0
0
. 00203 . 00016 0
0
0
0
. 00038 . 00058 0
0
0
. 00001 0
0
0
0
0
. 00001 *
0
0
0
.00007 . 00937 . 00004 0
0
0
. 00008 0
. 00019 . 00006
. 00023 0
0
. 00002 0
. 00006 . 00001 0
. 00003 0
. 00016 . 00032 . 00046 . 00010 . 00042 . 00120 . 00064 . 00004 . 00002 . 00017 . 00052 . 00056 . 00003 .00065 .00086
0
0
0
. 00112 . 00067 0
0
0
. 00007 0
0
. 00002 . 00015 0
0
.00038
. 00044 0
0
(*)
. 00019 0
. 00004 . 00116 . 00197 . 00094 . 00088 . 00118 . 00044 . 00010 . 00011 . 00038 . 00004 . 00017 . 00003 . 00157 . 00090 . 00072 .00253 . 00357

(*)
(*)

. 00134 0
0
. 00011 0
0
. 00002 . 00002 . 00001
. 00234 0
0
. 00100 0
0

. 00040 0
0
. 00023 0
. 00025
. 00006 (*) 0
0
(*) 0
. 00001 . 00003 . 00001 . 00003 . 00002 .00002
. 00016 (*) 0
. 00003 0
.00001
. 00134 . 00008 0
0
0
0

0
0
. 00065 0
.00061 (*)
. 00029 0
.00015 . 00001 . 00002 . 00005
.00002 .00006 . 00004 0
. 00246 0
. 000080

0
. 00084 . 00025 . 00001 . 00067 0
0
0
0
. 00014 . 00306 . 00002 0
. 00004 . 00602 . 00029 0
0
. 00001 . 00029 0
0
0
0
0
. 00760 . 01813 . 01654 . 00154 . 00048 . 00470 . 01522 . 00090 . 00094
. 03045 . 00839 . 00949 . 05082 . 03622 . 02214 . 01712 . 03706 . 03307

. 00003 0
0
0
0
0
. 00013 . 00026 . 00019 . 00386 .00012 . 00006
. 00397 . 00045 . 00236 . 00005 . 00004 . 00002
. 00260 . 00149 . 00060 . 00080 . 00071 . 00039
. 01487 . 03355 . 03070 . 01918 . 02938 . 05040

0
. 00003 0
. 00029 0
. 00137 . 00031 . 00176 . 00089 .00047
. 00030 . 00008 . 00096 . 00013 . 00010
. 00451 . 00060 . 00372 . 00087 . 00246
. 02172 . 02335 . 01191 . 02584 . 05976

0
0
0
0
. 00001
.00036 0
. 00028 0

0
0
. 00001 0
0
. 00002 . 00009 . 00009
. 00006 0
0
. 00031 . 00003 0
0

(*)

(*)
(*)




. 00030
. 00030
. 00002
. 00004
. 00005

.00648
. 01731
. 00012
00139
.00075

.00083
.00026
.00008
. 00060
. 05264

23

1,1+*

111

s!«
|.a|
"" a ®

£~

Sg

aa

^
1

o

_g

II
£

S

|
|

w

'o

a

p

"S

S5

1

a o(_l

JS ft
CQ

1
£5
«2

11

0

o>

.a
I

t

1
C3

tuo

W

abe

o>

o

I

d
Sg

a
&
fc

|
|

1!
§i

0

£iOTa a

b
.a
a
be

a

"w

•§§

[3 '3

£_a

t3°3

t» &
%

S

I
1

-a a
It
° S*
02

2
§

a

"o

2

o
(-1
ft

!l

•5 a
gog«8
O

d

1
2
§

!
«8

.ata 8
1

°.a
8 tuo
JLa
0
51

.a
1
a

uipment

o>

2

uipment

ill

i
i

achinery

Table 2.—Direct Requirements Per Dollar of Gross Output, 1958—Continued
(Producers' prices)

I

o1

1

1
|
1 |

I

"a
03

3

8

oa
5a
J?«8
W

0

OQ

W

52

53

54

£

=3
bfi
0

ia
a

0

do g
**
*w a

a £l
cT.2
It HI

1§
w

"oS <»

rt

i1
ti

O CO

11

«1

3

^
40

i

2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
A.
V.A.
T.

41

42

43

44

45

46

47

48

49

50

55

56

57

"0

a
1

1*

"3

§

^1

o>

ll

"3 g
ft
•§£
*
58

"Eo

8
2

o3
a

o>

•8

1o

a

i
03

t- 0
0

s

3

59

60

la

o

61

i
o
o
o
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
)
)
i
\
I
)
o
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
)
i
I
I
I
)
)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
)
)
I
I
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00121 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00063 0
. 00016 0
0
I
1
. 00125
0
0
0
o
o
o
o
o
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00145 o
. 00102 o
. 00026 0
0
0
0
. 00001 . 00020 . 00013 I
. 00033 . 00032 . 00033
. 00029 . 00016 )
. 00063 . 00018 . 00069
. 00022 . 00036 . 00027 . 00102 . 00092 . 00066 0
I
1
I
)
1
1
0
0
0
o
o
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
o
0
0
. 00016 . 00012 0
0
0
. 00243 . 00003 I
0
. 00017 . 00001 )
. 00017 0
. 00007
. 00018 0
)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00004 0
0
0
0
0
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00091 . 00064 00055 . 00032 . 00070 . 00023 . 00032 . 00211 . 00095 .00116 . 00407 . 00072 . 00120 . 00131 . 00063 . 00006 . 00138 . 00075 00006 00303 00178 00036
. 00253 . 00032 0
. 00027 . 00079 . 00013 . 00004 .00111
. 00130 . 00001 . 00001 . 02422 . 00830
. 00026 . 051500
. 00012 . 00067 . 00019 0
I
)
)
0
. 00006 0
. 00009 0
. 00001o
. 00039 0
0
0
. 00009 o
0
. 00003 0
0
0
0
o
o (*) 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00126 . 00056 (*)
. 00024 0
. 00006 .00011 . 00029 . 00253 o
. 00033 . 00215 . 00015 . 00060
. 00024 . 00008 . 00083 . 00009 . 00006 . 00008 . 00148 0
0
0
. 00030 . 00007 . 000010
0
0
0
0
0
. 00381 . 00049 . 00071
0
. 00004 . 00011 .00111 . 00021 0
(*) o
. 00089 . 00105 . 00103 . 00069 . 00070 . 00075 . 00072 . 00108 . 00100 . 00093 . 00130 . 00084 . 00071 . 00090 . 00071 . 00097 . 00074 . 00133 . 00092 .00044 . 00089 . 00107
)
0
o
0
0
. 000050
0
0
. 00001 0
. 00651 0
0
0
0
. 00042
. 00031 . 00013 . 00002 0
(*)
. 00053 . 00326 . 00126 . 00159 . 00123 . 00179 . 00026 . 00002 .00054 . 00170 . 02396
. 00235 . 00509 . 00799 . 00027 . 00351 . 00124 . 00076 . 00138 . 00553 . 00143 0
. 00001 (*)
. 00014 . 00006 0
0
. 00002 0
. 00029 0
. 00033 . 00508 . 00003 . 00570 0
0
0
0
. 00100 . 00047 . 00079 0
0
.00111 0
. 00005 0
. 00004 . 00016 0
. 00017 . 00001 . 02336 . 00538 0
. 00003 . 00005 . 00035 0
. 00673
. 00099 . 00027 . 00122 0
. 00002 . 00013 (*)
. 00022 . 00067 (*) . 00028
. 00060 0
. 00046 (*)
. 00001 . 00002 0
. 00019 . 00169 .00419
. 00161 . 00013 . 00100 0
. 00183 . 00446 . 00380 .00111 . 00058 . 00091 . 00064 . 00001 . 00212 . 00274 . 00008 . 00668 . 00393 . 00780 . 00150 . 00277 . 00442 .01178 . 00127 . 00355 . 00039 . 00166
. 00172 . 00830 . 00387 . 00962 . 01764 . 00517 . 00555 . 00696 .00104 . 00074 . 00033
. 00393 . 00916 . 00526 . 00477 . 00212 . 00087 . 00036 . 00028 . 00030 . 00165 0
. 00053 . 00142 . 00249 . 00147 . 00045 . 00042 . 00056 . 00008 . 00096 .00054 . 00018 . 00322 . 00023 . 00117 . 00064 . 00032 . 00144 . 00055 . 00021 . 00052 . 00080 . 00049
0
.
00177
.
00210
.
00964
. 00036 . 00640 . 00377 . 00509 .00546 . 00102 .01145 .02117 . 00175 . 00123 . 00223
. 00096
. 00006 . 00096 . 00091
. 00246 . 00323
(*)
.00114 . 00100 . 00683 . 00259 . 01856 . 00691 . 00765 . 00552 .00112 . 00067 . 00716
. 00032 . 00399 . 00093 . 00065 . 00015 . 00047 . 00048 . 00044 . 00072 . 00027 0
.
00051
.
00042
. 00068 . 00040 . 00069
. 00061 . 00020 . 00068 . 00011 . 00018 . 00017 . 00033 . 00006 . 00007 . 00079 . 00040 . 00060
. 00026 . 00065 . 00031 . 00044 . 00058
. 00096 . 00496 . 00286 . 00577 . 00477 . 00044 . 00063 . 00001 . 00379 . 00081 . 00786
. 00267 . 00495 . 00159 .00119 . 00380 . 00145 . 00249 . 00005 . 00032 . 00067 0
. 00528 . 00633 . 00444 . 00397 . 00381 . 00439 . 00331 . 00500 . 00560 . 00370 . 00999 . 00148 . 00295 . 00310 . 00128 . 00180 . 00123 . 00159 . 00137 . 00203 . 00238 . 00432
. 00137 . 00653 . 00699 . 00487 . 03222 . 01501 . 01864 . 00390 . 01234 . 00411 . 00176 . 01061 .01158 . 00720 . 03265 . 01529 . 00980 . 00664 . 04595 . 02788 . 00620 . 00878
. 00043
. 00013 . 00012 . 00009 . 00014 . 00104 . 00013 . 00010 . 00007 . 00121 . 00025 . 00032 . 00010 . 00014 . 00011 . 00024 . 00016 . 00018 . 00005 . 00007 . 00028 0
. 00001 . 00028 . 00008 . 00001 . 00001 . 00001 . 00001 . 00008 . 00001 . 00001 . 00126 . 00002 . 00001 . 00002 . 00126 . 00001 . 00001 . 00002 . 00001 (*) . 00001 . 00001
. 00372 . 00101 . 00025 . 00053 . 00011 . 00003 . 00030 . 00014 . 00005 . 00005 . 00005 . 00025 . 00276 . 00088 . 00183 . 02885 . 00452 . 03181 . 00064 . 01001 . 00013 . 00503
. 00621 . 00773 . 00697 . 00651 . 00540 . 00578 . 00374 . 00730 . 00431 . 00919 . 01724 . 00264 . 00593 . 00776 . 00779 . 00666 . 00314 .00694 . 00928 . 00271 . 00374 . 00813
. 23837 . 19912 . 19275 . 10147 . 14289 . 15395 . 10716 .07549 . 08821 . 10647 . 07914 . 02183 . 06834 . 05731 . 07644 . 06742 . 00921 . 02027 . 02870 .08543 . 03179 . 11697
. 07282 . 06477 . 06676 . 03278 . 00745 . 00715 .01153 . 02902 . 04426 . 02822 . 07672 . 01846 . 05072 . 07156 . 04249 . 05161 .01942 . 04481 . 10463 .01113 . 02822 . 01809
0
. 00001 0
0
. 00001 0
. 00004 (*)
0
0
0
. 00041 . 00350 . 00072 0
. 00027 . 00001 (*)
(*) 0
(*)
(*)
. 02260 . 00792 . 00871 . 00118 . 00234 . 01574 . 01194 . 00371 . 01074 . 01837 . 00187 . 00002 . 02311 . 00282 . 01575 . 00229 . 00064 . 00045 . 00002 . 00099 . 00061 . 04525
. 01924 . 04022 . 01964 . 02210 . 03124 . 01038 . 01730 . 02645 . 01243 .01110 .00510 . 01087 . 03507 . 01481 . 05362 . 02725 . 01852 . 02329 . 02403 . 03019 . 01925 . 00487
. 03146 . 02639 . 04180 . 00257 . 00659 . 01297 . 02095 . 02041 . 01641 . 01907 . 02087 . 00588 . 02636 . 00835 . 03308 . 01739 . 01186 . 01348 . 00452 . 03506 . 01027 . 02078
0
. 00116 . 00369 . 00155 . 03004
0
0
. 00156 . 01571 0
. 00396 . 00148 . 00107 . 09282 . 04688 . 02588 . 01388 . 00180 . 00049 . 01290 . 00499 0
. 00064 . 00102 . 00016 . 00502
0
. 00174 . 00108 . 00102 . 01360 . 03955 . 01754 . 00456 . 00153 . 00275 . 00213 . 00062 . 00002 . 00044 . 00019 . 00001 . 00030 0
. 00298 . 00027 . 00290 . 02765 . 01224 . 05928 . 04916 . 00190 . 00748 . 00733 . 00312 . 00001 . 00049 . 00110 . 00031 . 00030 . 00017 . 00075 . 00141 . 00043 . 00016 . 00524
. 00001 . 000010
0
. 00021 . 00039 . 00422
. 00099 . 00027 . 00102 . 00126 . 00039 . 00551 . 04025 . 00234 . 00474 . 00759 . 00037 . 00002 .00111 . 00039 0
. 00544 . 01135 . 02609 . 01678 .01715 . 01695 . 01590 . 05924 . 02285 . 01773 . 01792 . 00916 . 00295 . 01152 . 00774 . 00559 . 00457 . 00574 . 01394 . 01095 . 01933 . 00510
. 00361 . 00051 . 00249 . 00113 . 00273 . 00182 . 00421 . 00833 . 06130 . 00674 . 00624 . 00531 . 00281 . 00113 . 00002 . 00001 . 00033 . 00038 . 00002 . 00024 . 00043 . 00026
. 01148 . 00070 . 00818 . 03207 . 05474 . 05716 . 06668 . 03231 . 05457 . 07324 . 00947 . 00632 . 01552 . 00873 . 01083 . 00146 . 00135 . 00100 . 01647 . 00554 . 01080 . 01526
. 00412 . 00373 . 00296 . 03004 . 01429 . 00452 . 01552 . 00606 . 00398 . 00575 . 08884 . 00242 . 00088 . 00173 . 00098 . 00161 . 00092 . 00103 . 00797 . 00626 . 00989 . 00351
. 00116 . 00472 . 000580
. 00045 0
. 00032 . 00100 . 00002 . 00150 . 00003 . 00062 . 09132 . 00008 . 00058 . 000010
0
. 00031 . 00062 . 00015 0
. 00826 . 00175 . 00130 . 00009 . 00039 . 00065 . 00182 . 00191 . 00474 . 00866 . 00062 . 00001 . 05171 .00031 . 02901 . 00087 . 00064 . 00001 . 00003 . 00125 . 00063 . 00240
.
03412
.
01659
.
03317
.
02333
.
00212
.
00335 .03299
.
08859
.
00590
.
06763
.01126
.
05133
.
00490
.
02282
. 04800 . 02699 . 03809
. 04158
. 01136 . 00417 . 00382 . 01728
. 00220 . 00502
. 00008 (*) .06351 . 00058 . 01071 . 00030 . 00033 . 00075 . 00257 (*)
. 00191 . 00118 0
. 00675 . 00238 . 00199 . 00004 . 00347 . 00016 0
.00129
. 00343
.
01141
.
00797
.
03687
.
00107
.
04005
.
00397
.
00408
.
01665
.
00781
.
00234
.
00079
.
00648
. 00046 . 00068 .00111 . 00277 . 00059 . 00048
. 00205 . 00398
. 00012 . 00027 . 00034 . 00009 . 00008 . 00065 . 00019 . 00006 . 00905 . 00187 . 00062 . 00922 . 00288 . 01000 . 00028 . 00218 . 06891 . 03387 . 00450 . 00509 . 02697 . 00156
. 00016 . 00043 . 00009 . 00256 . 00030 . 00008 . 04092 . 00006 . 02722 . 00002 . 00348 . 17986 . 06101 . 01328 . 00077 . 00599 . 00009
0
. 00099 . 00092 . 00077 0
. 00005 . 00028 . 00032 .01763 . 00745 . 00154 . 00225 . 00009 . 00041 . 00098 . 00189 . 00045 . 00001 . 00220 . 00028 . 02898 . 00033 . 00075 . 04115 . 01501 . 00357 . 00119
. 03397 . 29525 . 00638 . 01322
. 00397 . 02639 . 00481 . 02557 . 01581 . 01464 . 00912 . 04705 . 00272 . 00626 . 00399 . 00005 . 01242 . 00155 . 00209 . 00001 . 00017 0
. 00071 . 00038 . 19150 . 00450
. 00149 . 00155 . 00076 . 00994 . 00205 . 00065 . 00182 . 00546 . 00347 . 01665 . 00312 . 00664 . 00643 . 00107 . 00014 . 00001 . 00851 0
. 00002 . 00087 . 00022 . 06764
. 00044 . 00504 . 00195 . 00001 . 00017 0
. 00708 . 00027 . 00076 . 00907 . 00195 . 00486 . 00393 . 00027 . 00315 . 00506 . 00312 0
. 00887 . 00186 . 00323 . 00083 . 00128 . 00069 . 00051 . 00089 . 00174 . 00614 . 00130 . 00338 . 01267 . 01304 . 03019 . 00265 . 00551 . 00473 . 00396 . 00426 . 01544 . 00137
. 00014 . 00050 . 00015 . 00006 . 00007 . 00007 . 00007 . 00014 . 00194 . 00026 . 00017 . 00009 . 00007 . 00066 . 00146 . 00009 . 00238 . 00032 . 00041 . 00004 . 00204 . 00010
. 00092 . 00505 . 00308 . 00131 . 00096 . 00057 . 02704 . 00244 . 00091 . 00028 . 00032 . 00139 . 00157 . 00045 . 00114 . 00516 . 00169 . 00157 . 00055 . 00084 . 00175 . 00240
. 01793 . 01585 . 01429 . 01248 . 01568 . 01433 . 01226 . 00808 .01153 . 01329 . 01002 . 00902 . 01500 . 01198 . 01581 . 01346 . 01169 . 01071 . 01299 . 01971 . 00888 . 01864
. 00400 . 00256 . 00270 . 00255 . 00241 . 00320 . 00339 . 00809 . 00955 . 00897 . 00673 . 00417 . 00345 . 00406 . 00414 . 00264 . 00333 .00283 . 00323 . 00202 . 00443 . 00273
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00620 . 00890 00728 . 00429 . 00532 .00610 . 00389 . 00606 . 00549 . 00605 . 00778 . 00327 . 00497 . 00679 . 00604 . 00528 . 00267 . 00742 . 00609 . 00461 . 00541 .00625
. 03624 . 02966 . 03568 . 02709 , 03887 . 03526 . 04306 . 02929 . 03940 . 04553 . 03156 . 04848 . 05434 . 03119 . 04210 . 06310 . 03555 .05470 . 03537 . 03132 . 01848 .04880
. 00797 . 00795 . 00675 . 00593 . 00684 . 00701 . 00777 . 00774 . 00719 . 00618 . 00822 . 00530 . 00804 .00452 . 00326 . 00439 . 00342 . 00479 . 00414 . 00400 . 00301 . 00518
. 00616 . 00835 . 00543 . 00451 . 00512 . 00546 . 00916 . 01736 . 00972 . 00705 . 01469 . 00764 . 01286 . 00769 . 00525 . 00939 . 00602 . 02012 . 00722 . 00269 . 00565 . 00447
. 00152
. 00124 . 00146 . 00144 . 00097 . 00102 . 00105 . 00105 . 00155 . 00146 . 00125 . 00188 . 00117 . 00099 . 00126 . 00099 . 00135 . 00104 . 00192 . 00126 . 00064 0
. 01135 . 00913 . 01442 . 01148 . 02558 . 01379 . 01482 . 01029 .01191 .01167 . 01016 . 02553 . 00966 .01101 . 08539 . 01320 . 02279 . 01013 . 02116 . 02446 . 00343 . 00855
0
0
0
0
0
. 00051 . 00094 0
0
. 00033 . 00075 0
0
0
0
0
. 00544 0
. 00025 0
0
0
. 00205 . 00081 . 00098 00029 . 00099 . 00085 . 00066 . 00068 . 00145 . 00072 .00122 . 00026 .00110 . 00049 . 00018 . 00031 . 00022 . 00002 . 00046 . 00035 . 00013 . 00090
. 00003
. 00003 . 00003 . 00003 . 00003 . 00003 . 00003 . 00003 . 00004 . 00004 . 00003 . 00004 . 00003 . 00003 . 00003 . 00002 . 00003 . 00003 . 00004 . 00003 . 000010
. 00099 . 00098 . 00093 . 00094 . 00096 . 00099 . 00087 . 00093 . 00098 . 00095 . 00103 . 00086 . 00093 . 00099 . 00100 . 00102 . 00100 . 00103 . 00094 . 00098 . 00090 . 00104
. 00101 . 00102 . 00097 . 00098 . 00184 . 00078 . 00122 . 00078 . 00094 . 00101 . 00120 . 00152 . 00106 . 00245 . 00209 . 00149 . 00238 . 00329 . 00225 . 00165 . 00094 . 00076
. 00022 . 00027 . 00023 . 00015 . 00030 . 00015 . 00008 .00011 . 00018 . 00016 . 00018 . 00010 . 00016 . 00017 . 00019 . 00018 . 00010 . 00018 . 00022 . 00018 . 00016 . 00022
. 00201 . 00598 . 01271 . 00249 . 04826 .00019 . 01140 . 01195 . 01307 . 00205 . 00904 . 01699 . 00186 . 01060 . 00031 . 00409 . 00569 . 00272 . 01138 . 02313 . 00392 . 01206
. 00860 . 01006 . 01073 . 01001 . 00833 ' . 01063 . 01282 . 01169 . 01370 . 01320 . 01086 . 02316 . 01040 . 02077 . 00960 . 01265 . 01802 . 02021 . 01343 . 00413 . 00409 . 01017
. 00052 . 00073 . 00078 . 00071 . 00078 . 00076 . 00091 . 00083 . 00098 . 00094 . 00077 . 00139 . 00074 . 00123 . 00057 . 00075 . 00106 .00119 . 00079 . 00037 . 00077 . 00085
-. 00419 -. 00535 -. 00171 +. 00120
-K 00027 -. 01329 -. 00194 +. 00095 -. 00104 -. 00255 -. 00307 -. 00225 -. 01059 -. 00232 -. 02027-. 00571-. 00468 -. 00142 +. 00016 +. 00085 -. 01368 0
.3838 . 43937 . 42832 . 42258 . 35815 . 44130 . 36648 . 50627 . 43998 . 43496 . 53093 . 56304 . 34132 . 49202 . 37255 . 46647 . 44302 . 49694 . 42148 .29036 . 47004 . 38027
1. 0000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. OOOOC 1. OOOOC 1. OOOCO 1.00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. OOOOC 1. OOOOC 1. 00000

*Less than .000005.

i To prevent requirements for scrap and by-products from generating production, scrap and
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank
24 of St. Louis

(*)

by-products have been treated as inputs to the producing industry rather than to the consuming industry. As a result of this treatment, the sum of the coefficient is increased in the

Table 2.—-Direct Requirements Per Dollar of Gross Output, 1958—Continued
(Producer's prices)

d
d
bjo

o

I

I
a
•8^
d G>

if

-i§
o

H
It

62

63

o

CC

o

he

d

"H
1d

d
0

i
g
"03

^

3,
1

. _w

o

a

'-£ o

a

!>'

£

2
h

o°£
o

1
&

64

65

66

67

d
IP

o

0. 00005 0
0
0
0
. 00132 . 00101 0
. 00120 0
. 00052 . 00004 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00041 0
. 00152 . 00014 . 00078 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00007 . 00004 0
. 00003 0
. 00001 . 00003 0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
. 00015 . 00032 . 00280 . 03660 . 03153
0
. 02839 . 00124 . 00009 0
. 00141 . 00293 0
. 00320 0
0
.00011 0
0
0
. 00764 . 00051 . 01767 . 00020 . 00007
. 00174 . 00030 . 00622 . 00046 . 00038
. 00269 . 00082 . 00155 . 00013 0
. 00123 . 00044 . 00055
. 00035 0
. 00075 . 00007 . 01785 . 00027 . 00002
. 00034 . 00051 0
. 00029 0
0
. 00027 0
. 00061 0
. 00090 0
0
. 00360 (*)
. 00484 . 03145 .02117 . 00098 0
. 00767 . 00649 . 03678 . 00025 0
. 00054 . 00025 . 00507 . 00221 .01186
. 00295 . 05869 . 00803 . 00104 . 00003
0
. 00236 . 00067 . 02180 (*)
. 00194 . 00007 . 00268 . 00034 . 00010
. 00051 . 00019 . 00709 .00117 0
. 00129 . 00255 . 00302 . 04450 . 00175
.01147 . 00707 . 03408 . 00754 . 00067
. 00072 . 00007 . 00603 . 00010 0
. 00087 . 00047 . 00588 . 00001 . 00003
.00311 . 01066 . 00493 . 00016 0
. 00341 .01817 . 00223 . 00011 0
. 01867 . 00570 . 02629 .00111 0
. 03871 . 02622 . 04459 . 00143 . 00246
0
. 00234 0
0
0
. 00036 . 00002 0
. 00124 0
. 01735 . 00584 . 01295 . 00045 0
. 01592 . 00971 . 01665 . 00120 . 00031
. 00001 . 00238 0
. 00001 0
0
. 00031 0
. 00033 0
0
. 00061 . 00025 . 00001 0
. 00001 . 00041 0
0
(*)
. 01180 . 00420 . 00075 . 00069 . 00001
0
. 00169 . 00124 .00036 0
. 00096 . 00042 0
. 00565 0
. 00722 . 00062 . 00216 . 00020 0
. 01271 . 00049 . 00252 . 00007 0
. 00028 . 00006 0
. 00159 0
. 03316 . 01270 . 00555 . 00090 . 00004
0
. 00198 0
. 00083 0
. 00323 . 00372 . 00287 . 00021 0
. 01041 . 00432 . 00243 . 00052 . 01244
. 02812 .00013 . 00192 . 00073 . 00057
. 00089 . 00341 . 00018 . 00214 . 00048
. 01412 0
. 00108 . 00258 0
. 01561 . 00006 00074 . 00479 0
.00138 . 00049 . 00198 . 00888 . 00051
. 06708 . 01343 . 00127 . 00076 . 00001
(*}
. 00544 , 05332 . 00001 (*)
. 00536 . 00165 . 05735 . 00141 . 00097
. 01042 . 01540 . 01581 . 06371 . 00177
. 00432 . 00295 . 00525 . 00795 . 00893
0
0
0
0
0
. 00373 . 00354 . 00475 . 00431 . 00613
. 04592 . 04076 . 06266 . 02943 . 00527
. 00519 . 00572 . 00838 . 02057 . 00566
! . 00972 . 01251 . 01424 . 02999 . 01641
! . 00130 .00119J .00173 0
0
. 01440 . 05514 . 02224 . 01459 . 01753
0
I . 00124 0
0
0
. 00024 . 00055 . 00141 . 02405 . 00163
. 00003 . 00003 . 00004 . 00073 .00031
. 00095 . 00099 . 00102 . 00092 . 00093
.00111 . 00204 . 00173 . 00163 . 00414
. 00014 . 00010 . 00023 . 02164 . 00041
. 02113 . 03855 . 05297 . 03990 . 00580
. 02225 . 00988 . 01227 . 00427 . 00487
. 00138 . 00069 . 00108 . 00126 . 00389
-.01121 -. 00041 -.00391 -.00198 0
. 45476 .52011 . 40126 . 60378 .85153
1. 00000 1.00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000

ji

>>

bfl

d

s

o

1
d
o>

1
•^

£

-2
"S

1

|
«

"3
H

i

i
%

s8 o>
wM

68

>

03

"3
0

i

1

j£

P*H

69

70

1

_0

sf_

71

^

1
*"
|
|

!i

i ll

PH

o

—i

72

1oa
<D

<3

">

1

"3
d .
_o

1

d<£>

a
|
| 1

V(

"53

a
1

d
1

"d

_TQ

|
§

W

tf

1
<

•3

H
S

73

74

75

76

77

|
|
^8

£

78

0
0. 01441 0
0
0
0. 00193 0.00020! 0.00042
0
0
0
o
0
. 00023 . 15143
0
0
. 02188 0
0
0
. 00002 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00009 0
0
0
.00055 0
0
0
. 00161 0
0
0
0
. 00008 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00043
. 00014 (*)
. 00008 0
0
0
1 0
0
0
0
0
. 00123 0
. 00001 . 01140
. 00133 0
. 02689 . 00004 . 00023 . 00017 0
. 00009 0
0
. 00195 0
0
0
0
. 05747 (*)
0
. 00013 0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00001 . 00004 0
. 00010
. 00002 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
(*)
(*)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 02715 . 00814 . 00452 . 09529 . 00288 . 00090 0
. 01368 . 02242 . 02997 . 00345
. 19828 0
0
0
. 00006 0
0
0
. 00001 . 00009 0
. 00101 .00108 0
. 00075 0
0
. 00747 . 06319
. 00002 . 00556 0
0
0
0
. 00001 0
. 00003 0
0
. 00001 . 00003 0
. 00019 0
.00011 0
0
. 00026 .01028 0
. 00009 . 00010 0
. 00025 . 00080 . 00009 . 00191 i . 00057 . 00051 . 00205 . 00057 . 00100 0
(*)
. 00168 0
0
. 00055 . 00001 . 00042 . 00794 . 00018 .00027! .00014! 0
0
. 00041 .00118 . 00005 . 01066 . 00089 . 00048 . 00232 . 00097 . 00151 . 00049
0
. 00014 0
0
. 00038 . 00041 0
0
.00013 .00061 0
0
0
0
. 00003 0
0
0
0
. 00096 0
0
0
. 00005 . 00091 0
0
. 00013 0
0
0
0
1
(*)
0
. 00002 . 00028 0
. 00014 0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00080 . 00482 . 00384 . 00017 .01196 . 00269 . 00127 . 00041 . 00060 . 00373 . 00660
. 00002 . 00370 . 00092 . 00015 . 00155 . 00033 . 00030 . 00012 . 00014 . 00089 . 00158
. 00025 . 00247 . 01487 . 00092 . 00053 . 22331 . 00009 . 00129 . 00353 . 01420 . 00920
. 00121 . 00806 . 00056 . 01573 .00001 0
. 00020 0
. 00048 . 00106 0
0
. 00150 0
. 00017 0
0
0
. 00010 . 00004 0
0
. 00003 . 00126 . 00042 . 00043 . 01454 . 00114 . 00433 . 00118 . 00017 . 02591 0
. 00017 . 00001 0
0
. 00024 0
0
. 00773 0
0
(*)
. 01206 . 00764 . 00353 . 00586 .01181 . 00444 . 00358 . 00344 . 00066 . 00309 . 00150
. 00042 . 00249 . 00201 . 00071 . 00566 . 00268 . 00546 . 03436 . 00031 . 00283 . 00026
. 00002 0
. 00001 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
(*)
. 00001 . 00019 . 00004 . 00007 . 00056 . 00002 0
. 00001 . 00174 . 00011 . 00018
. 00009 . 00026 0
.00111 0
. 00019 . 01226 0
. 00028 0
0
. 00032 . 004251 . 00001 0
. 00118 .00126 0
. 00496 0
. 00287
(*)
. 00033 0
. 00094 0
0
0
0
.00111 .00008 0
0
. 00018 . 00052 . 00064 . 00243 0
0
0
. 00042 .000161 0
0
. 00004 0
0
. 00019 0
. 00008 0
0
0
0
0
. 00102 0
0
. 00015 0
. 00281 0
0
0
0
0
. 00008 0
. 00056 0
. 00046 0
0
0
. 00089 0
0
. 00011 . 00229 . 00003 . 00337 . 01435 0
. 00002 . 00072
. 00779 . 00066 0
. 00007 0
. 00419 .00909 0
0
0
. 00009 . 00012 0
0
. 00010 0
0
. 00555 . 00225 0
0
0
. 00001 . 00019 0
. 00012 0
. 00029 0
0
0
. 00073 . 00071 0
0
0
. 00014 0
. 00007 0
. 00056 0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00055 0
. 00075 . 01928 . 00012 0
0
. 00011 . 00015 0
0
. 00067 0
. 00029 0
. 00018 . 00005 0
0
0
0
0
. 00014 0
. 00031 0
. 00056 0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00002 . 00041 . 01326 0
. 00014 0
. 00001 . 00018
. 00023 0
0
. 01965 . 00225 0
0
. 00013 0
. 00039 . 00046 . 00018 . 00013 0
. 00021 . 00328 . 00352 . 00197 0
0
0
. 00037 0
0
0
0
. 00011 . 00054 (*)
. 03165 . 00077 0
. 00049 . 00025 0
0
. 00017 00969 0
0
0
. 02809 0
0
. 00025 0
0
. 00012 . 00019 0
. 00005 . 00061 (*)
. 01348 . 00419 0
. 00005
(*)
. 00048 0
. 00018 . 00082 0
. 00019 . 00067 0
0
. 06986 0
. 00022 . 01913 0
0
0
0
. 00010 0
.02641 0
0
. 00051 . 00012
. 00002 . 00052 . 00007 00005 . 00030 . 00019 .00431 .01489! 0
. 00008 . 00228
. 00021 . 03446 - 14297 0
. 00004 , 00218 0
. 00030 0
0
0
. 00021 0
0
0
. 00071 0
. 28996 0
(*)
. 00006 00013 . 00036 . 00011 . 00074 . 00075 . 00107 . 00120 . 00017 . 00086 0
.
01144
0
0
. 00013 . 00575 0
0
. 00044 0
.02033! .00203 0
. 00439 . 00318 0
0
. 00001 . 00038 0
. 00008 . 00868 . 00785 . 00585 0
.00579 .00031
.00116 . 00085 . 00023 . 02121 .01013 . 00195 . 00023 . 01544 . 00141 0
.00165 .01833 . 00416 . 00888 . 00628 . 00740 . 00461 . 00038 - 00939 . 00401 . 00528 . 17817
. 03959 . 00230 . 01063 . 01555 . 00359 . 00530 . 02564 . 00037 . 00698 . 00553 . 00838 . 00276
0
. 00268 0
. 06223 0
0
0
0
0
. 00023 0
0
. 01912 . 00753 . 01840 . 01773
. 00405 . 16682 . 02012 . 00473 . 00402 . 01930J . 01007 0
.01177 .01183 . 01661 . 00966 . 01725 . 04269 . 01726 . 00218 . 08485 . 01254 . 01850 . 01509
. 00812 . 00545 . 01659 . 20355 . 03334 .01624 .01202 . 00094 . 02618 . 02307 .01165 . 00124
. 05034 . 00275 . 05300 . 07777 . 02047 . 04642 . 03663 .00218! .03919 . 05079 . 06858 . 00991
. 00485 0
0
0
0
0
. 00422 . 02908 . 00497 0
. 00236 0
. 04018 .01110 . 04992 . 03871 . 02062 . 02589 . 02243 . 00375 . 01945 . 03792 . 02522 . 01355
0
0
0
0
. 00176 . 00032
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00109 . 00122 . 00867 . 00314 . 00185 . 00949 . 00480 0
.01683J 0
. 00215 . 00866
.19413 0
. 00135 .00094 0
.23640 . 00367 0
. 00100 . 00019 .00158! 0
00096
00097
. 01304 0
. 00097 . 00081 . 00100 . 00530 . 00061 1 . 00096 . 00015 .10086i i . 00059 . 01935 . 01029 . 01233 .00438 .00058 . 02688 0
! .00045! .00056 . 00070 . 00154
| .00273! .00022 . 00054 . 00021
. 00009 . 12584 . 00376 . 00266 . 00672 . 00153 . 00030 0
0
. 00177 . 00032 .00450 0
!0
0
0
!0
j .01861 . 00022 . 04489
. 01973 . 00296 . 01680 . 01388 .00091J .01247 .00875 .00311 .00370 .01522 . 01955 . 00880
.00111 . 00081 . 00225 .00515 .00044J .00159 .01009 0
.00040 .00121 . 00384 . 00506
+ .00157 + . 001100
0
| + . 00918 0
0
0
+.00379 0
(*)
(*)
.57268 . 48865 . 72446 . 56018 . 72225 . 60812 . 45867 . 07681 i .48130 .53186 . 68106 . 43562
1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1. 00000 1.00000 1.00000 1.00000 1.00000 1.00000 1.00000 1. 00000 1. 00000

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00517
0
0
1
0
0
. 00113
0
. 00166
0
0
0
0
. 00535
. 00128
. 00630
0
0
. 00003
0
. 00130
. 00055
0
. 00003
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 02265
0
0
0
0
0
1

o
o


industries
producing the scrap or by-products and reduced in the consuming industries.
The entries in this row are the offsetting adjustments necessary to restore the industry sum
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
to unity.
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

i

t

1

d
S3
o
bC

<&,

B

3

§
d

bJO

L
*!
if
m

79

0
0
0
. 00012

0
0
. 01657
. 00417

0
0
0
. 24917

(*)
. 00011
0
0
. 00045
. 00035

0
. 00001

0
0
0
. 00040

0
. 00251
. 00497
. 00001
. 00060
. 00002
. 00844
.00114

0
0
0
. 00013
. 00047

0
0
0
. 00449

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00022

0
0
0
0
. 00006

0
0
. 00020
. 00257

0
0
0
0
. 00007
. 01455
. 00523

0
. 07865
. 00880
. 00941 1
. 01487
. 00155
. 01425

0
.00101

0
. 00005
. 00086
. 00010

0
.00311
. 00602

0
. 54430
1. 00000

i

"o

13
J

a

£ I"
II 1=3
o""1

PQ

80

81

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
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

"a
a

d

s

d

o

»—i

82

0. 00414 0
. 00997 0
. 00232 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00069 0
. 29692 0
. 02149 0
0
0
0
0
. 00098 0
0
0
.00025 0
0
0
0
0
0
o
. 00047 . 24155
0
0
. 00094 . 57734
0
. 00702
0
0
. 00477 0
0
0
0
0
. 00026 . 00666
0
0
. 00384 0
. 00033 . 00045
. 00029 0
0
. 00176
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00054 . 00307
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00475
0
0
0
0
. 00374 0
0
0
. 00553 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00108 0
. 00180 . 00785
. 00632 . 14955
. 38976 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.05411 0
0
0
0
0
. 14187 0
0
0
0
0
()
0
.01789 0
. 00551 0
0
0
0
0
. 02420 0
-()
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1.00000 1.00000

NOTE.—Detail may not add to total due to rounding.
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics.

1a

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
A.
V.A.
T.

Table 3.—Total Requirements (Direct and Indirect) Per Dollar of Delivery to Final Demand, 1958

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14,
15.
16
17

Livestock & Livestock Products
Other Agricultural Products
Forestry & Fishery Products
Agricultural Forestry & Fishery Services
Iron & Ferroallov Ores Mining
Nonferrous Metal Ores Mining
Coal Mining
Crude Petroleum A Natural Gas
Stone & Clav Mining & Quarryings
Chemical & Fertilizer Mineral Mining
New Construction
M unten mce & Repair Construction _
Ordnance & Accessories, _ Food A Kindred Products _ _
Tobacco Manufactures...
Broad A Narrow Fabrics, Yarn A Thro id \IiPMiscellaneous Textile Goods A Floor Co^ < rums

10
20
21
22
23
24
2)
26
2"
2s
29
KJ
r.
>2
3>
34
I
36
3"
3s
3o
40
41
42
43
41
4r->
4l>
47
4*
49
50
i
52
5'3
•>\

- -

-

Miscellaneous Fabric ited Textile Products
Lumber A Wood Products, E\a } i r l o n t n n « r ^
W ooden Containers, _
Ho isehold Furnituro...
Other Furniture & Fixtures
P i p e r A Allied Products, Except < orUii eis
P ip< rboard Containers A Boxes
Printing A Publishing
On rmcals A Selected Chemical P r , * < i ' u K
PI tstics A Synthetic M a t t n ilDrugs, Ch anmg A Toilet PM p.ir it'onx
Paints A Allied Products
P. foloum Refining A Related Industri. s
Rubber A Miscellaneous PI \^ii< Pro n u t s
L< i h < r Finning A Industm! L« iMi« r pr ,du< is
Foot\\e ir A Other Leather Prouu^tx
Gl iss A Glass Products
Stum A CIa\ Products
Pnmar\ Iron & Steel M inuf u t u n u r
primar, Nonferrous Met aN M IM if u HIPP"
\l« Ul Containers _.
}{.< itmg, Plumbing A Stnrf* nr t! \ ' » tat » ro<Ui"t<? _
v
-* rnpmgs, Screw Machim J ' r o U d c t s A I r f
< M h e i Fibucattd Metal P r o d u c t s
Lngmts A Turbines _
F u m Machinery A Equipment
Construction, Mining A < >il Field M u h m t r v
M UetiaL Handling Machinerv A E q u i p m e n t
M i t i l w o r k m g Machinery A E q u i p n u n<
^ i H i n l Industry Machines A E q u i p m e n t
( u n e r al Industrial M u m m e r > A iVmip" t n f
M i^hme Shop P r o d u c t Office, Computing & \ c e o a n t i r v M u i me
Hnviee Industrv Marhim s
F!e< t n c Industrial Equipment A \ p p i r uu*
Household \ppliances
^ u c t u e Lighting A W i r i n g E q u i p ' i u n t
r
t Kidio, Television & Communication Fquip' i « n t
7 LU-ctroTiK Components &. Accessor ie>>
"> Misc Electrical Machinery Equipii'f * > i \ -upi ^
)9 Motor \ i hides A Equipment
60 A i r c r a f t A Faits. 1 1 ( > t h < r Transportation Eq'iipnu nt
62 Scientific A Controlling I n s t r u m e n t s
t>3 Optical, (>phthalmic & I hotogi iphic E q m p n u n !
64 Miscellaneous Manufacturing
t>5 Transportation & W a r e h o u s i n g
66 Communications, Except Radio A T \ Bio idea-ting
f'7 Radio & T.V Broadcasting
6S Electric, Gas, Water A samtaij beiMce<?
hO Wholesale & Retail Trade _
70. Finance & Insurance.
71. Real Estate & Rental. .
72 Hotels, Personal A Repair Services, Exc Auto
73. Business Services. _
74. Research & Development. .
75. Automobile Repair & Services
76, Amusements.
77 Medical, Educational Services & Non-Piont Organizations
78. Federal Government Enterprises
79. State & Local Government Enterprises
80. Gross Imports of Goods & Services.
81. Business Travel, Entertainment & Gifts
82. Office Supplies.
T.
TOTAL

26



J3

I
<0

b
U

O

n

&

9

repair con-

10

11

O

12

13

14

15

&

o"

Tobacco manufactures

be

i~>

Food A: kindred products

5

"cS

e

Maintenance
struction

4

1

a
1
New construction

3

||

be

ing

5

3

Stone & clay mining & quarry-

2

1

Nonferrous metal ores mining

1

1
|

Iron & ferroalloy ores mining

Other agricultural products

Each entry represents the output required, directly and indirectly, from the industry named at the beginning of the row
for each dollar of delivery to final demand by the industry
named at the head of the column

Livestock & livestock products

I

(Producers' prices)

<»
03

§

oc3

8
1
°"£

»-H

16

1. 28309 0. 10846 0. 09107 0. 21979 0. 00333 0. 00316 0. 00284 0. 00462 0. 00293 0. 00322 0. 00543 0. 00341 0. 00543 0. 39698 0. 02899|0. 04310
.36083 1. 07990 . 15396 j . 43224 .00433 .00399 . 00381 . 00580 . 00348 . 00346 . 01292 . 00436 . 00526 . 20724 . 24835 . 19112
.00116 . 00071 1.01169 .00052 .00091J .00048 . 00139 . 00029 . 00040 . 00043 . 00898 . 00367 . 00071 .00606 .00072 .00079
. 03768 . 04265 .019741.021451 .00031 .00031 . 00033 . 00036 . 00029 . 00028 . 00101 . 00048 . 00043 . 01542 .00994 .00814
. 00069 . 00094 .00052J . 00058 j 1.05666 j .01696 . 00226 . 00053 . 00277 . 00333 . 00676 . 00322 . OQ425 . 00158 .00052 .00114
. 00060 . 00097 .00044 .00056' .042031.21532 .00200 . 00056 . 00181 . 00221 . 00533 . 00395 .01123 . 00084 .00070 .00137
. 00196 . 00200 .00130J .00128: .00727: .00616 1. 20977 .00116 . 00608 . 00546 . 00639 00328 . 00404 . 00350 .00194 .00657
. 01470 . 03034 .01453! .01456 . 011P21 .01243 .01370 1. 02948 . 02277 . 01802 .01982 .01850 . 00792 . 01457 ,009951 .01707
. 00175 . 00409 . 00091 i .00179 .00060; .00129 . 00143 . 00044 1.01274 . 01835 . 01916 .01115 . 00135 .00157 .00122! .00146
. 00146 . 00371 .00082 .001591 .00070; .00295 . 00105 . 00034 .00152 1. 06399 .00127 , 00121 . 00072 .00136 .00139 .00387
0
0
0
o
o
'o
o
0
0
0
0
1 00000
0
('
0
02857 03277 012641 01912 01603 01315 01009 01791 01126 01240 01198 1 00700 01090 02298 0112'' 01670
00013 00017 00012 0001(1 00018 00019 00(117 0001 3 00018 00019 00060 00027 1 034 jO 00020 00013 Oo037
176S2 01971 03662 03862' 00462 00587 00532 00490 00576 00765 00964 00772 01390 1 21>1 Is 01717
((1895
00018 00019 00016 00014 00021 00027 00026 00026 00028 00039 00042 00025 00085 00030 1 23632 00037
!
00249 00363 00411 00408 00110 00377 002s 3 00001 00244 00102 00351 0017s 00470 00421 0022s i 54S17
00108 00303 01010 00992 00051 00084 00132 OOOSl 00208 oooos 00200 00108 0033s on is7 00130 04.097
00041 00037 00033 0002S 0002S 00037 00040 00025 000*3 0003' W001 00053
10207 00134 000_o ()03^h
OOlbO 00228 0007h OOllh 0002S 00041 0003-' 0002 > 00043 00o42 00070 00045 000 5S 00302 ( H K s3 ( v u 43
00300
00371 0031s OOSS3 00376
00237 00327 00310 00306 (.3780 005 ^S OOhOO O i h " > ] oO'.24
0020) 00408 OOOS6 00214 OOOlx 00010 000 IM 00012 00027 00018 00091 00049 0013' 00320 0032" vi()116
Oi)008 00011 00010, 00009 00012 H'MMS 0001 5 0000" 00000 OOOOS 00637 00030 00143 00011 <*>000x 00025
oooos 00009 00012 OOOOt) 0000') 00005 00009 0000" 00007 00006 00437 00117 . 00070 00000 OOOOt i \)O()1()
OOS61 02057 0003s 003sl 00017 00004 00 554
02430 01434 0149S 02S34 03»4f) i » M 3
01200
00510 00256 0002s 0()(,23 00101 OOlhl 0024S Oo! d
00i65 00273 00579 00418 00794 02188 017s,-, 01753
r
i i n s 01051 02610 009 tt 00"S6 00771
02374 00772 01440 02052 02507 01 43
0074
oo i )0 O244i
03017 1)73 ">3 0160' 032,)!, 01)74 0*417
02047 03238 01760 02704 ()320f 11072
04s JO
0027s 00461 00477 004 i l ooioO oo33!
1470'
0- 1' 4 00603 • M 3 3 7 (M1740 01076 00084 003S4 ( 2">4 1
1 10 32s
00112 001 38 1 OOOS2 o< 1 ->s Oi 11
00171
00243 00222 00245 00621 00300 0( 765
00 1O
00201 00236 00241 00! 3s 001 r,
0< 148 Oi i'
00b34 05361 00236 00238 OOllh 0(bll
001 23
•o 1 27
r
!!2777
02 ' ^
i 34n1 03321 01248 024bS 017-11
01079 00005 ()OM>0 00 Us OOt>7S
dor » 02^31
013S5 OOs 34
00000 00012
10 .(r
i)0 )19 00011 00032 00012 Oool3 (»0(»4t>
000 2(
00029 OOOM OOol" 0000" "OMo 00 ) 2 (If ' i 1 00! \ 0 M j 2 0002
00011 (H'0-is 00020 000 1 4 0 H'27
OOOSO OOOM
i )t i In' '
002".
000")
00' *)" 00407
tool <
004T OOM2 00341
no ",. 00410 00170 00210
OH24 0032 > 00174 00311
OMX4
(iOo52
M1
M-jU '<
0 ! 2 0093) 00722 000x4
iiOs
i 7172
070 tl ( 24< S Os "S-? 009h4
o 13 JN, 00 12
i " r i 705
OOoM
O i113.2
OiM4
On i
i027"
1020
001 40 0( 17 > 000 4 S < 007 "
f H iSs i
0032S
( 0 S"
00 > 1 1
(
4 0022" OO]' J "
05471 "04S1 uO s2
on 1 3<)
f
1
( v
O *~
0< *2* o
0 s
001 >1 00107 001 '0
)2 5
00 »0_ 02045 00 h2 0 1 I3 ! M 1 S I
OOSO" 0031s o()xS4 0037)
0 ; >'}
Of 13
i ) 3D
i 1 »S
o1
'/'«)! 4
0007* 024* «
(
1
001 }5
iH )» i
002 '0
10 )02 003S2 0 ) 0 x ( ) M i x , , . 7 0
• )1,"4
O02
0 ^i
00- i
00305 009S(
00203
12 J 00 s|0 00 i 3 "
)0403 00' i '
(V f 2
i 004
hish
Of -274 002 17 00(if
»-l'4 I
Ml 2s 00 >5_
OloH 00022 00 (V 00012
l)< o< 1 00 ,7 0 ) )! " I ,! j. ] 1 I 1' 2S
0 »o
M Hi 3 1
ooo
,
~3
000x2 ! »0( 199
< 4')
oo ,3
00074 00154
;02> 1
0 l» i
>00~
(' ~
: .3
005t
(>o vr ! K 0 0 > » >
00108 000 1 0)0 r s
< 031s
hiOsh 00147 00003 ooos
OOSS-,
00121
"1 2t> 00 >
n v_ 2
0 '044
IUD74
()«' H)7
00079 00 )47 ()004n 000x4
'('13 1 ( o ro
01 ~S 001 Os
00129 00204
0 « "X
too ^
Oo! 41 oOO r 7
I o
OOO1- 5
OOMci
0« 194 OOOP2
000'^
in)03s
0002S 00039 00( 1 *x 00)23 00024
0052s 00! 4 >
002^3
()(r»-1
OUX
t
Sj
! (OS
0*'115 001 ^> OOOhO 00230
00 SO
) lot '> 00 S3
014 2 Oi ~Ss 0320 t ' • O i l
000 0
OK <
(h'il
004331
00027 OOi )2 t 00' 2 > 00025 0003 '
00 M 00 )66
(t i' ! 0(>1 )3
( 0
0000*
()0- 0 00(142 00 )M 0011 '
Ol50h Oi H I
i 1 s3 1-OS7
OK n
»f'0t r
)OOS2
0. 0-V
0 )04S 000 5t) 000 '4
00"->
0015)
048 J 4
000" xr
0 ) 0,5
1)0 >
O H ' O-lIOl 0141* 0 )04* 0( > , 3 Odu6(
00034 0)041 0003s 00027 0 > M 4
0( it ' »
OOOS
o i r > 00071
000) ,
0(H 7<
00121
I ! W 3 O O I 1 4 0033! 0010_
1
?
00 03 00250 not * oo3s(1
014S4 1)04 ', i 1'sv ii()27«)
Oo.i , 00124
OOi, 7
100x0
0000 1
0010^
JO! 3
0006 3 00050 00043 OOK 3 OOOS s oo 17*
1
V 3 OOOQ7
015S3 00 149 oO >* s 0 ' 1 2
)')0f i 001 jo
000-2 0 '07(
Ml 00120 oo, >:
r
o ' *{
10064
0005
OOOSl 00u77 006,9 002 ..5 03 i b
0003 > 000 N
!O04~
0 .0*4
nOlOt)
OOOh 7 00098 0003* 0 )' ^2 00 )43 000 1
P0074 ( * ' / ! j(
00052 o()047 Oo043 rK I A 0004r 1
00407
004 x
0' 264 f O , «
00144 00 17/«
0022" 00'71
00147
0)123 (H1316 f « 0 ' 2 (
OT7
( ) ^4 s
)h iSO
o-sx~4 04017 00243
'779 ' 01334
05 I'M 03463 03500 03005
01 102 00 r .2< 01150 OOOho 005( i, OOS")'
0)54"
0»»362 00540 005 /
00790 0(K31 00812 OOS91
1(0.344 OOTo 00.47
OOt 00
00142 00122 0 14^2 001 >_ 0()19(
00121
00330 00500 00178
040 >'}
0104() 03517
04 "S
fiU.Vi (,>OS4 02151
Os 039 OOXhfi 01134 0 ' 4 7 > 04 T
02513 05SOO 040-0 135( i 1054S Ot>994 oSOSJ 04223 OS072
06031 04l7o 0421s 03469
OJ2JO
!2>7S 02291 0 1 7 j 2 02700 01360 02093 0258' 01444 02729
02S02 0373*5 01083 01701
03908 (I3S,
05834 10302 05610 05742 OS109
04%3 (/2>S3 03144 01911 0242M 04464 03359 0416S
001 so 00215 00100 00141 S 0020S 00325
o413
00233' 00691 00367 00241 00566
O024h 00339 00372
07.51h 03942
03150 05249 OS955 02833 01531 01924 01734 04230 02267 01947 07392 01950, 03037 0540s
00013 00022 00009 OOOH 0001 ( 00022 O n p 5 OOOOt) 00015 0001S 00027 00021' 00051 00023 i .00017 0009S
003 lh 00," 09
00724 00524 00294 00336 003S1 002S3 i ( 23S 0033S 00272 0033s 01062 00453! 00205 0107
00136 00090 00094 00204 00081 , 00156 00163 001 68 ' 00140
00105 00146 00195 00085 00083 OOOS7 0007r
00308
0079S 00193 OOlSt) 00252 00135 00178 (Hi I SO 00142 00174 00169 00250 00146( 00258 00434 002 W
00540 00294 00460i 0047. f.' f 2s 00592
00339 Of,415 | 00405 00309 00298 00394 00401 00290 00369 0040t
002"2
0072S
00624
00369
00461
'
OOt
01
00701
006S3
00423 004441 00270 00203 00654
00415 00707i 01003
1
02102 06444
03495 03049 21086 0221s 320S4 24310 012SS 09568 07829 12270 03111 01892 03075 0737(
00662 00690 00585 00493 00777 01000 OOOhl 0)943, 01050 u!463 01546 00921 ,03172 01294 00677 01367
00108 OU118 OOllhi 0013.5 00224 00110 00264 0019* 00149 00204
00114 00137 00191 00090 00092 00113
2. 41749 1. 97081 2. 05613 2. 15584 1. 96014 2. 10579 1. 80190 1. 59,545 1. 79352 1.83209 2. 34280 1. 8073112. 40194 2. 66911 k 05823 12. 78866

Table 3.—Total Requirements (Direct and Indirect) Per Dollar of Delivery to Final Demand, 1958—Continued

23

£a

II
«

HH

PH

42
'o
•8
o>
p
o

O

OQ

35

36

o
•S be

il
£

a

C3

3
8
'3
"S

P-

^
17

o>

idustry m

*•§

42

1
o

'c3

rimary n onferrous m
manufacti iring

PH

£

tri
91

,P
"cs

y products

26

PH

i

«8

I
1

lass & glaf is products

25

O

°8
be
p

miscellaneous
icts

O

'rugs, clealtiing, & toilet
arations

PH

synthetic mat

PH

I*

4 •a1EJ
p

ootwear &
ucts

21

22

PH

a
1
£

1

eather tar
leather pr

O

fea
%%

«8

I

etroleum
industries

W

«g

•1
fc

aints & a!lied products

£

1
1
1£§

hemicals <fe selected che
products

<D

3

IB

rinting & publishing

(_!

"o

T3

1
0

o

£2

aperboard containers &

ture & fixture;

J

ousehold ifurniture

S

°03

ooden cor

<

I
£

r

a

03

s

i

umber & wood product
cept contaliners

<£>

iiscellaneous fabricated
tile products

!iscellaneous textile goo<
floor cover•ings

-8
T-i

(Producers' prices)

*
^

18

19

20

24

27

28

29

30

31

32

32

34

37

38

39

0. 04274 0. 01849 0. 02628 0. 01915 0. 00989 0. 012550. 00628 0. 00806 0. 00572 0. 00744 0. 010750. 00762 0. 01832 0.01920 0. 00445 0. 00812 0. 00426 0. 00584 0. 00395 0. 00444 0. 00318 0. 00320 0. 00345
05467 . 07038 . 09780 .06047 . 02592 . 02521 . 00994 .01146 . 00746 . 00883 .01022 . 00778 .01314 . 01330 . 00549 . 01250 . 00470 . 01171 . 00530 . 00556 . 00367 . 00392 . 0038T
.00090 . 01258 . 00146 . 13236 . 05126 . 01743 . 00925 . 01090 . 00523 . 00254 . 00263 .00170 . 00133 .00147 . 00044 . 00102 .00181 .00221 . 00320 . 00105 . 00069 . 00061 . 00061
. 00302 . 00328 . 00437 . 00568 . 00244 . 00172 . 00085 . 00094 . 00063 . 00062 . 00073 . 00056 . 00096 . 00102 . 00037 . 00075 . 00036] . 00069 . 00045 . 00041 . 00033 . 00034 . 00036
. 00106 . 00066 . 00096 . 00086 . 00385 . 00378 .00905 . 00105 . 00093 . 00063 . 00793 .00319 .00225 . 00452 . 00130 . 00164 . 00092] . 00069 . 00094 . 00276 . 07546 . 00767 . 03432
.00134 .00087 .00116 . 00107 . 00108 .00299 . 00421 .00135 . 00094 . 00097 . 01069 . 00420 .00222 . 00368 . 00101 . 00206 .00116 . 00085 .00136 . 00219 . 00775 . 13950 . 00553
.00534 .00323! .00460 . 00245 . 00383 . 00502 . 00689 .01351 .00735 . 00392 .01140 . 01249 . 00468 . 00691 . 00318 .00616 . 00551 . 00291 . 00559 .01516 .04470) .00652 . 02151
. 01326 .008951 .01235 .01618 .01372) .00990 . 00880 .01774 . 01500 . 00816 . 04998 . 02951 .01757 . 02449 . 57686 . 01289 .01001] .00652 .01164 .01801 .01505 .01193 .01190
. 00109 .00074] .00110 . 00124 . 00108 .00142 . 00192 . 00547 . 00276 . 00146 . 00387 . 00214 . 00215 . 00287 . 00439 . 00220 .00139 .00096 .014851 .07567 . 00593 . 00189 .00318
. 00366 .00184] .00249 .00114 . 00064 . 00123 . 00094 . (X3417 . 00218 . 00164 . 03924 . 01443 .00578 .01116 . 00163 . 00577 . 00463 . 00181 . 00240 . 00527 . 00149 . 00168 .00113
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
it)
0
0
0
01287 .01154 .01407 .01496 .01298 .01193 .01094 .01575 .01625 . 01675 .01318 .01712 .01072 . 01306 . 01835 .01132 . 00620 . 00773 . 01079 . 01296 . 02063 .01078 . 01461
.00036) .00022 .00042 . 00018 . 00018 . 00027 . 00061 .00027 .00059 . 00084 .00083 .00106 .00045 . 00045 . 00027 . 00057 . 00023 . 00026 . 00043 . 00022 . 00057 . 00066 . 00063
.01737! .01253 .01587 . 01345 .01112 . 02227 .01121 .01823J .01296 .01703 .02923 .02021 .05107 . 05688 .00711 . 01203 .01095 .00940 . 00893 . 01044 . 00727 . 00723 . 00806
. 00035 . 00043 . 00049 . 00043 . 00049 . 00049 . 00052 .00038 .00045 . 00088 . 00071 . 00040 . 00050 . 00066 . 00027 . 00046 . 00025 . 00039 . 00043 . 00045 . 00032 . 00035 . 00035
. 28761 . 52684 . 75908 . 00396 . 00301 . 09888 . 01525 .01637 .00899 . 00499 .00498 .00588 .00381 .00366 . 00138 . 05740 . 00327 . 05668 . 00301 .00608 . 00236 . 00590 . 00277
1. 10143 . 02340 . 10813 . 00324 .00190 .02174 . 02198 .00493 .00325 . 00337 . 00205 . 00290 .00204 .00161 . 00088 . 07782 .00164] .02317 .00127 . 00221 .00115 .00183! .0020f
.00491 1.21004 .01370 . 00257 . 00130 . 00173 . 00232 .00168 .00209 .00065 .00119 .00130 .00112 .00124 . 00053 .00422] .00036 .00818 . 00202] . 00047 . 00164 . 00134 . 00107
. 00751 .01871 1.07147 . 00094 .00065 .00248 .00186 .00369 .00198 .00115 .00376 .00173 .00174 .00148 . 00053 .00188! .00246! .00190 .00064) .00113 . 00060 . 00076 . 00055
. 00628 . 00408 . 00745 1. 40234 . 54239 . 18274 . 09636 .11334! .05368 . 02470 .00910 .01054 .00880 .00751 . 00333 .00744 .00367 .01810 .03211 .00952 . 00606 - 00514 . 00612
. 00057 . 00055 . 00075 . 00405 1. 03956 .00114 .00095 .00125 .00129 .00041 .00065! .00063 .00054 . 00053 . 00021 .00039 .00266 .00120 .00621! .00200 .00051! .00024 . 0009(
. 00293 . 00021 . 00372 . 00328 . 00768 1.01602 .02986! .00039 .00023! .00017; .00013! .00013 .00017 .00011 . 00009 .00043' .00008! .00055 . 00260 . 00013 .00024! .00016 . 0002(
.00012 .00013 . 00302 . 00063 .00152 .00798 1.02069 .00032 .00018 .00058! .00009! .00010 .00012 . 00008 . 00007 .00025 .00005 .00011 .00011 . 00009 .00012! .00009 .00012
.04131 . 02202 . 04485 .02612 .01807 .03006 . 02898 1.26423 .57308 .26224 .03082 .07744 . 05251 . 03948 .01318 .03209 .01309 .03269 . 05646 . 04682 .01243 . 01361 . 02404
.01458 .01610 . 02290 .01011 . 00767 . 02690 . 02832 . 03789 1.05856 .01516 .01161 .01341 . 04083 . 01897 . 00399 . 01394 .00,5(36 .01864 .08649) .01512 . 00344 . 00364 .()175(
01276 .01404 .01609 . 01806 . 01509 . 01551 . 01341 . 02609 . 02478 1.17580 .01683 .01554 .05773 . 01869 . 01629 .01867 .01010 .02347 . 01377 . 01452 .01194 . 01089 .01553
11084 . 05213 06964 . 03036 . 01616 03254 . 02369 .067101 .03880 .03839 1.26952 .45777 .18182 . 35590 . 04856 .14322 .11013) .04387 . 05958 . 04803 .02603) .03751 . 02401
.21311 .06625 09350 .01499 . 00729 02589 . 01398 .02005 .01484 .00617 . 03065 1.04431 .01113 . 13731 . 00374 .17459 .00562 .02222 .00502 .01878 . 00419 . 02049 . 0()90(
. 00598 . 00374 . 00571 . 00317. 00255 . 00265 . 00226 .00483 .00454 .00262 .01854 .01906 1 . 07036 .01933 .00453 .00595 .03284 .00918 .00366 .00909 .00385 .00304!1 . 0052(
. 00348 .00186' .00270 .00802 .00492 .02323 .01942 . 00242 . 00189 .00153 .00(504 .00953 .004221.00569, .00226 .00286! .00110| .00114 .00142 .00278 .00282] .00243 .01884
.02156 .01423 01978 .02804 . 02306 .01585 .01374 .02888 . 02502 .01288 .08402 .0,5000! .02989 .04164' 1.08844 .02055 .01628! .01023 .01529 .02805 . 02263 . 01665' . 01825
.02575 .01039 04410 . 01458 .00945 .04963 .01754 .02267 .02133' .00819- .01391 .0264:' .01663 .01284 .00529 1.04077 .01418 .07296 . 00919 . 01797 .00861 .00700! .0213f
.00052| .00435 .00130 . 00015 .00013 .00170 .00192 . 00016 .00018 .OOOlf .00015 .00013 .0001' .00014 .00008 .00136 1. 16129! . 26371 .00010 .00026 .00011 .OOOll! .00057
.00069 .001421 .00351 . 00027 . 00021 00064 .00034 00031 .00039 .00032 .00023 .OOOlH .00023, .00021 .OOOll) .00149 .00273 1.09210 .00017 .00022 .00015 .00015 .00018
. 00273 .0020* 00331 . 00282 . 00180 .01712 .04169 .00132 . 00308 . 00091 . 00323 . 00228 . 02386 . 00214 .00085 .00820 .00140 .00155 1.05173 .00205 . OCX) 93 .00106 . 00103
. 00345 .00195 .00280 . 00842 .00714 . 00830 . 00939 . 00967 . 00548 . 00333 . 00739 . 00484 . 00589 .01542 00489) .00711 .01366) .00754 . 03692 1.14415 . 02635 .01153 .0158f
. 00835 .00663' .01012 .01154 .06531 .06161 . 15406 .01167 .01222 . 00697 .02692 .01514 . 02278 . 04716 .01486 .01537 . 00587 . 00757 . 00977 .01798 1.31825 .04849 .59711
. 00673 .00550 .00737 . 00813 00802 . 02688 . 03760 .00930) .OOtiHfi 00736 .03275 .01514 .01017 . 01383 . 00672 .011981 .00497 .00574! .00899 . 01019 . 04207 1.44879 .0392(
00197 .00112 .00152 . 00129 . 00096 .00226 .00173 .00157 .00514 .00098 .01083] .00611 . 02058 . 05193 . 00815 .00197 .00177 .00094 .00125 .00118 .00080 .00084! 1.00833
.00119 .00102 .00139 . 00205 . 00229 .00549 .01574 .00154 00147 00129 .00171 .00 ISO . 00132 . 00217 .00207 .00171 . 00062 .00096 .00152 .00212] .00556 .0021?] .0083(
.00179! .00140; .00235 .00517 .00563 .00985 .01336 .00388 .00354! .00196 .00339] .00304 . 00,"98 .00344 .00196 .00557 .00193] .00235 .00656 .00373 .01196 .01692 .02118
.00538 .00479 .00749 .01512 .01596 .07113 04928, .01765 .01188' .00713 .00972 .00748 .01422 . 00740 j .01697 .01607 .00437 .01244 .00858 .01811
02847 02080' 02002
. 00058 .00947 .00060! .00084 .00072' .00078 .00093 .00065 000581 .00066 .00086' .00073 .00130: .00072! .00172 . 00066 .00036 .00050) .00056 .00084 .00148! .00103! .00124
.00118 .000911 .00123 .00092 . OOOf 3 .00077 .00145 .00043 .00035 .00057 00054 .00044 .00134 .00068 .00053 . 00054 . 00022 . 00054 . 00057 . 00049 . 00237 . 00054 . 00138
. 00068 . 00047 . 00065 . 000( .00072
3
.00104 . 00165| .00130 . 00083 . 00061 .00271] .00154 .00100 .00127 . 00297 .00092 .00061 . 00045 .00132 .00505 . 00536 . 00425 . 00283
.00023 .00015 .00022 .00087 .00047 . 00102 . 00043 . 00039. 00027 . 00018 . 001 15 . 00054 .00030 .00045 . 00028 . 00031 .00019 .00017 .00041 .00141 . 00073 . 00047 . 00052
.00156 .00', as 00169 .00154 .00218 . 00475 .00698 .00249 . 00236 .00133 .00290 .00320 .00213 . 00261 . 00162 . 00252 .00150 .00133! .00281 .00306 .01193 .01333! .01981
! 00435 004
."2 0061 4 .00307 . 00589 .00516 . 00198 . 00509 .00662 .00490' .01348 .00673 .00418 .00439 .00133! .00343! .00141 .00134] .00146 .00204 .00262: .00130 .00184
.00131 i 1 Hl(Jr) .00194 .00301 .00248 .00280 .00471 ,00218 .00219 .00122, .002911 .00233, .00161 .00213 .00572 .00231 .00093 .00099] .00261! .00220 .00681 .00719 01170
.00071 <> u.-l .00091 .00127 .00176 .00171 .00264 .00116 .00117 .00069 .00149 .00127 .00100 .00146 .00073 . 00376 . 00057 .00079 .00136; .00139 .01173] .00649! .01120
. 0009 i
'iW .00112' .00089 .00076 .00107 . 00325 .00112 . 00085 .00219! .00177 .00123! .00433 .00126 .00127 .00119 .00059 .00121 .00084! .00087 .00083! .00075 . 00088
. OOOH!)
-dSO .00043 .00036 .00037 . 00071 .01072 .00038 . 00034! . 00046 . 00052 . 00040 . 001 1C . 00040 . 00041
.00042! .00019 .00033 .00053] .00041 . 000581 .00073 .00068
0(>' ^ , x » l l j 00167 .00151 .00174 .0(3248 .00458 ..00211 .00177 .00185 .00410' .00309 .00195 .00221 .00344 .00236 .00155 .00123) .00212 .00284 .00866 .00866 ! 00678
\) >"5
H0034 .00041' .00035 . 00038 .00173 .00202! .00033 .00041 .00040 .00048 .000441 .00060 .00051 .00030 .00081 .00018) 00031 i 00073 .00033
00064 . 00100 .00310
" . <HHH)3 00098] .00235 . 00342 . 00228 .00242 .00229 .00177 .00096 . 0009S .00124 . 0007S .00096 .00061] .00242 .00145 .00165! .00350 .00491 .00189 . 00940 00184
„!>!',, » 00068 .00090 .00066 . 00069 .00119 . 00252 . 00068 . 00067' . 00153' . 001 17: . 00133
.00106 .00089 00091 .00161 .00041 . 00066 . 00065 . 00071 . 00099 . 00214 . 00098
<(»u"4 00055 .00077 .00055 . 00059 .00110 .00151 .00055] .00053 .00087 .00090 . OOOH2 .00088] .00065 .00122 .00113 . 00035 .00129 .00055] .00089 . 00087 .00145 . 00082
)•)' >h 00044 .00063 .00098 .00101 . 00077 . 00085 .00060 .00055 .00048! .00073, .00058 .00055! .00061 .00061 . O')068 . 00034 .00041 .00056 .00081 .00093 . 00827 . 00085
•H>JS3 .00183 .00279 .00485! .00515 .00392 .00784 .00255 .00241 . 00220 1 .00298 00249 .00257 .00281! 00307 00227 .00153 .001 71 J .00225 .00388 .00745 . 00699 .00618
•nii.is .00078 .00166 .00111 .00102 .00123 .00270 .00109 .00111 .00281' .00226 .00257 .00123 .00160 .00118 00433 .00065 .00099! .00116] .00123 . 00186 .00145 . 00588
00093 .00087 .00091 .00443 .00272 .00148! .00213 .00127, .00112 .00086 .00119 .00104 00093 .0010* .00111 .00115 .00060! .00069' .00081 .00127 .00286 .00184 .00190
.00063 .00072 .00420 .00061 .00062 .00106) .00783 .00095! .00071 .00083 .00114 .00110 .00505 .00091 .00064 .00222 .00086: . 00272 i 001531 00121 00125 .00147! .00141
00109 .00075 .00093 .00060! .00054 .00073 .00065 .00102 .00074 .00587 .00132 .00341 .00219 .00121 00068 .00148 .00050 .00192 .00068: 000701 00059! 00060 ! 00068
I 01143 .02632 .02335 .00437 .00327 .00828 .01923: .00333 . 00343 1 .00617 . 0040S .00318 .00507 .00347 00215 .00784 .00202
00709 .00285! .00486 .00266! .00373 .00308
.07268 .04664 . 062^4 .09865 .09247! .06510 .05839! .07774 .08095 . 05508 .08054 .07542 .05630 . 079S9 08&M .05773 .04620! .04281 . 05580 . 09694 . 09990 .05871 .08342
. 00856 .00902 .00965 .00874 .00831: .01139 .00984 .00841! .00819 .02044 .01034 00908 .01203 .01091 00606 .00861 .00644 .00847 .00733 .00841 .00910 . 00823 . 00785
. 00195 .00212! .00230 .00214 .001731 .00244 .00186: .00207! .00171! .00430 .00229 .00228 .01148' .00256 00327 .00270 .00125 .00298 .00189' .00201 .00164 .00160! .00190
. 02651 . 02099 . 02816 . 02069 .02410 .02323 .02394; .03847 .02752 .01932 .04911 .03523 .02247 .02837 .03147, .02817 .01923; .01632 .05701 .05091
05015 .05061) .03615
. 09323 .08473 .11111 . 08572 .09612 .09711 .09287 .07395 .08029, .05579 .06121 .05526 .06053 .07987 .03532 .06629 .04816 .06053! 06380i 05954^ 07020 .07145 .08293
. 02623 .02465 .02611 . 02568 . 02429 . 02149 .02013 .02047 .02222, .02557 .02657 .02416 .02523 .02609, .02669, .02017 .01617 .02116 .02234] .02533] .02332 . 02374 . 02386
.03198 .03748! .04261 . 03542 . 03435 .03480 .03085 .02426 .02966' 05972 .03614' .02898 .03547 03681 .09697 .02961 .01535 . 02627 . 02344 . 02841 . 02743 .02495 .02618
1 .00467 .00729 .00691 .00580 .00728 .00659 .00609) .00435 .00512 . 0»r71 .00564 .00401 .00512 00549 .00252 00506 .00341
00675 .00514! .00501 .00414 .00394 .00439
. 03108 .03377 .03675 .03418 .02765 . 03905 .02974 .033K .02727 .06875 .03653 .03646 .18384 .04093 .05200 .04310 .01998] 04767 .03016 .03212 . 02626 . 02552 . 03034
. 00093 .00042 .00060 .00015! .00015 .00027 .00032 .00048 .00027 .00019 .00281' .00396 .00050 .00122 .00057 .00086 .00027 . 00020 .00113 . 00021 .00128 . 00093 . 00066
. 00459 . 00358 . 00565 .01519 .01654 .00681 .00599 .00532 .00527 .00457 .00540 .00438 .00476 .00602 .00537 .00359 . 00308 . 00324 . 00400 . 00766 . 00444 . 00372 . 00431
.00120 . 00134 .00149 . 00136 .00134 . 00149 . 00132 .00121 .00119 .00234 .00157 00127 .00395 .00163 .00152 .00144 . 00077 .00149 .00118 .00127 .00107 .00103 .00116
. 00264 . 00292 .00311 . 00246 .00260 . 00254 . 00235 . 00221 . 00250 .00238 .00253; .00265; .00229 . 00267 .00224 .00231 .00182 .00240 .00214 .00217 .00239 .00233 . 00261
. 00603 .00619 . 00657 . 00407 . 00449 . 00467 . 00472 . 00501 . 00481 .01243 .00686! .00920! .01020 . 00741 . 00562 . 00545 .00817 . 00720 . 00638 .00476 . 00463 . 00430 . 00476
.00611 .00469 .00641 . 00647 . 00678 . 00558 . 00544 .00877 . 00674 .00494 .00937 .00734 . 00519 . 00662 . 00750 . 00589 . 00433 . 00384 . 00954 . 01075 . 01009 .00877 . 00760
. 16092 . 03479 .05515 . 11564 . 06512 . 03783 . 03159 . 13775 . 06900 . 03947 .06383! .04527 . 03233 . 03739 . 09552 . 06959 . 05827 . 03325 . 04097 . 03767 . 05470 . 16298 . 03429
. 01295 . 01587 . 01823 . 01583 .01831 .01817 . 01937 .01401 .01576 . 03279 .02663 .01489 . 01846 . 02451 .01011 . 01694 . 00924 . 01449 . 01598 . 01682 . 01202 . 01308 .01284
. 00178 .00219 .00232 .00173 .00178 .00226 .00228 .00180 . 00199 . 00517 .00236 .00165 . 00344 . 00253 .00168 . 00207 .00116 . 00237 . 00193 . 00187 .00171 .00159 .00171
2. 58047 2. 54437 2. 99101 2.41471 2. 41874 2. 30307 1 2. 19324 2. 27382 2. 384452. 11972 2. 27099 2. 316462. 25458 2. 4027S 2. 38082 2.164731.75389 2.12092 1.87472 2. 01063 2. 20987 2. 42837 2. 44158




27

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
T.

Table 3.—Total Requirements (Direct and Indirect) Per Dollar of Delivery to Final Demand, 1958—Continued

(Producers' prices)

£ ^ 3 0 ,-H *

a
^-g

o'o) S °J5 *

r? ^

filial
S

T3 o

I
wT
bJO

.a M
ll
41

1

"3

bX)

a

TJ
£
03
_0
X5
o3

'fl

1
«8
£
rt

!>>
fe
0

03

a

'bfl
I

o

42

bC

a

W
43

o3
fe

44

2
3
4
5

i

0. 00385
. 00435
. 00099
. 00039
. 02090

0. 00399
. 00453
, 00132
. 00039
. 01782

0. 00413
. 00483
. 00172
. 00042
. 01721

0. 00383
. 00402
. 00055
. 00036
. 01176

0. 00430
. 00522
. 00101
. 00169
. 01438

6
7
8
9
10

. 01392
. 01378
. 01156
. 00282
. 00089

. 01230
. 01237
. 01194
. 00248
. 00098

. 01284
.01177
. 01071
. 00254
. 00117

. 00845
. 00947
. 00917
. 00208
. 00062

. 00468
. 01099
. 00974
. 00240
. 00082

a

"§22§
la
o
45

*

JL

abe

b

.2

2
a

3
'S

0
X3

i^

£
2

_C

~ a £i~t
.25 a
o>'3
O

!«
2
46

.3
r-l -U

1

"o ®

^

02

47

§a

as

o<D a

"3

|
03

03

aa

o
bfi

a

§

"3a

a
SJ

>>

1
1

1
o
OJ

^
la
o

'3a1

02
^

.3 <»

c3
•§S

-S a

!§•
w

abJD
S

.1'ai

o
"c3
O

1a
ao

.0

xl

<o a

2
"Q

•-3

3f
.a

0

.2 '3
0
W

1
S

a
a
"30"

03

a

tuo

o>

o

a
03

XI

1
1

03 CD

PH

a
I
o

1

s

rt

XJ

a§
•§s

sS
*o a

§*

^
48

49

50

51

52

53

54

55

56

57

58

I

a

.on equipi

03

a
3
0

.S

I

g

equipmerj

'o

o>

nachines

a

fi ^ 02

40

fl

«

be

a
'3
I machine

I

0

'30*

a
'3
machiner

bJO

0

o>

a
a

§

chinery &

18
S-ll!

o

*

a
machine

liiii^

1
1

<*)
1
.1?
2
o>

<%

^

£S

o
'o

^
59

03

a

•s•8o

a

1
£

1
3

1

60

61

o

0. 00394 0. 00489 0. 00395 0. 00478 0. 00441 0. 00366 0. 00540 0. 00500 0. 00531 0. 00482 0. 00454 0. 00576 0. 00574 0. 00480 0. 00422 0. 00292 0. 00474
. 00415 . 00540 . 00420 . 00518 . 00460 . 00390 . 00504 . 00558 . 00529 . 00614 . 00482 . 00616 . 00600 . 00531 . 00619 . 00338 . 00615
. 00067 . 00076 . 00064 . 00131 . 00076 . 00041 . 00060 . 00146 . 00078 . 00121 . 00086 . 00131 . 00089 . 00060 . 00075 . 00070 . 00410
. 00039 . 00046 . 00035 . 00044 . 00041 . 00033 . 00043 . 00050 . 00042 . 00049 . 00044 . 00049 .00050 . 00043 . 00046 . 00028 . 00057
. 01531 . 01250 . 00911 . 01008 .01157 . 00859 . 00318 . 00971 . 00758 . 00940 . 00754 . 00298 . 00365 . 00687 . 01191 . 00525 . 01288
. 00441
.01106
. 00973
. 00239
. 00068

. 00573
00864
. 00924
. 00205
. 00072

. 00702
. 00639
. 00874
. 00182
. 00053

. 00960
. 00717
. 01000
. 00182
. 00070

. 00764
. 00834
. 00910
. 00478
. 00066

. 01355
. 00650
.01211
. 00259
. 00055

. 00460
. 00291
. 00529
. 00092
. 00045

.01187
. 00771
. 00970
. 00202
. 00106

. 01294
. 00593
. 00826
. 00175
. 00087

. 00972
. 00773
. 00861
. 00202
. 00110

. 01210
. 00607
. 00820
. 00209
. 00123

. 00628 . 00878
. 00357 . 00408
. 00646 . 00749
. 00127 . 00189
. 00077 . 00116

. 01923
. 00505
. 00858
. 00210
. 00178

. 00567
. 00966
. 00943
. 00204
. 00102

. 00767 . 00634
. 00442 . 00995
. 00666 . 01060
. 00126 . 00240
. 00052 . 00095

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
11 0
0
12
. 01276 . 01202 . 01130 . 00969 .01121 . 01040 . 01102 .01176 . 01096 . 01127 . 01369 . 00799 . 01259 . 01011 . 01120 . 00963 . 00990 . 01060 . 00939 . 01475 . 00940 . 01104
. 00105 . 00128 . 00076 . 00266 . 00350 . 00103 . 00084 . 00118 . 00203 . 00216 . 00065 . 00294 . 00172 . 00295 . 00158 . 00061 . 03016 . 01093 . 00094 . 00140 . 06814 . 00098
13
. 00912 . 00936 . 00966 . 00942 . 00946 . 00957 .01173 . 00913 .01156 . 01089 . 00854 .01411 . 01173 . 01364 .01114 .01105 . 01445 . 01403 . 01158 . 00862 . 00676 . 01068
14
. 00049 . 00050 . 00052 . 00054 . 00050 . 00055 . 00067 . 00054 . 00065 . 00063 . 00050 . 00088 . 00063 . 00081 . 00058 . 00060 . 00085 . 00081 . 00064 . 00042 . 00037 . 00056
15
16
. 00371 . 00389 . 00499 . 00338 . 00455 . 00351 . 00707 . 00331 .00546 .00390 . 00271 . 00288 . 00468 . 00378 . 00914 . 00375 . 00616 . 00391 . 00655 .01789 . 00361 . 00581
. 00134 . 00193 . 00290 . 00196 . 00373 . 00228 . 00299 . 00160 .00203 .00141! .00098 . 00163 . 00247 . 00190 . 00404 . 00230 . 00238 . 00161 . 00504 .01117 . 00232 . 00307
17
. 00209 . 00221 . 00218 . 00186 . 00194 . 00190 . 00205 . 00214 . 00221 . 00212 . 00237 . 00179 . 00205 . 00199 . 00202 . 00209 . 00205 . 00251 . 00218 . 00191 . 00212 . 00240
18
. 00092 . 00095 . 00063 . 00076 . 00071 . 00064 . 00068 . 00091 . 00054 . 00057 . 00047 . 00044 . 00080 . 00053 . 00073 . 00057 . 00058 . 00057 . 00099 . 01051 . 00045 . 00120
19
. 00914 . 01249 . 01666 . 00453 . 00933 . 00572 . 00624 . 00539 . 01225 . 00647 . 00307 . 00453 . 01377 . 00633 .01110 . 00732 . 01189 . 00729 . 00426 . 00651 . 00628 . 04190
20
. 00154 . 00089 . 00123 . 00029 . 00067 . 00033 . 00039 . 00030 . 00052 . 00046 . 00026 . 00063 . 00641 . 00033 . 00657 . 00052 . 00041 . 00052 . 00035 . 00046 . 00032 . 00057
21
22
. 00140 . 00052 . 00154 . 00029 . 00031 . 00046 . 00034 . 00025 . 00060 . 00074 . 00019 . 00073 . 00168 . 00069 . 00059 . 00035 . 02703 . 00704 . 00041 . 00061 . 00126 . 00787
23
. 00191 . 00030 . 00121 . 00020 . 00079 . 00019 . 00071 . 00016 . 00021 . 00040 . 00013 . 00036 . 00103 . 00019 . 00063 . 00013 . 00038 . 00020 . 00013 . 00050 . 00235 . 00489
24
. 01503 . 02146 . 01843 . 01406 . 01335 . 01129 . 01361 . 00883 .01315 . 01459 . 00791 . 02052 . 02333 . 02302 . 02466 . 02659 . 02439 . 03077 . 01850 . 02036 . 00937 . 01426
25
. 00801 . 01356 . 00906 . 00869 . 00613 . 00412 . 00532 . 00322 . 00367 . 00524 . 00232 . 00516 . 01488 . 00827 . 01559 . 02573 . 01220 . 01306 . 01245 . 00726 . 00425 . 00518
26
. 01266 . 01288 . 01530 . 01334 .01671 . 01275 . 01447 . 01049 . 01305 . 01243 . 01000 . 01847 . 01443 . 01228 . 03347 . 01254 . 01684 . 01189 . 01497 . 01899 . 00909 . 01241
27
. 01935 . 02264 . 02770 . 01337 . 01845 . 01477 . 01610 .01181 . 01638 01462 . 01081 . 01069 . 02695 . 02180 . 02759 . 03273 . 01997 . 03160 04953 . 02498 . 01267 02325
! 00586 ! 01090 . 00740 . 00636 . 01008 . 00681 . 00948 . 00509 . 00750 . 00543 . 00422 . 00665 . 01046 . 01436 . 01478 . 02832 . 01591 . 01465 .02114 . 01552 . 00652 . 01558
28
29
. 00240 . 00285 . 00242 . 00225 . 00260 . 00235 . 00271 . 00190 . 00249 . 00218 . 00218 . 00148 . 00286 . 00191 . 00242 . 00235 . 00202 . 00191 . 00235 . 00323 . 00179 . 00281
30
. 00482 . 00709 . 00347 . 00314 . 00587 . 00333 . 00480 . 00191 . 00211 . 00259 . 00150 . 00216 . 00800 . 00465 . 00809 . 00666 . 00264 . 00237 . 00205 . 00739 . 00245 . 01084
31
. 01820 . 01879 . 01670 . 01464 . 01542 . 01539 . 01469 . 01390 . 01608 . 01426 . 01991 . 00824 .01517 . 01276 . 01309 . 01256 . 01007 .01117 . 01303 . 01470 . 01026 . 01685
32
. 00795 . 01372 . 01319 . 01371 . 04172 . 02306 . 02838 . 01086 . 01932 .01077 . 00637 . 01603 . 02216 . 01338 . 04123 .02338 . 01883 . 01305 . 05690 . 04810 . 01464 . 01719
33
. 00032 . 00040 . 00030 . 00040 . 00149 . 00037 . 00060 . 00030 . 00168 . 00048 . 00088 . 00029 . 00043 . 00030 . 00087 . 00039 . 00044 . 00024 . 00031 . 00067 . 00019 . 00076
34
. 00021 . 00053 . 00031 . 00025 . 00027 . 00021 . 00046 . 00029 . 00024 . 00023 . 00166 . 00027 . 00036 . 00026 . 00169 . 00026 . 00030 . 00027 . 00029 . 00029 . 00023 . 00024
35
. 00528 . 00263 . 00147 . 00209 . 00163 . 00138 . 00204 . 00179 . 00149 . 00143 . 00090 . 00301 . 00524 . 00373 . 00390 . 03291 . 01399 . 03742 . 00432 . 01656 . 00211 . 00764
36
. 01764 . 01797 . 01688 . 01655 . 01549 . 01574 . 01362 . 01520 . 01268 . 01902 . 02722 . 00704 . 01580 . 01522 . 01653 . 01475 . 00989 . 01394 . 01727 . 01260 . 01065 . 01841
37
. 35657 . 30328 . 29192 . 19905 . 24739 . 26426 . 21354 . 15093 . 16897 . 19609 . 14101 . 05166 . 15950 . 11059 . 15596 . 12172 . 04630 . 05534 . 08051 . 20265 . 08595 . 21941
38
. 13334 . 11780 . 12018 . 08104 . 04027 . 03730 . 05229 . 06767 . 09388 . 07274 . 13600 . 04547 . 11683 . 12932 . 09436 . 10073 . 06227 . 08740 . 17978 .05101 . 07624 . 05795
39
. 00138 . 00471 . 00168 . 00080 . 00101 . 00082 . 00096 . 00100 . 00081 . 00080 . 00062 . 00072 . 00136 . 00101 . 00142 . 00124 . 00094 . 00100 . 00109 . 00119 . 00069 . 00125
40 1. 02710 . 01106 . 01204 . 00547 . 00673 . 02122 . 01807 . 00725 . 01570 . 02359 . 00466 . 00155 . 02941 . 00541 . 02012 . 00447 . 00268 . 00235 . 00242 .00465 .00314 . 05287
41
. 02894 1.04987 . 02818 . 03439 .04265 . 02026 . 02856 . 03705 .02184 . 02103 .01154 . 01738 . 05145 . 02348 . 06503 . 03549 . 03073 . 03136 . 03509 . 05161 . 03223 .01475
42
. 04729 .04116 1.05591 .01618 . 02046 . 02707 . 03668 . 03391 . 02955 . 03272 . 03206 .01257 . 04406 . 01825 . 04732 . 02716 . 02435 . 02251 . 01681 .06236 . 02286 . 03640
43
. 00643 . 00296 . 00265 1.10685 . 05676 . 03409 . 02138 . 00453 . 00392 . 01828 . 00735 . 00126 . 00516 .01980 . 00256 .00152 . 00131 . 00138 . 00327 . 00730 . 00346 . 03834
44
. 00308 . 00212 . 00214 .01725 1.04340 . 02104 . 00737 . 00262 . 00420 . 00371 .00153 . 00057 . 00148 .00114 .00133 . 00099 . 00061 . 00052 .00150 . 00263 . 00087 . 00723
45
. 00592 . 00242 . 00538 . 03489 . 01749 1.06690 . 05753 . 00409 . 01093 .01128 . 00545 . 00088 . 00268 . 00325 . 00214 .00174 . 00125 .00188 . 00327 . 00261 . 00154 . 00935
46
. 00166 . 00070 . 00163 . 00240 . 00150 . 00713 1.04337 . 00325 . 00623 .00915 . 00092 .00030 . 00182 . 00085 . 00052 . 00032 . 00028 . 00027 . 00049 . 00080 . 00092 . 00540
47
. 01325 . 01861 . 03421 . 02758 . 02677 . 02645 . 02647 1.06938 . 03240 . 02701 . 02558 . 01393 .01140 .01789 . 01492 . 01095 .01053 . 01049 .02118 . 02277 .03115 . 01270
48
. 00547 . 00201 . 00437 . 00312 . 00498 . 00397 . 00686 .01063 1.06713 . 00920 . 00831 . 00702 . 00482 . 00244 . 00177 . 00126 . 00154 . 00155 .00162 . 00197 . 00186 . 00204
49
.01775 . 00493 . 01378 .04611 . 06863 . 07251 . 08425 .04129 . 06819 1.08608 .01536 . 00992 . 02343 . 01387 . 01625 . 00495 . 00437 . 00371 . 02232 .01279 . 01855 . 02430
50
. 00950 . 00850 . 00743 . 04089 . 02249 . 01078 . 02271 . 01048 . 00841 .01115 1.10038 . 00466 . 00493 . 00535 . 00458 . 00445 . 00563 .00385 .01218 . 01344 . 02190 .00911
51
. 00141 . 00156 .00116 . 00098 . 00130 . 00134 . 00236 . 00087 . 00275 .00111 .00150 1.10194 .00150 . 00186 . 00314 . 00103 . 00374 . 00655 .00196 .00155 .00173 . 00096
52
. 00990 .00262 . 00223 . 00120 . 00185 .00210 . 00357 . 00321 . 00665 .01074 . 00135 . 00057 1.05774 . 00102 .03222 .00150 . 00142 . 00059 . 00095 . 00269 . 00187 .00410
53
. 01988 . 00955 . 01002 . 02873 .01621 . 02225 . 06429 . 03685 . 05275 . 06641 .01054 .03193 .10981 1.07955 . 05426 . 04231 . 03070 . 04225 .03315 .00911 . 01268 . 04500
54
. 00827 . 00326 . 00285 . 00103 . 00440 . 00104 . 00107 . 00283 . 00240 .00150 . 00072 . 00055 . 06882 . 00132 1.01373 .00106 . 00124 . 00146 . 00338 . 00092 . 00345 . 00662
55
. 00455 . 00629 . 00439 . 00359 . 00287 . 00304 . 00584 . 00292 . 00321 . 00398 . 00274 . 00653 .01163 . 02086 .01128 1.04522 .01670 . 01163 . 04305 . 00865 . 00483 . 00629
56
. 00168 .00162 . 00155 . 00279 .00179 . 00223 . 00249 . 00214 .01257 . 00491 . 00196 . 01438 . 00629 . 01415 . 00269 . 00412 1.08462 . 04101 . 00750 . 00919 . 04077 . 00363
57
. 00282 . 00222 . 00204 . 00248 . 00156 . 00185 . 00361 . 00222 . 00755 .00413 . 00134 . 05228 . 00569 . 03507 . 00380 . 00687 . 20968 1.07502 . 01805 . 00426 .01741 . 00281
58
. 00172 . 00225 .00178 . 02242 .01051 . 00375 . 00443 . 00228 . 00192 . 00286 . 00362 . 00145 . 00222 . 00465 . 00192 . 03267 . 00194 .00217 1.04655 . 02348 . 00595 . 00357
59
. 01260 . 04405 . 01393 . 04907 . 03326 . 03023 . 02260 . 07600 .01135 . 01694 .01158 . 00367 . 02582 . 00812 .01091 .00619 . 00471 . 0042C . 05599 1.42708 .01793 .02713
60
. 00412 . 00359 .00273 . 01876 . 00709 .00435 .00606 . 00934 . 00793 . 02466 . 00572 . 01099 .01107 . 00406 .00313 .00138 . 02041 . 00459 . 00300 . 00320 1.25686 . 00854
61
. 00950 .00178 . 00234 .01256 . 00453 .00774 .00702 .00178 . 00547 . 00776 . 00479 . 00091 . 00277 . 00705 . 00384 .00120 . 00130 . 00107 . 00137 . 00276 .00156 1.07500
62
.01152 . 00349 . 00485 . 00331 . 00349 . 00276 . 00336 . 00315 . 00450 . 00975 . 00263 . 00561 . 01976 .01638 . 03533 .00457 .00975 . 00740 . 00644 . 00801 . 02394 . 00419
63
. 00084 .00115 . 00083 . 00079 . 00091 . 00073 . 00086 . 00076 . 00290 .00105 . 00072 . 00095 .00110 . 00149 . 00320 . 00083 . 00368 .00116 .00129 .00100! .00341 . 00081
64
. 00360 . 00790 . 00588 . 00394 . 00388 . 00318 . 03260 . 00499 . 00364 . 00303 . 00240 . 00398 . 00486 . 00306 . 00532 .00811 . 00508 . 00429 .00369! .00452! .00458 . 00549
65
. 06577 . 06090 .05818 . 05133 . 05697 . 05536 .05463 .04086 . 04955 . 05242 .04231 .03867 . 05794 . 04952 . 05641 . 04970 . 04727 .04534 .05107 .06608 .03606 .06257
66
. 01037 . 00828 . 00868 . 00869 . 00933 . 00951 . 01057 .01357 .01619 .01545 ,01201 .00924 .01058 . 0092C . 01262 . 00815 . 00931 . 00794 .00934) .009381 .00994 .00907
67
. 00196 .00176 . 00206 . 00193 . 00294 . 00207 . 00230 . 00171 .00194 .00191 .00161! .00263 . 00234 .00173 .00681 . 00201 . 00267 .00176 .00263 .00343 .00117 .00187
68
.03113 . 03216 . 02988 . 02284 . 02522 . 02557 . 02327 . 02188 . 02368 . 02489 .02544! .01448 . 02621 . 02395 . 02656 . 02423 .01747 . 02423 .02588 .02636! .01975! .02679
69
. 07767 . 06764 . 07294 . 06532 .07826 .07321 . 08640 . 06084 .07683 .08308 .06162 .07711 . 10029 .06519 . 08330 . 09767 . 07750 . 08791 .07432 .08093! .05073! .09103
70
. 02464 . 02357 .02191 . 02034 .02238 .02184 . 02421 ! . 02098 .02186 .02062 .021 "7 j .01599 . 02529 .01692 .01910 . 01795 .01611 .01765 .01821 .02052! .01393 . 02066
. 02656 . 02734 . 02459 . 02262 .02534 .02403 .03024 .03392 . 02884 i .1)2605! .03179! .02382 . 03537 . 02463 . 02878 .0281f . 02703 . 03842 . 02654 .02419 .02050 . 02475
71
. 00547 . 00564 . 00576 . 00542 . 00538 . 00551 .00639! .005811 .00649 .00619 .00589 . 00720 . 0062C . 00701 . 00614 . 00604 . 00739 . 00779 .00629 .00476 .00309 . 00624
73
.03138 . 02809 . 03290 . 03085 .047021 .03315 .03676! .02733 . 03095 .03052 .02569 ,04213 . 03738 . 02757 .10905 .03209 .04276 . 02806 .04198 .05483 .01871 . 02983
74
. 00076 . 00047 . 00044 . 00635 . 00066 . 00053 .000431 .00030 . 00032 .00041 .00030 . 00019 . 00037 . 00042 . 00034 . 00037 . 00074 .00109 .0004l! .00111! .00141 . 00058
75
. 00561 . 00408 . 00428 . 00323 .00435 .004001 00408 .00325 . 00461 .00390 .00389 . 00277 . 00487 . 00329 . 00401 . 00346 . 00316 . 00294 . 00355 .00405 . 0022C . 00478
76
.00129 . 00123 . 00133 .00130 .00156 .00135 . 00156 . 00124 .00142 .00140 .00118 ,00178 .0015( .00147 . 00274 .00141 .00179 .00155 .00159 .00163 .00084 .00135
77
. 00251 . 00239 . 00230 . 00296 . 00241 . 00239 . 00241 .00212 . 00234 . 00233 .00219 .00190 . 00254 , 0022( . 00243 . 00228 .00244 .00235 .00233 .00278! .00224; .00254
. 00484 . 00464 . 00464 .00451! .00605 .00443 .0053? .00399 , 00459 .00472 .00430! .00506 , 00562 . 00583 .00817 . 00541 .00677 .00708 .00636! .00674 .00378 .00467
78
79
. 00658 . 00658 . 00618 .004951 .00563! .00544 .00516! ,00456 .00512 .00533! .00510! .00345 . 00580 . 00502 . 00571 . 00524 . 00412 . 00513 .00543 .00589 .00405; .00592
80
. 03830 . 04071 . 04689 . 02956 .07506 .02413 .03829! ,03506 .04087 .02744! .03715 .03476 .03422 .04013! .03060 . 03247 .02718 .02711 .04918 .05999! .02500; .04107
81
.01815 . 01860 .01952 . 02020 .01864 .02034; .02480 .02004 .02415 .02366 .01 849 1 .03290 . 02341 .03048 .02166 .02217 .03171 .03042! .02395 .015491 .01385 .02093

82
.00193 . 00202 . 00212 . 00210 . 00238 .00216 .00253 .00204 .00240 .00237! .00192! .00276 . 00243 .00248 .00288 . 00209 . 00271 .00251 .00228 .00215; .00200; .00231
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
T. 2. 34166 2.25744 2.23623 2.26691 2.33490 2.21629 2. 36096 2. 05793 2. 20984 2. 21091 2. 02666 1 . 888212.44407 2.09271 2.35483 2.12093 2.20467 2. 04888 2. 26956 2. 65126^. 14830|2. 33727

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Table 3.—Requirements (Direct and Indirect) Per Dollar of Delivery to Final Demand, 1958—-Continued

(Producers' prices)

to

controlling

p

«3
C3
CP
"p

bfi
O

"o
G
C3

I
"o3

0 03

.a
st

ft 03

CO

O

bfl

g

i

'S03

t-i
|

-a03

"ft

1

1
03

P
_O

O be
'£> P

8
1
1
§

1

64

65

"o3

be

a
1

03
^

£*

>

03

1

ja

JH

03

of
be
a"

t>

0

"o

11

^
'03S
PH

3

66

67

0. 00710 0. 00421 0.00180
. 01249 . 00542 . 00255
. 00406 .00052 . 00026
. 00085 . 00038 .00016
. 00373 . 00079 . 00024
. 00066
. 00077
. 00307
. 00049
. 00013

1

a

£3

3
s
p§

«
p

CO

03
03

p

15
S

g
03
ft

1
">
1

CO
03
*3
03

£

s

PH

68

69

70

71

0. 00631
. 00608
. 00043
. 00055
.00029

0. 00300
. 00644
.00049
. 00038
. 00077

0. 00746
. 00843
. 00053
. 00213
. 00036

0. 00617
. 00883
. 00040
. 00051
. 00023

. 00045
, 00105
. 00401
. 00044
. 00020

. 00095
. 04382
. 08542
.00123
. 00032

. 00039
. 00201
. 00888
. 00061
. 00027

. 00027
. 00168
. 00617
. 00045
. 00023

w

CO

03

'>

03

E

o3

C3

•g

1
f

03

"303

g

1
TH
&

0

03

•8

1
PQ

1pi

73

74

•g
(-1

S?

8

!
,2
so
a
0

"3

1

a
3
<a

11
11
"S £J>

03

li
S

T!
ft
03

ernment en

a

6

1
">

developme

03

>
E-I
«8

3
ft

nsurance

p

us manufac

-12

o
be
'oS
03
'O

S

1

*Sb

«8

1a

.0

1

a

CS

1
be

-3
o

1

a

sg

s
03

6

.a

"ft

1
03
C3

PR

1
02

O

pq

0

78

79

80

81

82

03

11
P
-5
q

^

62

63

0. 00770
. 00936
. 00084
. 00065
00406

0. 00430
. 00497
. 00090
. 00040
. 00199

. 00905
. 00375
. 00674
. 00128
. 00077

. 00558
. 00514
. 00914
. 00245
. 00298

. 00807
.00458
. 00966
. 00142
. 00163

. 00089
. 00289
. 03097
. 00104
. 00040

72

75

0. 02311 0. 00605
. 03207 . 00907
. 00057 . 00074
. 00180 . 00058
. 00058 .00072

0. 00624
. 01052
. 00091
. 00063
. 00063

0. 00550
. 00555
. 00079
.00043
.00469

0. 00409
. 00533
. 00046
. 00048
. 00255

. 00110
. 00241
. 01280
. 00095
. 00084

. 00085
. 00406
. 00790
. 00071
. 00062

. 00747
. 00434
. 00985
. 00134
. 00133

. 00190
. 00527
. 00878
.00146
. 00068

. 00068
.00136
. 00981
. 00151
. 00038

76

77

0. 00863 0. 00907 0. 04479
. 00689 . 00798 . 17990
. 00044 . 00056 . 00083
. 00121 ! . 00055 . 00768
. 00032 .00042 . 00101
. 00047
. 00120
.00428
. 00061
. 00021

. 00055
. 00176
. 00688
. 00073
. 00040

. 00055
. 01608
. 01465
. 00144
. 00086

0. 00254
. 00336
. 00111
.00039
.00116

0
0
0
0
0

. 00131
. 02476
.02215
. 00308
. 00063

0
0
0
0
0

0. 12847 0. 00751
.08389 . 00998
.00464 .00475
.00582 .00073
.00104 .00146
. 00099
.00287
. 01974
. 00121
. 00084

. 00230
.00650
.01104
. 00247
. 0025£

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
. 00911 . 00852 . 01355 . 05330 . 03579 . 02261 . 07729 . 02021 . 02147 .10376 .01512 . 01493 . 01334 . 02753 .04089! .04314 . 02366 .26104 0
. 03287 .01580
. 00131 . 00068
. 03369 . 00251 . 00060 . 00052 . 00043 . 00080 .00012 . 00029 . 00012 . 00017 . 00061 . 00043 .22839 . 00041 . 00012 1 . 00094 . 00026 . 00013 0
. 01924 .01018 . 01395 . 00879 . 00363 .01185 . 00606 . 01691 .01070 . 00725 . 01135 . 01262 . 01354 .00717 .01080 .02124 .08907 .00512 0
. 38271 . 01 fi--0
. 00090 . 00049 . 00072 . 00024 . 00019 . 00075 . 00022 . 00059 . 00057 . 00016 . 00051 . 00059 . 00065 . 00032 . 00064 . 00066 . 00038 . 00021 0
. 02691 .000 -'3
. 01834 . 00419 . 03754 .00236 .00119 00319 00102 . 00206 . 00255 . 00153 . 03219 . 00373 . 00610 . 00798 .002831 .00405 . 00224 .00141 0
.00815 . 012LC
. 00471 . 00192 .01219 .00186 . 00080 . 00225 . 00058 . 00108 . 00196 . 00064 . 00534 .00241 . 00374 . 00740 ,00170 . 00212 . 00130 .00117 0
.00250 . 00553
.00443 .00165 . 00298 . 00048 . 00014 . 00034 . 00026 . 00096 . 00031 . 00071 . 01056 . 00071 .00232 . 00098 . 00032 . 00248 . 00035 . 00070 0
. 00344 .oom
.00119 . 00075 . 00231 . 00092 . 00074 . 00241 . 00025 . 00087 . 00194 . 00041 . 01247 .00173 . 00164 . 00443 .001721 .00211 . 00143 . 00033 0
, 00323
. 00638 . 00726 . 03495 . 00424 . 00232 . 00313 . 00458 . 00410 .00301 .00515 . 00524 . 00810 . 00632 , 00388 . 00334 . 00390 .00402] .01098 0
. 00564 . 047K-1
. 00072 . 00036 . 00089 . 00072 . 00006 . 00013 .00015 .00117 . 00014 . 00028 . 00032 . 00026 .00073 .00035 . 00014 . 00018 .00116 .00020 0
.00152 . 000f>l»
.00155 . 00029 . 00067 . 00017 . 00038 . 00069 . 00008 .000231 .00007 .00012 . 00128 .00017 .00288 . 00024 . 00007 . 00012 .00009 .00011 0
. 00047 .OOOPI
.00413| .00015 .00112 . 00016 . 00007 . 00008 . 00012 . 00021 .00007 .00016 . 00045 .00021 .00103 . 00018 .00010 .00015 . 00008 . 00033 0
. 00019 . 00051;
. 02287 j . 05785 . 06459 . 00818 . 00786 . 01740 . 00724 . 01665 . 02063 . 00587 . 02730 . 07370 .01746 .01194 .01090 .01757 . 02080 . 01059 0
. 01968 . 46752
.01336 .01242 . 04653 . 00193 . 00095 . 00344 . 00127 . 00564 .00288 . 00134 . 00629 .00589 . 00745 . 00458 . 00239 . 00392 . 00479 . 00187 0
.00978 . 02523
. 01375 . 02335 . 02263 . 01324 . 02328 . 02779 . 01076 . 02259 . 04366 .01146 . 01627 . 28207 . 01566 . 01645 . 02475 . 03215 . 02586 . 01571 0
.01817 .68912
. 01956 . 08933 . 04398 . 00995 . 00325 . 00480 . 00864 . 00661 . 00530 . 00887 . 02366 . 01495 . 03812 .01714 .00537 .01093 . 01754 .01780 0
. 01930 . 05573*
.01143 . 00740 . 04009 . 00363 . 00127 .00224 .00194 .00195 . 00196 . 00209 . 00764 . 00373 .01154J .01164 ,00223 . 00272 .00246 . 00386 0
. 00512 .01590
. 00396 . 00249 . 00578 . 00130 . 00047 . 00086 . 00079 . 00216 . 00144 . 00116 . 01732 .00253 . 00969 .00284 . 00105 . 02897 .00129 .00165 0
.01043 . 00376I
. 00229 . 00153 . 00946 . 00466 . 00203 . 00148 . 00440 . 00163 . 00137 . 00583 . 00162 . 00134 . 00285 . 01068 . 00249 .00262 . 00194 .01412 0
.00311 .00298
. 01045 .01480 .01550 . 05659 . 00458 . 00591 . 02440 .01311 . 00978 . 01341 . 02019 .01210 . 01585 . 01223 . 00590 . 00948 . 02393 .02215 0
. 03477 .01771 i
.01990 . 01280 . 04409 . 01180 . 00200 . 00319 . 00338 . 00502 . 00473 . 00286 .01131 . 00766 . 02437 . 04644 .00313 . 00574 . 00616 .00483 0
.01078 . 02407
. 00138 . 00035 . 00925 .00020 .000051 .00029 .00005 .00016 . 00009 . 00008 . 00050 .00023 . 00032 . 00022 . 00085 . 00014 .00015 . 00007 0
. 00130 .00153
. 00134 . 00073 . 00708 . 00012 . 00010 . 00075 . 00009 . 00037 . 00021 .00015 . 00100 . 00034 . 00039 .00023 .00278 . 00033 . 00035 . 00009 0
. 00457 .00134
. 00658 . 01295 . 00716 . 00145 . 00057 . 00085 . 00077 . 00193 .00054 . 00101 . 00252 .00095 .00548 . 01655 . 00074 | .00177 . 00162 . 00189 0
.00566 .00259
. 00960 . 02524 . 00729 . 00361 . 00186! . 00165 . 00571 . 00310 . 00148 . 00507 . 00747 . 00243 . 00970 .01084 . 00233 .00269 .00556 .01157 0
.00440 . 00579
. 06365 . 02322 . 05670 . 01200 . 00347 . 00413 .01187 . 00528 . 00309 . 00741 . 00966 . 00887 . 07359 .04140 . 00462 .00595 .00780 .01770 0
.01573 . 01926
. 08528 . 05141 . 07943 .00806 . 00644 .00417 . 00667 . 00330 .00226 . 00513 . 00943 . 00750 . 07245 . 01687 . 00430 . 00459 . 00407 .01167 0
. 00841 .01975
. 00357 . 00123 . 00162 . 00094 . 00026 . 00047 . 00062 . 00077 . 00048 . 00070 .00101 . 00065 . 00144 . 00103 . 00050 . 00131 .00266 .00113 0
. 00990 . 00130|
. 00360 . 00121 . 00227 . 00369 . 00205 . 00140 .00457 . 00236 . 00132 . 00591 . 00149 . 00127 . 00684 . 00263 . 00237 .00259 .00163 .01438 0
.00256 .001541
. 02715 . 00962 . 01807 . 00222 . 00084 . 00136 . 00146 . 00147 . 00061 . 00101 . 00297 . 00219 . 02454 . 00960 . 00094J . 00219 . 00156 . 00202 0
. 00377 . OOSlOi
. 02716 . 01567 . 02511 . 00507 . 00158 . 00191 . 01320 . 00281 . 00150 . 00204 . 00679 . 00395 . 02465 . 02732 .00178 .00248 . 00414 .00923 0
. 00630 . 01578
. 00189 . 00105 . 00092 . 00362 . 00023 . 00046 . 00074 . 00066 . 00049 . 00045 . 00054 . 00551 . 01344 . 00165 .00047 .00045 . 00106 .00055 0
. 00184 . 00071
. 00108 . 00066 . 00096 . 00041 . 00019 . 00046 . 00034 . 00070 . 00048 . 00063 . 00044 . 00636 . 00360 . 00077 .00048' .00039 . 00188 .00033 0
. 00117 . 00060
. 00190 . 00123 . 00099 . 00073 . 00021 . 00026 . 00240 . 00066 . 00028 . 00060 . 00047 . 00147 . 00278 . 00099 . 00030! . 00036 . 00102 . 00182 0
.00064 . 00088
. 00037 . 00026 . 00027 . 00063 . 00006 . 00007 . 00033 . 00023 . 00007 . 00021 . 00012 . 00014 . 00124 .00027 .00008 . 00010 . 00026 . 00039 0
.00035 . 00026^
. 01913 . 00715 . 00387 . 00191 .00041] .00062 . 00121 . 00080 . 00043 . 00107 . 00126 . 00213 . 03876 . 00516 . 00047 . 00080 . 00098 . 00112 0
. 00175 . 00224
. 00331 . 00298 . 00207 . 00039 . 00020 . 00032 . 00038 . 00065 . 00036 . 00047 . 00090 . 00157 . 00301 . 00088 . 00030 . 00048 . 00049 . 00051 0
.00066 .00456
. 01044 . 00182 . 00304 . 00184 . 00033 . 00043 . 00155 .00092 . 00039 . 00081 . 00101 . 00156 . 01296 . 00314 . 00042 .00062 . 00094 . 00139 0
. 00147 . 00184!
. 01381 . 00205 . 00411 . 00137 . 00024 . 00036 . 00049 . 00074 . 00030 . 00048 . 00078 . 00092 . 02836 . 01749 . 00029! . 00053 . 00092 .00082 0
. 00118 . 00141
. 01626 . 00263 . 00414 . 00083 . 00060 . 00151 .00119 . 00196 . 00168 . 00089 . 00140 . 02310 . 00485 .00118 . 00149 . 00137 . 00091 . 00074 0
.00123 . 0074-"
. 00266 . 00055 . 00086 . 00043 . 00020 . 00037 . 00034 . 00078 . 00035 . 00062 . 00423 . 00409 . 00512 . 00074 . 00039 . 00039 .00029 . 00072 0
.00110 . 00051
. 04479 .01718 . 00895 . 00280 . 00095 . 00129 . 00215 .00110 . 00060 . 00128 .00367! .00240 . 05311 . 00389 . 00089 .00147 .00113 . 00254 0
. 00267 . 00330
. 00178 . 00044 . 00265 . 00045 . 00024 . 00035 .00045 . 00060 . 00029 . 00074 .010711 .00063 . 03047 . 00050 . 00041 . 00052 . 00029 . 00122 0
.00569 .00073
. 00680 . 00561 . 00471 . 00128 . 00064 . 00076 . 00112 . 00069 . 00038 . 00108 . 00169 . 00082 .02211 . 00698 . 00059 . 00073 . 00073 . 00252 0
. 00135 . 00193«
. 01716 . 00631 . 00392 . 00148 . 01388 . 02571 . 00073 . 00144| . 00076 . 00068 . 00254 . 00301 . 09994 . 00207 . 00070 . 00155 . 00070 . 00083 0
. 00736 . 001 78
. 03815 . 00284 . 00380 . 00153 . 00341 . 00527 . 00050 . 00077 . 00044 . 00065 . 02212 . 00205 . 05364 . 00138 . 00045 . 00115 . 00055 . 00050 0
. 00521 . 001 5n
. 00272 . 00460 . 00125 . 00332 . 00069 . 00028 . 00045 . 00100 . 00041 . 00038 . 00093 . 00084 . 00907 . 01974 . 00026 . 00088 . 00134 . 00074 0
. 00187 . 00067
. 02679 . 00321 . 00516 . 01097 . 00086 . 00113 . 00255 . 00599 . 00182 . 00185 .00371 .00336 . 06184 . 21001 . 00094 . 00200 . 00848 .00542 0
.00678 . 00279
. 03089 . 00233 . 00222 . 00697 . 00044 . 00080 . 00051 . 00134 . 00045 . 00060 . 00086 . 00138 . 42059 . 00120 . 00038 . 00153 . 00171 . 00052 0
. 00363 . 00235
. 00292 . 00140 . 00325 . 01061 . 00075 . 00046 . 00088 . 00057 . 00095 . 00048 . 00140 . 00149 . 00377 . 00223 . 00068 . 00138 . 00231 .00075 0
. 00485 . 00133
1. 07526 . 01616 . 00248 . 00150 .00031! .00053 . 00043 . 00088 . 00037 . 00055 . 00758 . 00082 . 03949 . 00397 . 00044 . 01307 . 00055 .00076 0
. 00342 . 00128
. 00702 1. 05744 . 00089 . 00045 . 00042 . 00206 . 00038 . 00120 . 00090 . 00052 . 01016 . 01034 . 00883 . 00070 . 00686 . 00424 . 00058 . 00046 0
. 00405 . 01209
. 00901 . 00446 1. 06372 . 00314 .00246 .01235 . 00194 . 00330 . 00382 . 00167 . 02561 . 01581 . 00677 . 00266 . 02341 . 00401 . 00247 . 00299 0
. 01324 . 16360
. 04698 . 04399 . 05300 1. 08443 .01014J .02194 . 04450 . 02354 . 03105 . 01844 . 02974 j . 03596 . 04200 . 03508 . 02338 . 02586 . 21299 . 03607 0
. 45677 . 06036
.01017 . 00882 . 01144 . 01206 1. 01083 . 04538 . 00633 . 01473 . 02366 . 00684 . 01005 . 03628 .01017 . 01297 . 01154 . 01231 .00843 . 00875 0
.01066 . 015831
. 00214 . 00464 . 00276 . 00179 . 00144 1. 00654 . 00167 . 00385 . 00379 . 00217 . 00283 . 06568 . 00219 . 00271 . 00385 . 00262 . 00221 .00166 0
. 00271 . 00349
. 01878 . 01798 . 02199 . 01471 . 01005 . 01214 1. 22166 . 03017 . 01276 . 01035 . 03278 . 02248 . 02079 . 03613 . 01670 . 02821 . 03151 . 10274 0
. 02005 . 02468
. 08293 . 06733 . 09960 . 04982 . 01426 . 02972 . 03391 1. 03095 . 02618 . 03589 . 06655 . 04496 . 05959 . 11581 . 03207 . 03672 . 04749 . 04393 0
. 11656 .06711
. 01848 . 01802 . 02411 . 03571 . 01044 . 02537 . 01722 . 02864 1. 26505 . 04794 . 03104 . 02885 . 01833 . 04546 . 04578 . 02370 . 01733 . 02010 0
. 02997 . 02397
. 02865 . 03036 . 03571 . 04887 . 02243 . 07633 . 02657 . 06672 .11105 1. 03512 . 06522 . 06614 . 03164 . 06049 . 08067 . 08316 . 04291 . 02899 0
. 05019 . 04662
. 00771 . 00520 . 00649 . 00201 . 00143 . 00500 . 00190 . 00631 . 00416 . 00552 1. 03386 . 00969 . 00580 . 00313 . 00443 . 00951 . 00281 . 00337 0
. 14931 . 00665
. 03420 . 07430 . 04415 . 02845 . 02306 . 06139 . 02668 . 06140 . 06025 . 03096 . 04504 1.05236 . 03497 . 04327 . 06139 . 04173 . 03524 . 02647 0
. 04325 . 05578
. 00029 . 00161 . 00035 .00011 . 00004 . 00005 . 00007 . 00006 . 00005 . 00005 . 00015 . 00014 1. 00100 . 00026 . 00005 . 00185 . 00041 .00010 0
. 00017 . 00032
. 00321 . 00348 . 00511 . 02784 . 00250 . 00288 . 00401 . 01075 . 00608 .00363 . 01228 . 00786 . 00296 1.02013 .00188 . 00418 . 01603 . 00351 0
. 01670 .00481
. 00170 . 00202 . 00164 . 00195 . 00108 . 25691 . 00082 . 00311 . 00222 . 00294 . 00153 . 01935 .00315 . 00140 1.31149 . 00646 . 00133 . 00083 0
. 02525 . 00194
. 00231 . 00212 . 00235 . 00172 . 00125 . 00193 . 00159 . 00168 . 00731 . 00135 . 00191 . 00136 . 10427 . 00222 . 00204 1.01414 .00120 . 00084 0
. 00812 00233
. 00486 . 00651 . 00615 . 00448 . 00569 . 00423 . 02560 . 01396 . 01886 . 00685 . 00456 . 03250 . 00464 . 00543 . 00440 . 00402 1. 00489 . 00491 0
. 00508 . 00949
. 00435 . 00411 . 00518 . 02612 , 00219 . 00296 . 15520 .00885 . 00661 . 00902 . 00732 . 00488 . 00446 . 00927! . 00377 . 00555 .00950 1. 01440 0
. 01387 . 00594
. 04790 . 06327 . 08807 . 05350 . 00991 . 01244 . 01747 . 00862 . 01380 . 00682 . 01432 . 01888 . 02814 . 01872 . 03199 . 00928 . 06939 .01076 1.00000 . 07307 . 07106
. 03383 . 01842 . 02162 . 00881 . 00718 . 02787 . 00789 . 02062 . 02123 . 00436 . 01898 . 02188 . 02416 . 01188 . 02389 . 02430 .01415 . 00790 0
1. 01261 . 02624
. 00285 . 00231 . 00262 . 00242 . 00446 . 00274 . 00275 . 00353 . 00774 . 00138 .00290 . 01248 . 00247 . 00196 . 00286 . 00496 .00629 .00700 0
. 00234 1. 00388
2. 18095

1. 95657 2. 23826 1. 73137 1. 28488 1. 80380 1. 95828 1. 54113 1. 80905 1. 51995 1. 78833 2. 08284 3. 00884 2. 06642 1, 86923 1. 62471 2. 07984 1. 85452 1. 00000 3. 02038 3. 17407

http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Source: U.S.
Department
of Commerce, Office of Business Economics.
Federal Reserve
Bank
of St. Louis

1
3
5
t>
7
K
9
if*
li
13
J4
15
In

. 001 .„

21
22
'23
>5
/7

9'}>

otj

3'!

3'
53
b1

3J
3'
?,"

3b
40
4
40
4;
•f^
41
"
*0

/)
*;
52

53
5.
fa.
f>h

60

6bt>
b
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77

78
79
80
81
82
T.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

30
Government Programs
(continued from p. 4)
and evaluation, due to the phaseout of
research and development on major
missile and aircraft programs. Lesser
reductions are scheduled for military
assistance and military construction,
and atomic energy outlays are expected
to be down slightly from the preceding
year.
Partially offsetting these declines are
estimates of larger expenditures for
operation and maintenance in the Defense Department and for military
personnel, primarily because of the
recently-approved increase in military
pay. Spending for space" research and
technology is expected to reach almost
$5 billion in fiscal 1965, up about $%
billion from fiscal 1964, but a smaller
increase than in recent years.
Nondefense purchases, although below the earlier forecast, are expected
to be well above the fiscal 1964 level.
This is due chiefly to the pay increase
for civilian employees and to higher
outlays for the public works acceleration program and construction projects
of the Corps of Engineers. The in-

crease is not as large as projected
because government agencies will absorb a greater portion of the costs of
the pay raise than assumed in the
January Budget. In addition, expenditures were lower than forecast in the
Office of Economic Opportunity (the
new agency established to administer
the war on poverty), the Department
of Commerce and the Department of
Labor.
Other expenditures rise

Although fiscal year 1965 purchases
of goods and services show almost no
change from the preceding year, other
Federal expenditures are slated to rise.
Transfer payments to individuals are
expected to rise more than $1 billion
from fiscal 1964 to fiscal 1965. The
rise, about the same as estimated in
January, is in line with the experience
of recent years and is due primarily to
increased OASI and Civil Service retirement payments and a rise in military
pensions.
Federal aid to State and local governments is up nearly $1% billion over
fiscal 1964 and is also substantially
higher than the earlier forecast. Increased outlays for public assistance

November 1964

grants, highway construction, and
grants under the newly enacted poverty
program account for the bulk of the
increase.
Net interest charges are projected
about $K billion higher than in the
past fiscal year and somewhat above
the January forecast. This is due
partly to the increase in the national
debt and partly to the higher average
interest rates that the Treasury must
pay in refunding operations.
The "subsidies less current surplus
of government enterprises" category is
slightly below fiscal 1964, but over $1
billion above the earlier estimate for
fiscal 1965. The current forecast for
agricultural price support and farm
subsidies is substantially above the
January estimate, mainly because
cotton legislation was enacted in a
form more costly than anticipated and
because the new law came too late in
the spring for many producers to participate in the cost-reducing features of
the program. In addition, expenditures in fiscal 1965 under the feed
grain program are expected to be
larger because of higher production and
lower utilization of feed grains.

NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT
Table 1.—Gross National Product in Current and Constant Dollars (1-3, 1-5)
1964

1963
1961

1962

1963

III

IV

I

II

1964

1963

III

1961

1962

1963

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates

III

IV

I

II

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates

Billions of current dollars

Billions of 1954 dollars

4.6

4.0

4.4

4.2

5.8

7.7

5.7

7.0

2.5

2.2

2.2

2.0

3.5

5.4

3.4

23.0

29 2
25.2

30.7
26. 3

31.0
26.8

32.6
26.9

34.5
26.8

33.7
27.9

35.7
28.7

25.8
23.3

27.5
25.3

29.1
26.8

29.4
27.4

30.9
27.4

32.7
27.3

31.9
28.5

108.0

116.3

122.6

122.8

124.8

125.2

129.6

129.5

84.3

89.8

92.1

92.3

92.4

91.6

94.3

57.4

62.9

64.7

64.4

64.9

64.3

67.1

65.5

44.8

49.4

49.7

49.6

48.9

47.8

49.8

519.6
351.8
55.6
160.9
135.3
70.4
38.6
20.9
17.7
29 2
2.5
2.4
.1
4.5
33.8
29.2
92.8
47.8

49.0
8.9
.6

53.6
10.2
.9

55.2
10.3
.8

55.5
9.5
.6

55.3
10.5
.9

54.0
11.5
1.2

57.0
11.0
.9

55.2
11 2
.9

50.6

53.5

57.9

58.4

59.9

60.9

62.5

64.1

39.4

40.3

42.4

42.7

43.4

43.8

44.5

45.0

115.8

116.7

118.5

118.7

119.3

119.8

120.5

121.0

518.7

556.2

583.9

587.2

599.0

608.8

618.6

628.4

447.9

476.4

492.6

494.8

502.0

508.0

337.3

356.8

375.0

377.4

381.3

390.0

396.1

404.6

303.8

318.5

330.6

332.4

334.4

43.7
155. 4
138.3

48.4
162.0
146.4

52.1
167.5
155.3

52.2
168.6
156. 6

53.6
168.9
158.8

55.9
172. 9
161.1

57.0
175.3
163.8

58.7
179.5
166.4

41.4
143.5
118.9

45.7
148.3
124.5

49.3
151.6
129.7

49.4
152.5
130.6

50.8
152.1
131.6

340.9
53.1
155.2
132.6

68.8

79.1
44.2

82.0

82.8

87.1

85.9

87.2

87.3

57.4

65.9

67.7

70.1

70.8

46.6

47.2

48.3

49.2

48.9

48.9

34.3

36.7

37.9

68.1
38.2

71.7

41.0

39.0

39.6

39.2

21.1
19.8

23.6
20.6

25.2
21.3

25.4
21.9

26.2
22.1

26.9
22.3

26.2
22.7

25.7
23.1

18.2
16.1

20.1
16.5

21.2
16.7

21.2
17.0

21.8
17.2

22.3
17.3

21.6
17.5

Producers' durable equipment

25.9

29.0

31.0

31.4

32.4

34.2

34.6

35.6

21.4

24.0

25.6

25.9

26.8

28.1

28.3

Change in business inventories

1.9

5.9

4.4

4.2

6.4

2.5

3.7

2.8

1.7

5.2

4.1

4.0

5.9

2.4

3.3

1.5
.3

5.3
.6

3.9
.5

3.7
.5

6.0
.4

2.2
.3

3.4
.3

2.7
.1

1.5
2

4.8
.4

3.6
.5

3.4
.6

5.5
.4

2.1
.3

3.0
.3

Gross national product

-_ __

Personal consumption expenditures
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Gross private domestic investment
New construction
Residential nonfarm
Other

Nonfarm
Farm _
Net exports of goods and services
Exports
Imports .
Government purchases of goods and services
Federal . _
National defense
Other.. .
Less: Government sales
State and local
Addendum:
Implicit price deflator for seasonally adjusted
ON P, 1954 = 100
.




_

III

513.5
345.0

54.0
157.4
133.7

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964

Table 2.—National Income by Type of Income (1-8, 1-9)

31

Table 3.—Personal Income and Its Use (II-2)

[Billions of dollars]

[Billions of dollars]
1964

1963

1961

1962

III

1963

IV

I

1963

II

III

1961

1962

1963

III

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
426.9 455.6 478.5 481.9 490.0 498.4

National income

Compensation of employees
302.2 323.1 340.3 342.7 347.7 352.5
Wages and salaries
278.8 297.1 312.1 314.3 318.8 323.2
227 0 241.6 252.9 255.0 257.6 260.8
Private
Military
10.2 10.8 10.9 10.7 11.7 11.7
Government civilian
41.6 44.7 48.3 48.7 49.6 50.7
Supplements to wages and salaries
23.4 25.9 28.2 28.4 28.8 29.4
Employer contributions for
social insurance
11.8 13.6 15.1 15.2 15.4 15.7
Other labor income
11.6 12.3 13.1 13.2 13.4 13.7
Employer contributions
to private pension and
9.2 9.7 10.4
welfare funds
2 4 26 27
Other
Proprietors' income

48.2

49.8

50.6

50.7

51.5

51.2
38.6

507.1

1

514.5

358.6
328.7
265.3
11.7
51.7

364.8
334.4
269.4
11.8
53.2

29.9

30.4

15.9
14.0

16.2
14.2

51.7
39.1

36.6

37.6

36 6

37 6

0
12.9

0
13.2

0
13.0

12.9

13.2

12.6

12.6

12.6

Rental income of persons

12.2

12.2

12.3

12.4

12.4

12.4

12.4

12.4

Corporate profits and inventory
valuation adjustment
Profits before tax
Profits tax liability _ __ _
Profits after tax
Dividends
Undistributed profits
Inventory valuation adjustment.

44.1
44.2
22.3
21. 9
15 2
6.7

48.4
48.2
23. 2
25.0
16.5
8.5
.3

50.8
51.3
24.6
26. 7
18.0
8.7
-.4

51.4 53.1
51.3 54.3
24.5 26.0
26.7 28.3
17.9 19.1
9.2
8.9
.2 -1.2

56.4
56.6
25.4
31.2
19.4
11.8

57.9
57.9
26.0
31.9
19.8
12.1
-.1

158.1
58. 0
26.0
32.0
20.0
12. 0
.I

Net interest

20.1

22.1

24.4

24.7

25.9

26.5

37.8

38.3

Personal income.
Wage and salary disbursements.
Commodity-producing industries
Manufacturing only
Distributive industries
Service industries _ .
Government

I

II

III

417.6 442.4 464.1 466.3 474.5 480.9

487.9

494.5

278.8 297.1 312.1 314.3 318.8 323.2

328.7

334.3

110.8 118.5 123.3 124.1 125.5 126.7
87.5 94.2 98.0 98.5 99.9 100.6
72.9 76.6 80.3 81.0 81.9 ,82.7
43.4 46.4 49.3 49.9 50.2 51.3
51.8 55.6 59.2 59.4 61.3 62.4

128.9
102. 4
84.1
52.4
63.4

130.8
103.8
85.7
52.9
64.9

Other labor income

11.6

12.3

13.1

13.2

13.4

13.7

14.0

14.2

Proprietors' income
Business and professional
Farm

48.2
35.3
12.9

49.8
36.6
13.2

50.6
37.6
13.0

50.7
37.8
12.9

51.5
38.3
13.2

51.2
38.6
12.6

51.7
39.1
12.6

52.1
39.6
12.6

12.2

12.2

12.3

12.4

12.4

12.4

12.4

12.4

15.2

16.5

18.0

17.9

19.1

19.4

19.8

20.0

Rental income of persons.. _
Dividends

39.6

35.3

IV

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates

52.1

35 3

Business and professionalIncome of unincorporated
enterprises
Inventory valuation adjustment
Farm

1964

__. ._.

_

_

Personal interest income

27.5

30.0

32.9

33.4

34.2

35.0

35.7

36.3

Transfer payments
Old-age and survivors insurance benefits
State unemployment insurance benefits
Veterans' benefitsOther

33.6

34.7

36.7

36.5

37.2

38.3

38.0

38.0

12.6

14.3

15.2

15.4

15.4

15.6

16.1

16.1

4.0
4.8
12.2

2.9
4.8
12.7

2.8
5.0
13.7

2.6
5.0
13.4

3.0
5.1
13.6

2.8
5.2
14.8

2.5
5.3
14.2

2.4
5.2
14.2

9.6

10.3

11.8

11.9

12.1

12.3

Less: Personal contributions for
social insurance

12.5

12.8

27.1

Less: Personal tax and nontax pay52.9 57.9 61.6 61.9 63.3 61.4
ments
Federal
45 1 49.1 51.9 52.2 53.4 51.2
State and local .
9.6
9.7
7.8
8.8
9.9 10.2
Equals: Disposable personal income- 364.7 384.6 402.5 404.4 411.2 419.5

'57.7
'47.3
10.5
' 430. 2

58.8
48.2
10.6
435.6

1. Third-quarter national income total and the corporate profits share are based on preliminary estimates and are subject to revision in next month's SURVEY.

Less: Personal consumption expenditures
337.3 356.8 375.0 377.4 381.3 390.0
Equals: Personal saving
27.3 27.8 27.5 27.0 29.9 29.5

396.1
'34.0

404.6
31.0

Addendum : Disposable personal income in constant (1954) dollars
328.2 343.4 354.9 356.3 360.7 366.7

' 374. 7 378.8

25.4

r

Revised

Table 4.—Gross National Product by Major Type of Product in Current and Constant Dollars (1-6, 1-7)
1963
1961

1962

1963

III

1964
IV

I

II

III

1961

1962

1963

_„ .

Goods output
Final sales
Inventory change
Durable goods output
Final sales
Inventory change.. . _ _ _ _ _ _
Nondurable goods output
Final sales
Inventory change.. _
Services

_ .

IV

I

II

III

Billions of 1954 dollars

Billions of current dollars

Final sales ._
Inventory change

III

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates

Gross national product

1964

1963

518.7

556.2

583.9

587.2

599.0

608. 8

618.6

628.4

447.9

476.4

492.6

494.8

502.0

508.0

513.5

519.6

516. 8
1.9

550.3
5.9

579.5
4.4

583.0
4.2

592. 6
6.4

606. 4
2. 5

614.9
3.7

625. 7
2.8

446.2
1.7

471.2
5.2

488.5
4.1

490.9
4.0

496.1
5.9

505.6
2.4

510.2
3.3

517.0
2.5

259.8
257. 9
1.9

279.5
273.6
5.9

290.2
285.8
4.4

289.8
285. 7
4.2

296.7
290.3
6.4

300. 7
298. 2
2.5

308.0
304.3
3.7

313. 3
310.5
2.8

233. 6
232.0
1.7

250.3
245.1
5.2

258.1
254.0
4.1

257. 8
253.8
4.0

263.2
257.3
5.9

266.2
263.8
2.4

271.8
268. 5
3.3

276.3
273.7
2.5

94.4
94.5
-.1

105. 3
102.3
3.0

110.4
108.2
2.2

108.1
106.6
1.5

113.4
110.4
3.0

114. 9
114.3
.7

121.4
119.0
2.5

122.0
120. 7
1.3

82.1
82.1
-.1

91.7
89.2
2.6

96.3
94.4
1.9

94.3
93.0
1.2

99.0
96.4
2.6

100.4
99.8
.6

105.4
103.3
2. 1

106.0
104.9
1.1

165.4
163. 4
2.0

174. 2
171.3
2.9

179. 8
177.6
2 2

181.8
179.1
2. 7

183.3
179.9
3.4

185. 7
183. 9
1.8

186.6
185.4
1.2

191.3
189.8
1.5

151.6
149.8
1.7

158.6
155. 9
2.6

161.8
159.6
2.3

163.6
160.8
2.7

164.2
160.9
3.3

165.8
164.0
1.8

166. 4
165.2
1.2

170. 3
168.8
1.5
188.9

200.8

214.7

228.4

231.2

234.5

239.6

241.7

246.0

165.4

174.8

181.4

183.5

184.2

186.8

186.7

Construction

58.1

62.0

65.2

66.2

67.8

68.6

68.9

69.2

48.9

51.3

53.0

53.5

54.6

55.0

55.0

54.4

Addendum: Auto product..

17.7

21.9

24.4

24.3 * 25.6

25.8

26.4

26.8

14.8

18.3

20.4

20.4

21.6

21.7

22.0

22.1




SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

32

Table 5.- •Relation of Gross National Product, National Income
and Personal Income (1-17, 1-18)
[Billions of dollars]

1962

1963

Table 7.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type
(II-6)
[Billions of dollars]

IV

III

i

11

!

1961

III

1962 1 1963
i

Seasonally adjusted at annual rate

518.7 556,2 583.9 587.2 599.0 608.8

Gross national product . . .

618.6

628.

53.1

53.

_ _ 474.1 507.5 533.1 536.0 547.3 556.3

565.5

574.

Less- Indirect business tax and nontax liability
49.0 52.8 55.9 56.1 57.3 57.9
2.4
2.4
2.5
2.4
2.4
2.4
Business transfer payments
-2.6 -1.8 -2.7 -3.5 -1.8 -1.6
Statistical discrepancy.. .

59.0
2.5
94

60.

48.7

44.5

Pius: Subsidies less current surplus
of government enterprises ...

1.6

1.6

50.8

1.0

51.2

.9

426.9 455.6 478.5 481.9

Equals: National income

Less: Corporate profits and inventory valuation adjustment. _ . 44.1
Contributions for socin.1 insnr-

51.7

.7

507.1

51.4

53.1

56.4

57.9

ance
'__ 21.4 i 23. 9 I 26. 9 I 27.1
Excess of wage accruals over j
disbursements
j 0 | 0 | 0 I 0

27.5

28.0

28.4

0

0

48.4

50.8

i 32.3 II 34.3 !| 34.0

Pius: Government transfer payments to persons..
31.3
Net interest paid by government
I 7. 4 !
15.2 i
Dividends.
Business transfer payments. - - 2.4 i

8.0 ! 8.6 i 8.7
16.5 | 18.0 | 17.9
2.4 i 2.4 ! 2.4

Nondurable goods, tot&i

i 58.
29. 0

!

396.1

4016

57.0

58.7

53,6

55.9

22.6

23. 2

24. 3 | 24, 1

25. 6

19.3

21.6

22.3

23.1

24.2

24.2

7.3

7.6 | 8.0

8.0

8. 2 1 8.5

8.8

8.8

155.4 162.0 167,5 168.6 168.9 172.9

175.3 ; 179.5

Food and beverages . .

81.3

84.6 | 87.1

87.3

87. 8

89. 7

90 6

92. S

Clothing and shoes. .

28.7

29.9

30.7

31.3

30.9

32.1

33.2 ,

33.'

Gasoline and oil

11.9

12.3 | 12.8

12.9

13. 0

13. 3

13. 5

U>. '

Other

33.6

35.2

37.1

37.3

37.8 i 38.0

an ?

138.3 146.4 155,3 156.6 158.8 1 161.1 ! 161*

!*». ,

Services, total

36.9

!

Housing .

44.2

46.5

48.9

49.2

49.8 ! 50. 5

34.7 | 35.9 | 35,5

Household operation _ „

20.4

21.6 i 22.7

22.9

23.0

8.8
19.1
2.4

Transportation

10. 7

11.3 ! 11.7

11.7

11.8 j 12.0 i i:

Other

63.0

67.0 | 72.0

72.7

74.1 i 75. 1

9.1 ! 9,3
19.4 j 19.8
2,5 i 2.5

|417.6 442.4 1464.1 1466.3 J474.5 480.9 j 487.9 ! 494.5
!
i
!
I
I

Equals: Personal income..

I

i

ii i in

52.2

Other.

1514.

i

iv | i

III

48.4 | 52.1
i
20.6 ! 22.7
|
1
20.2 j 21,4

17.1

_

Furniture and household equipment
.. ....

1.0

490.0 498.4

43.7

Automobiles and parts

i

337.3 356.8 375.0 377.4 381.3 390.0

Durable goods, total

allow-

52.5

Equals' Net national product

Goods and services total

1964

j
]
1

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates

i

i

Less: Capital consumption
ances

1963

j

1964

1963
1961

November 1964

bi

-

23.5 j 24. f

;

7*

Table 8.-—Foreign Transactions HI th** National

r -">

i See footnote table 2.

[Billion
T~

Table 6.—Government Receipts and Expenditures (III-3, 111-4)

1963

[Billions of dollars]

I 1961

1962

1963

III

! 1961 i 1962 ! 1963 i III
!

1964

1968
IV

'

!
II |

117.2 114.8 '112.3
113.6 114.2 117.2
98.3 106.4 113.6
'47. 3
45.1 49.1 51.9 52.2 53.4 51.2 ''47.3
24.4
20.9 21.8 23.0 23.0 24.4 23.9

j j ,114.0
48.2
i124.4
94 4

Federal Government expenditures.. 102.6 110,4 115. 2 114.9 116.6 117.2
Purchases of goods and services- _ 57.4 62.9 64.7 64.4 64.9 64.3

120.2
67. I

IA A
16.6
r>/ 7
24.7
'
119.2
65.5

15.6
23.0

15.7
23.2

15.9
23.5

27.4
25.8
1.6

28.3
26.7
1.6

29.9
28.3
1.6

29.6
28.0
1.6

30.3
28.6
1.7

31.1
29.5
1.5

30.7
29.1
1.6

30.8
29. 1
1. 7

Grants-in-aid to State and local
governments

7.2

8.0

9. 1

9.4

9.9

9.8

10.4

10.6

Net in terest paid

67

7.1

7. 7

7.8

7.9

8.3

8.4

8.4

Subsidies less current surplus of
government enterprises-

3.9

4.2

3.8

3.7

3.5

3.7

3.6

3.9

'-7.8

!-5.2
170.6

Transfer payments
To persons
Foreign (net""

-.7

.6 -2.4

59.5

64.4

64.9

66.7

67.8

69.2

Personal tax and nontax receipts. 7.8
Corporate profits tax accruals
1.3
Indirect business tax and nontax
accruals _
___ _
34.9
Contributions for social insurance
3.2
Federal grants-in-aid
7.2

8.8
1.4

9.6
1.5

9.7
1.5

9.9
1.6

10.2
1.6

10.5
1.6

1

37.8

40.2

40.4

41.3

42.1

42.6

43.4

3.5
8.0

3.9
9.1

3.9
9.4

4.0
9.9

4.1
9.8

4.2
10.4

4.3
10.6

State and local government expenditures.
54.4
Purchases of goods and ser vices _ _ 50.6
Transfer payments to persons... 5.4
Net interest paid
.8
Less: Current surplus of government enterprises
2.4

1

Revised.
See footnote table 2.




Payments to abroad
Imports of goods and services
Net transfer payments by government
Net foreign investment

j

III

27.6

29.2

30.7

31.0

32.6

34.5 j 33.7 I

35.7

27.6

29.2

30.7

31.0

32.6

34.5 | 33.7 I

35.7

27.6

29,2

30.7

31.0

32t.6

34.5 j 33.7 |

35,7

23.0

25.2

26.3

26.8

26.9

26.8 ! 27.9 |

28.7

1.6
3.0

1. 6
2.4

1.6
2.8

1.6
2.6

1.7
4.1

1.6 !
4.1 I

1.7
5.2

1.5 1
6. 2 j

Table 9.—Sources and Uses of. Gross Saving (V-2)
[Billions of dollars]
1963
1961

.1

78.5

Gross private saving

-4.1 -1.5

State and local government receipts. 54.5

r

i

1962

1963

III

196<i

IV

ii

I

in

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates

Surplus or deficit (— ) on income
and product account
-4.3

Surplus or deficit (— ) on income
product account _

Exports of goods and services

1
jj

16.4
24.2

15.1
15.
1
20.5

I

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates

15.9
23.9

14. 1
18.2

|
i

TT T

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Federal Government receipts
Personal tax and nontax receipts.
Corporate profits tax accurals
Indirect business tax and nontax
accruals
Contributions for social insurance-

IV

Personal saving. ....
27.3
Undistributed corporate profits. _ 6.7
Corporate inventory valuation
— 1
adjustment
Capital consumption allowances . 44.5
Excess of wage accruals over
0
disbursements

10.6
1.6

68.3
64.1
6.4
.9

57.3
53.5
5.6
.8

62.0
57.9
6.0
.8

62.4
58.4
6.0
.8

64.0
59.9
6.1
.8

65.3
60.9
6.3
.9

66.9
62.5
6.4
.9

2 6

2.8

2.8

2.8

2.8

2.9

3.0

2.1

2.4

2.4

2.7

2.4

2.3

12.3

Government surplus on income and
product transactions
-4.2
Federal
State and local

.

Gross investment
Gross private domestic investment
Net foreign investment . . .
Statistical discrepancy
r
1

Revised.
See footnote table 2.

85.3

86.7

87.2
27.0
8.9

89.6
29.9
9.2

93.7

r

99, 2 j

29.5
11.8

r

34. 0
12. 1

27.8
8.5

27.5
8.7

3
48.7

50.8

51.2

51. 7

-.2
52.5

53! 1

0

0

0

0

0

0

3.3

0

o -1.2

A

.9

1.7

-4.3 -4.1 -1.5
2.4
2.1
.1

-.7
2.4

-1.9

l

1

96, C
31. 0
12. 0

53.! 7
.I

.6 — 2 4 '-7.8
2. 3
2^4
2.7

-5.2
2. 3

71. 8

81.5

84.8

85.4

91.1

92.1

91.3

92.5

68.8
3.0

79.1
2.4

82.0
2.8

82.8
2.6

87,1
4,1

85.9
6.2

87.2 !
4. 1 |

87.3
5. 2

-2.6

-1.8

-2.7

-3.5

-1.8

-1.6

-2.4 h -1.4

Current

BUSINESS

STATISTICS

JL HE STATISTICS here update series published in the 1963 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS, biennial Statistical Supplement to the SURVEY
OF CURRENT BUSINESS. That volume (price $2.00) contains data by months, or quarters, for the years 1959 through 1962 (1951-62, for major
quarterlv series) and averages of monthly or quarterly data for all years back to 1939; it also provides a description of each series and references
to sources of earlier figures. Series added or significantly revised after the 1963 BUSINESS STATISTICS went to press are indicated by an asterisk
(*) and a dagger (f), respectively; certain revisions for 1962 issued too late for inclusion in the aforementioned volume appear in the monthly
SURVEY beginning with the August 1963 issue. Also, unless otherwise noted, revised monthly data (for periods not shown herein) corresponding
to revised monthly averages are available upon request.
Statistics originating in Government agencies are not copyrighted and may be reprinted freely.
through the courtesy of the compilers, and are subject to their copyrights.
1961 | 1962

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1963

1961

III

Annual total

Data from private sources are provided

1962

! IV

I

1964

1963

II

III

II

I

IV

| III

in

i ! ii

IV

Seasonally adjusted quarterly totals at annual rates

GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Quarterly Series
!

!

NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT
*\ it joinl income total t

-.

C mspf Ti-oho n f e n p l o \ e e

-

-

bl $

f t tal

rlr _

1

\\ H,^ 't 1 s d i r u s , t J t i i
i>n\ iti
.

1
4.26. 9 . 45f 1
1
i
3-o 1 '
! 302. 2
i

"*?£
2«7
10
41

uo
^<
f

< ft) ei mi v T t . i\ 'li in

^°
i

f<-

( pi U
1

Ot it

j

1

T

f

<(
d(

r

r i UK i < o pt <-on
1(
< p< F U pr > f i t "inc in nitoi \ \ a l u \ t i o n idi isi
i ( t to i
b i *
i n t PJ sfit w I" ofr re n

r

01 s >

t

Oh i IO U •>
i listriiutert profits
s

! f

f

r

r

sill ' i >

!

\
1

*

dl IS!

lf

t

, 1

{

f

> tOt t1

«, f < t

<»
f 'U

s o i li i n q < o d s , L ' , 1<1
< 'loMil'H'-vid s*' '*"
1 ' in' ilc i.ollc U a. it s i

- 'i'

i'}
«>

»
i

'!(

j H,

dl

, .i' MM r ti »
.« i
Y

S

""''

do
do.

-

'\, 'Jos.V',^' "
T

t{bifHfr t f

' j r o j ^ in * v r x u e « .
-

dn

_' * ^

\ r-] ( ? < l n ! io r fai i
.
r << j
f ui ibie e f j ' j ' f lie 1 f
! t-' ' has! s- 1 i \ e n t )ri" t . .
o'ifn J

' i i t M,
! \p n
> T n » ' ts

1

.<
°"
do

"

.

•< u'v ^ » i^ts f roo 3s end service' , t ^ t d 1
, « of i; < 1 * s Uovernrnent sal( /
_
N tior il defense 9
_ _
. d
ofd^ and locii. . _ - _ . .
By Ma or type of product T
Final sales, total
_.._..._
Goods, total
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
_
Services
.
__„
Construction
Inventory change, total
Durable goods
._
Nondurable goods..

.

481 9

4QO 0

498 4

507 1

r ",1 \ r

340 ?

304 7

310 ,

31' 0 '

32° 4

325 d

32 "

332. 7 i 338. 1

342 "

347 7

352 5

358 6

304 H

2
29h G
299 2
">
Ml 5
243 ^
1 ! 11. 0 '
10 7
»
44 1 | 45 0
4
o-, ^
2(1
i
4( o
40 "
!
3
3t t»
3t 7
7 !
i «>
1 0
2
1- .
1 „

301 0
_44 8
10 •)
4f 3
2t> 4
4q 3f fi
12 12 2

305
247
10
17
27
5!
37
IS
L

314 3

31S 8

323 2

32 S 7
20 3
11 ,

S3 4
J»>'< 4
li ^

29 4

n o

3 i •*

r, -

n.

51
3s *
1J (

5r>
f4 3
26 I •
2^ >
19 '
92
- J *.

5(> 6

57 <

31 2
19 4
11 v
2

31 9

!

291
230
11.
43
>,
') i
30
1
' 1

3 !| 31' i
. 25 ^
•
HI 2
4~ <•
4
2 9
I
•>
-«
3
I- ^
12 >

_5 r i (
11, -

J

"~ f
i, -

'{)

S,

11

4> '

42 S

S"
i*
L

49
30 ti
1 '
1 ..

"
3"
H
1'

4*1
o" 7
1 *
1' „

49
30 o
10 4
U 2

44 1

4b 4

4^

4 n

r j

i- ,.

4^ i

50 3

49 ^

5!

5. 4

4

4w
2

44
2*. \
22
1' i

49 r
24 h
24
1 ,

47 2 '
2
~ "

4~ l
-J J

4^ 1
2
/

49 4

4s o '
~> 4 ,

f)l i
2-4

H '

1 4

if

17.1

T- „

r 7

v ^

X o

5i
24
2 t
r
S

<J

2

'

2' c-

2f "

." 1

^7» N

77 ,

5S" _

i9 )

<nx,.

61S C

'28 4

r»o

377 4

3S1 3

39 ! (

396. 1

2
1

21
1 2
0

i

2v

'

j
^

,

^

hi '

]>•

W

|
k

V

f

rt

4

•*

1

i

6* :

14* 4
., o

2(
44 > ,
1

„

4

f

f

8 '
4( r
2

lo.
do
do.

4 t
27 <
.M <

2i 2

do
do
o
d

]( s 0
57 4
49 l

do_._~
do
do
do
do
do

516. 8
257 9
94! 5
163 4
200! 8
58. 1

40

' i f . :-

' 20 ^
'i 6
53 5

4

i

>
v

Ot

x

. |

1.9
-.1
2.0

4. 4
2. 2
2.2

^,.9

2^

1

M

3> 5

\JL

>

4

j

1

i

'

.»'•».

41
2
"»
, ~
,J '>
A

23 ' ,

5, 1 '
4° 6
50 9

r !J
"
i
'
i
'
550 3 ' 579 5
518.7 i
273 o
285 8
'^58 8 i
~95.' 4 j
102! 3
108! 2
171. 3
177, 6
163. 4 ^
21 4! 7
228.' 4
201.8
62 0
65 2
58 2 i

5. 9
3. 0
2.9 '

-

'45 „

ft ( i ! n
'
'

*1

M

4

J

[

-

i

1
' j
i

l "
«-,fj

'

4

9 "
1

><* •

Mi _ .

i•*
11 4

s4

'>

4)

i

4

t

'

^

(

4

4

<< !

1

.
i

J

f

,

"i r
2" -5
It

«

3' i i

H<

s~

2

T j
r '

U
4 •
i

*i
„* »
,

V(,

„

<„».
)

'

21 S
JO <
M 41 4

'jf

s,i 2 r»/
H' "

^ '
1

5
^; 4
2 s

51
*. (
2 '

iM r
^M ,

10 »
^ t

S( 4
2
1 ,

S t (J
*•

1

1 )0 '*

i• _

iy <

" "" '*

S 1 2

4- ,
4
>
" i
4 1

41 o
'M
j . r
-t
4 >•

4i
2t y
jf
'
3 i

i 4
2^ H
2r 1

x

34

43

44

39

24 *

2") ,'

15 3

2"> r

112 »

114 3
^ 1 4c
5°
52 8

m 1
« 3 t.
55 3r
52

11" 9
62 4
53 0
53. 5 i

HV1
ho
5.
54

554.0
273 9
10L4
172 6
216. 8
63 2

561.2
278 °
loi'l
174 1
220.0
63 0

538.7
547,3 !
'268 9 ! *?73 5
10(12
103! 5
168. 7
170 0
210.0 ! 212, 2 !
59 8 i 61 6

-1

4^ t
]

43

531.4
264 8
98!4
166. 5
206.8
59 7

tf

7
H
5
8

jv
2S 4

49 <
"*s S

17 s

3

i- 9

(

2 4
4S i
f

24 i

59 8
".0 9
52 8

2o

h

47
I1

it ^
I, ^

}

> *
h t

j Q

4s 1

*s i <

j- i '
<
,

2
s
>r

]

r < ,

j 1

••*
o

N

,4

44

f

^

' 1

2f '/

> ,1 ; i , i
. -! , ,

1 1*

|

53t u

k * i <
r
^ ',
i, -

>

'!> 4

?

'i' ' ""

4( ,'
,

41 r
2. d
29
« 9
5 I',

5( o

7

i! ,

i,
21
25 M
1 c*
1 >

'

*4

4^ 4
2M
21
JO ('
"

V X |

"* 1

,V^

>(. *

t. ^
x -\
t

l

>

—

K 2

-

t
( *
i ,
"

3.7 !
5.6
2.3 j
3.6
1.4 '
2.0
r
Revised. j> Preliminary. fRevised series. Estimates of national income and product
,^-iv* >/^iov/iio.i m^uint, iicivv, uccii icvi»cu UUUK LU iyoi (.see p. o u. 01 Liie JUiy lyoi O U K V ^ Y J ;
revisions prior to May 1963 for personal income appear on p. 15 of the July 1964 SURVEY.




474 f

48 o

do
d,
dc
d(

.do
do
do

1
2s 1 1
2>so S
2 N 9 ' 233 2

t

do

*.

' (' r O ' l ^ 1 '»' ' » f | l l i j )

467 9

44 "

r ,

d

t i] •> nd pi
i

d

pt OM t i r K r i d i t t

1

r

463,2

<

} ' -

( < > t i1

457 «

10 S

i

.

1
»

> »

0' t

454 S

1()

*

_ __ __
do
- . ..do

*

i) f H OH < p f o h"
>

i<

p l O ' H s f "> 1 lb i *\
T

IT

, IOT

44" . i

1 ) <*

'

j s n i f s s i n 1 profesMo i ilcf

)

ii

(01 H

442 4

8

>j

](

i

429 "

29" 1 ! 31. i
24^ (» 2'^ 9

k
(
2
(

'

478 b

Cj

5
""
t
(

l
24 ~

5_
22
21
1 ,s
i
-T
12
1 iO
'2)
49

2
0
t
o
3
S
f
°
2

V

2

"

53
M
22
^
3'1
S7
13
15*24
49

4" '
^~
3(1
fj (
.1

4

.

t-

tM

-»

3

4 „
30 "
20 3

4 .
31 1
70 S

5*
32 0
2h '4

120 (
64 3
55 „
50 7

122 8
64 4

124 S
04 9

58 4

59 9

568. 2
573. 7
280 9
286 5
105.6
111.0
175 8 S 175 5
224. 7
223. 5
62 7
63 7

583.0
285 7
106.6
179 1
231 ! 2
66 2

592.6
290 3
110.4
179 9
234! 5
67 8

4
1
N
3

6.9
6.1 i
5.1
5.4
3. 6
3. 6
4. 2
3.9 i
3. 1 (i
3. 1
1.8
1. 5
2. 7 I1
1. 5
2. 9 '
3. 0
2. 0 '
3.6
2. 7
2.0 '
.9
cf Includes inventory valuation adjustment. ©Includes
9 Government sales are not deducted.

1 » 4

12 l

1

5t 4

5" *

5 9
t
'
^4 «
,
2^ 1
}
17 l
32 '
9
89 "
S
'»
13 3
H j loi 1
< | 2'> R
^ ' 1l5M f

1! s

1?
05
54
56

3( (f
1'

r

11 "

'4 J
C 7

) ' i

_ 0

4r 2
4 '

04
f i'

6. 4
3. 0
3. 4

'34

f

3M 1

4
S

'

p rS 0
_( 0
j 3 ()

V

I Jf (1

!_ 1
- 1

r i M»
1

1(

r

4(4 r

5" 0
24 ^
24 2

rr

5s "
1 _

r

•>3 2
9(i 6

1" "
3'j S
r (j

\'-t "

Ib3
24
51
1.

>
0
1
>

It t

^ 4

34 ~
20 ^

33. "
27 '»

i

ns

T

4v
't
.^4 < »

22

V

1 .( r,

,,1 S
12 2

IV

<)

~

i"

s

" M

125
04
54
00

2
3
0
9

129 f

7

i )

2' 7
1 >S
i,"

^7 0
f j 5

606, 4
9qX o
H4.' 3
183 9
239! 6
68 6

614.9
304 3

2. 5

3.7
2.5
1.2

l! 8

7

n«!o

185. 4
241.7
68 9

025.
310
120.
189.
240,
69

7
5
7
8
0
2

2.8
1.3
1.5

data not shown separately.

S-l

3-2

SURVFY ^F v T E U F X T ^LSJYCSS

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
^nd descriptive notes are shown In the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS
1

196!

1962

*963

A 9fl

96?
|

Annual total

November 1964

IV

963
j

,

'

LI

HI

FV

- -.

j
'

H

'

1
1
III

IV

i
1

1964
i

i

II

i

|

III

IV

GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS— Quarterly Series— Continued
NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT—Con.
Quarterly Data Seasonally Adjusted at Annual Rates
GNP In constant (1954) dollars
tlross national product, totalt
._..bil. $._
Personal consumption expenditures, total ~ _ d o _ _ _ .
Durable goods
Nondurable good's
Services ,_
.

.

do
do_
do

Gross private domestic investment, total __do
New construction
Producers' durable equipment
Change in business inventories

__

do
do
do

|

1
|

i

i

i

\
j

i
I

i

447.9

476.4

492.6

462.5

469.1

475.1

478, 3

483.0

485.4

487.9

494.8

502,0

508.0

513. 5

303.8

318.5

330,6

310. 0 j

314.2

316.6 I

319.8

323. 6

327.0

328.6

332.4

334.4

340.9

345.0

351.8 |

41.4
143.5
118.9

45.7
148.3
124.5

49.3
151.6
129.7

43.7
145.6 j
120.8

44.8
146.6
122.7

44.9
147.8
123.8

45.6
149. 1 i
125.0

47.6 j
149. 5
126. 5

48.5
150. 7
127,8

48.6
151. 1
128. 9

49.4
152. 5
130.6

50.8
152,1
131.6

53.1
155.2
132.6

54.0
157.4
133.7

55. fi
160.9 j
135 3

57.4

65.9

67.7

62.7

64.8

65.8

66.3

66.5

64.7

66.2

68.1

71.7

70.1

70.8

70.4

34.3
21.4
1.7

36.7
24.0
5.2

37.9
25.6
4.1

35.2
22.7
4.8

35.5
23.2
6.1

36.6
23.8
5.4

37.5 j
24.4
4.4

37. 0
24.7
4.9

36.8 !
24.6
3.4

37.5 1
25.4
3.3

38.2
25.9
4.0

39.0
26.8
5.9

39.6
28.1
2.4

39.2
28.3
3.3

38. 6
29. 2
2 5

i

i

'519.6

do

2.5

2.2

2.2

2.1

1.3

2.8

2.8

2. 1

1.3

2.1

2.0

3.5

5.4

3.4

4.5

Govt. purchases of goods and services, total-do
Federal
do
State and local
_ _
_do

84.3
44.8
39.4

89.8
49.4
40.3

92.1
49.7
42.4

87.7
47.0
40.7

88.8
48.4
40.4

89.9
50.2
39.8

89.4
49.2 !
40.2 |

90.7
49.9
40.9

92.4
50.7
41.8

91.0
49.4
41.7

92.3
49,6
42.7

92.4
48.9
43.4

91.6
47.8
43.8

94.3
49.8
44.5

92.8
47.8
45.0

DISPOSITION OF PERSONAL INCOMEf
Quarterly Data Seasonally Adjusted at Annual Rates
Personal income total
bil $
Less: Personal tax and nontax payments
do
Equals* Disposable personal Income
do

417.6
52.9
364.7

442.4
57.9
384.6

464.1
61.6
402.5

428.6
54.4
374. 2

434.7
56.1
378.5

441.0
57.6
383.4

444.5
58.5
386.0

449.7
59.3
390.4

455.2
60.1
395.1

460. 2
61.1
399.1

466.3
61.9
404.4

474.5
63.3
411.2

480.9
61.4
419.5

27.3

27.8

27.5

29.1

28.0

29.4

27.5

26.4

25.9

27.1

27.0

29.9

Net exports of Broods and services

Personal saving §
_ _ .do .
NEW PLANT AND EQUIPMENT
EXPENDITURES
Unadjusted quarterly or annual totals:
All industries
_ _
bil. $
Manufacturing
Durable goods Industries
Nondurable goods industries
Mining
Railroads
Transportation, other than rail
Public utilities
..
Communications
Commercial and other

r

494. 5

487. 9
* 57. 7
430. 2

r

43'5! 6

29.5

r

34.0

'31.0

34.37

37.31

39.22

9.54

8.02

9.50

9.62

10.18

8.25

9.74

10.14

11.09

9.40

11.11

U1.28

212.43

do
do
do

13.68
6.27
7.40

14.68
7.03
7.65

15.69
7.85
7.84

3.88
1.79
2.09

3.14
1.44
1.69

3.69
1.77
1.92

3.72
1.79
1.93

4.13
2.03
2.10

3.27
1.62
1.65

3.92
1.96
1.95

3.95
1.96
1.99

4.56
2.31
2.25

3.79
1.93
1.87

4.53
2.30
2.23

4.64
2.31
2.33

5.30
2.66
2.64

do
. .do
do
.
do
do
do

.98
.67
1.85
5.52
3 22
8.46

1.08
.85
2.07
5.48
3.63
9.52

1.04
1.10
1.92
5.65
3.79
10.03

.26
.16
. 50
1.54
.88
2.32

.26
.16
.47
1.06
.88
2.06

.27
.26
.60
1.37
.93
2.37

.28
.24
.50
1.54
.87
2.48

.27
.20
.50
1.52
.95
2.60

.24
.21
.39
1.04
.85
2.26

.26
.28
.54
1.40
.95
2.41

.27
.29
.45
1.60
.93
2.64

.28
.33
.54
1.61
1.06
2.72

.26
.32
.51
1.18
.97
2.37

.29
.36
.63
1.58
1.10
2.61

.29
.34
.56
1.63

.28
.44
,61
1.69

33.81

34.11

.

Seas. adj. qtrly. totals at annual rates:
All industries

do

35.40

35.70

36.95

38.35

37.95

36.95

38.05

40.00

41.20

42.55

43.50

144.55

2 46. 15

Manufacturing
Durable goodsindustries
Nondurable goods industries

do
do
do

14.00
6.40
7.60

14.20
6.55
7.60

14.45
6.95
7.50

15.05
7.25
7.80

15.00
7.30
7.70

14.85
7.35
7.50

15.30
7.65
7.65

15.95
8.00
8.00

16. 45
8.30
8.15

17.40
8.85
8.55

17.80
9.00
8.80

18. 70
9.35
9.35

19. 05
9.50
9.55

1.00
. 60
1.95
5.55
3.35
9.00

1.15
.70
2.05
5.15
3.70
8.75

1.05
.95
2.25
5.40
3.65
9.25

1.10
1.00
2.00
5.75
3.60
9.85

1.00
.80
1.90
5.45
3.60
10.20

1.05
.90
1.70
5.20
3.55
9.65

1.00
1.00
2.05
5.45
3.65
9.65

1.05
1.20
1.85
5.90
3.85
10.20

1.05
1.35
2.10
5.80
4.05
10.45

1.15
1.40
2.30
5.95
4.05
10.25

1.15
1.25
2.25
6.30
4.30
10.45

1.15
1.40
2.25
6.00

1.10
1.90
2.45
6.00

315.10

3 15. 60

4,910

Mining
do
Railroads
do
Transportation other than rail
do
Public utilities'
do
Communications
do
Commercial and other
do
BUSINESS POPULATION
Firms In operation, end of quarter (seasonally adjusted)
thous

« 4, 713

<4,755 < 4, 797

4,770

4,780

4,790

4,800

4,815

4,825

4, 835

4,850

4,860

4,875

4,895

U.S. BALANCE OF INTERNATIONAL
P A Y M ENTScf J
Quarterly Data are Seasonally Adjusted
U S payments recorded
mil $

31, 791

33, 486

35, 990

8,616

8,447

8,151

8,312

8,576

8,724

9,713

8,482

9,071

9,219

9,742

Imports :
Merchandise
Military expenditures
Other services

do
do
do

14, 497
2,954
5,401

16, 134
3,044
5,843

16, 996
2,897
6,442

3,881
714
1,389

3,948
758
1,412

4,058
749
1,462

4,088
745
1,465

4,040
792
1,504

4,037
747
1,543

4,212
731
1,588

4,368
711
1,654

4,379
708
1,657

4,366
717
1,662

4,576
731
1,702

Remittances and pensions
Govt. grants and capital outflows

do
do

705
4,054

738
4,293

826
4,522

174
1,206

187
1,074

189
1,065

177
1,066

185
1,088

209
1,060

209
1,336

206
1,009

202
1,117

197
923

208
1,130

do
do
___do
do

4,180
1,599
1,025
1,556

3,434
1 654
1,227
553

4,307
1,888
1,685
734

1,252
377
445
430

1,068
260
390
418

628
446
303
-121

771
417
208
146

967
531
326
110

1,128
618
546

1,637
477
598
562

534
235
303
-4

1,008
558
238
212

1,354
517
227
610

1,395
513
261
621

do

30, 419

32, 394

33, 685

7,717

7,706

7,925

8,408

8, 355

7,780

8,429

8,596

8,880

9,326

9,040

do
do

19,913
8,525

20, 576
9,508

21,989
10,031

5,121
2,187

5,032
2,198

5, 237
2,397

5,288
2,339

5,019
2, 574

4,990
2,545

5,472
2,505

5,610
2,427

5,917
2,554

6,112
2,885

6,042
2, 756

1,274
707

1,280
1,030

969
696

196
213

150
326

237
54

606
175

287
475

166
79

190
262

424
135

189
220

216
113

188
54

741
7

-226
-214

96
-430

221
-460

-944
-118

-1,284
-11

114
-267

-191
57

107
-192

-702
-31

-440

-334

-681

1 062 -1,295

-153

-134

-85

-733

U.S. private capital (net)
Direct investments
Long-term portfolio
Short-term

„

U S receipts recorded
Exports:
Merchandise
Services and military sales

Repayments on U.S. Govt. loans
_ _ _ _ _ do
Foreign capital other than liquid funds (net). do
Excess of recorded receipts or payments ( — )
Unrecorded transactions (net)

do
do

-1,372 -1,092 -2,305
-339
-998 -1,111

-899
-332

Total, net receipts or payments (— )
do
-2,370 -2,203 -2, 644 — 1 231 -748
Net receipts or payments (— ), incl. transactions in
nonmarke table, medium-term convertible Govt.
securities
_
mil $
-1,942
r
Revised.
» Preliminary.
1
Estimates for July-Sept. 1964 based on anticipated capital expenditures of business.
2
Estimates for Oct.-Dec. 1964 based on anticipated capital expenditures of business.
Anticipated expenditures for the year 1964 are as follows (in bil. $): All industries, 44.21;
manufacturing, total, 18.27; durable goods industries, 9.19; nondurable goods industries,
9.08; mining, 1.12; railroads, 1.46; transportation,
2.31; public utilities, 6.07; commercial and
3
other (incl. communications), 14.98.
Includes communications.




v 4, 740

i

p 6, 390
i
I
|

p-565

-85 i -611 p — 362
22
—712 -1.143
-109
< Unadjusted. Data represent firms in operation as of Jan. 1; estimate for Jar . 1, 1963
•r,
Q 1 (
is based on incomplete data. tSee corresponding note on p. S-l (revisions for earlier qtrs. of
1901 appear on p. 8 IT. of the July 1964 SURVEY). "
§Personal saving is excess of disposable income over personal consumption expenditures
shown as a component of gross national product on p. S-l.
cf More complete details are given in the quarterly reviews in the Mar., June, Sept.
and Dec. issues of the SURVET.
tRevisions for 1960-2d qtr. 1961 apoear on p. 10 of the June 1964 SURVEY.

s-s

SUIT TV OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 196-1
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

I9f;

196?

Monthly
average

Sep*

Oci

196^
Nor

Jan

Dec.

Feb.

Mar.

| Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.;-

GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATOR S- -Monthly Series
i
PERSONAL INCOME, BY SOURCEf
_bil, $„_ *442.4

' 464. 1

468.9

472.7

473.8

477 1

2 477, 5
479. 4

480.5

482.9

486.6

487.8

489.3

491.4

494.9

- 497. 9

498. 6

do.-..

297.1

312. 1

316.0

318.2

318.3

320. 0

320. 8

323,6

325.1

327.7

328.7

330.1

331.8

334.6

r 337. 2

337. 3

Comrnodity-produclng industries, total-do....
Manufacturing only
do _ _
Distributive industries
- _-..^__do____

118.5
94.2
76.6

123.3
98 0
80.3

125.0
99
81,6

125. 4
99.7
81.8

125. 1
99,7
81.8

126. 0
100. 2
82. 0

125. 6
100. G
82. 4

127.1
100.7
82.8

127.4
101.1
83.1

128.8
102. 3
83.7

128.7
102. 3
84.2

129.4
102.7
84.6

129.9
103.0
85.2

130.8
103.8
85.7

- 132. 1
- 105. 1
-86.3

131. 0
103.7
86.6

Service industries
— - __,»__do_
Government
--.-..._-do _ _ _
Other labor incomfc
_do_~
Proprietors' income:
Business and profession a! _ _ _ _ _
_____do
Farm
•
•
- _ - - do.

46.4
55.6
12,3

49.3
59.2
13.1

49.9

59 r

1G.3

50.0
81. 0
13.4

50. 1
61, 3
13.5

50. 5
61. 5
13 5 j

50 *
62. 1
13. 6

51.4
62.4
13,7

51.9
62.7
13.8

52.1
63.0
13.9

52.3
63.4
14.0

52.4
63.8
14.1

52.6
64.1
14.2

52.9
65.1
14.2

-53.4
65.4
14.3

53,7
66. 0
14.-.

36.6
13.2

37.6
13.0

37.9
12 P

38.2
13. 2

38. 2
13.2

38 4
13. 9

38 3
12 8

38.7
12.6

38.8
12.4

39.0
12.5

39.1
12.6

39.3
12,6

39.5
12,4

39.6
12.6

-39,7
12. 7

39, -

'Rental income of persons
do _
Dividends
-•
do
Persona^ interest income
_.____do_
Transfer payments ___-_,.-.._ do.,.. _ _
Less personal contributions for social insurance
bll. $.....

12,2
16.5
30.0
317

12.3
18 0
32. 79
36

12.4
18.0
3G *
3fc -i

12, 4
18.5
34.0
37, 1

12.4
18.8
34.2
37.2

12 4 '
20 1
34.4
37 2 ,

12 <t
19. 3
34.7
2
33 7

12.4
19.4
35.0
37.5

12.4
19.6
35.3
37.8

12.4
19.8
35.5
38.2

12.4
19.8
35.7
38.0

12.4
19,9
35.9
37.6

12.4
20.0
36.0
37,8

12.4
20.0
36.2
38.0

12.4
19.9
36.5
- 38, 0

30. ;•:

10.3

11. *

i! ^

12. I f

Seasonally adjusted, at annual rates:!
Total personal income
Wage and salary disbursements, total

Total nonagrlcultural income-

__.dom__-

12. -'•

19.;,
3;-; '.-

12, 1

11.9

11 2

12.3

12.4

12.5

12.5

12.6

12.7

12.8

12, 9

-3 ;

424,9

446.6

451 t

455, 1

456.1

459 5 1 2 462 1

463,5

466.1

469.7

470. 7

472. 1

474.4

477.8

- 480, 6

48 i.;:

3, 151

3,218

3,84d

5. 338

4,3 r 4

8,473

2, 511

2, 610

2, 533

2, 314

2, 512

2,726

3, 431

3 7t:

2, 683
1,121
i . 562
400
873
272

2,925
1,315
1,610
396
902
296

3.4S'

931.
256

2,294
723
1, 57J.
452
819
260

2, 495
970
1, 525
418
82 7
254
93
85
99

100
98
101

109
115
105

101
84

110
107
112

11 7
120
114

{•»«.
j
1L"

127.6

^ 132.9

- 136 7

FARM INCOME AND MARKETINGS!
Cash receipts from
farming, including Government
Pfiyment*' ( 48 States) total"
mil. $
Fir T Ti rnnrketines ana f V C loms tora __ <ls>___
^rop
- ~.-fl"
1 ivesrork and product «• total
...fit
"Onlrr product
- _
.. .
- oo__
PoultT <in(i eft'
.GO
Indexes- of * as., racelnts from marketings «n 1 CV
loan unM'i|uste^
AHri rorumKliiiC . ...
- 1957-.1)-*— JOG.
rnr»

fl >

n

T,i\ ^of^'' °n pro T id
- <1<
Indexes 01 volum» of ra*-m marketings, unadjusted i
A I < ^oTTi'nodi'ie*
I9o/~^9~10"
( t *P
do
.' i\pst«>cr i T T i p r o a u c l _
1 •> _

3, OOfi
1 334
1,66«
4H
97
261'

3,077
1, 4211,65"
4'
9,9
17 f

3, "1 „
1, SOo

11?
117
10S

Vr

12*
108

m

I'll?1

rv

II'"

llf

113

* >(V.

3^
1 ni s
'tQ^

lD>
1 *

»8
15,

_ 727
'\ 701
•', 026
403
1, 277
330

*,>r>>
2,4b u
%73"f
3«
1,0 'f
30°

176
236
132

21!

176
227
138

113
ifr

111

345i

3 425 \ 3 37C
1 88*. {, 1,692
1, *i3<7
l,6b,
409
417
Q
L'3r «
9 0
2« i
277

2, 354
870
1,484
398
809
241

2,414
773
1,641
432
899
262

12<W

88
76
96

90
68
107

107

85
68
102

115

89
70
103

90
56
115

91
52
120

88
48
117

L>*K
15 . [

iOr .
i:
Kr 5

Fj

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTIONS

id'1°.
i4&

2, 434
781
1,653

114:

1,71
1 , 7«v
1,0
bi 1

\

Federal Reserve Index of Quantity Output

118.3

121 3

128. T

129, 9

127.0

124,7 1 125.7

128.3

129.0

131.7

132.3

133.9

118,7
117. 9
119.8
105. 0
131.4

121 9
124 5
125. 3
107 Q
140. 0

12 *
I2f t.
1?1

m3

131.2
29. 3
133. 6
111.0

128.
128.
128,
108,

125.2 j 125.8
127.3 > 126.7
122,6
124.7
107. 0
107. 9

129. 1
129. 5
128.5
108. 3

130.0
131.3
128.4
107.6

133,0
134. 1
131, 7
109.8

133.7
134,8
132. 3
111. 7

135. 2
136. 4
133.6
112.6

127. 9
133.0 - 137. 6
128.8
129. 7
136. 9
' 126. 7 r 137. 2 - 138. 5
' 107. 0 ' 113. 0 - 114. 3

136,5
133.5
140, 2
114.1

do
do
do
do
do

119.7
119.7
125.9
117.8
119. 6

124 9
125 2
134,4
122. 3
124.2

1L9 0
13. 7
13r) 4
130.5
126. 2

131.8
134.1
1.48. 6
129.5
126.8

127. 6
128, 3
147. 7
122.2
126,1

125. 5
124. 0
141,7
118,3
128.8

126,7
126. 1
138.7
122. 1
128, 0

128. 5
128.9
144,4
124. 0
127.5

128.5
127.7
144 1
122. 5
130. 1

130.7
130.3
148.3
124.6
131.5

130.5
130. 0
145.9
124.9
131.8

133.3
133.2
149.6
127.9
133. 5

127 5 -131.3 - 136. 7
r
126. 3 r 131. 3 - 137, 7
<• 128. 6 r 117. 1 144.3
125. 6 r 135. 9 - 135. 6
130.1 -131.3 - 134, 4

134.8
134. Ss
135
135
134,8

do
do
do— ..

117.0
114. 1
120. 0

123.7
121 2
126.3

126. 8
124. 1
129. 5

128.2
125. 4
131. 2

126, 5
123. 3
129, 8

123.9
121.1
126.9

124.9
121,1
128.8

128. 1
125. 3
131,0

129. 6
127.4
131. S

132.6
131,2
134, 0

133. 9
133,9
133.9

134. 5
134.9
134.1

r 127

' 134. 2 - 136. 8
136.2
132,6
135. 9 - 137. 4

135.5
132

Seas, adj., total index (incl. utilities) c?_ ...... do— —
By industry groupings;
Manufacturing, total
do

118. 3

124.3

125. 7

126. 1

126.1

127.0

127.7

128.2

129, 0

130.5

131.3

131. 6

132.9

< 133. 8 - 134. 0

131. 7

118. 7

124.9

126.2

126. 8

126.9

127. 9

128. 5

129.1

129.9

131.4

132,2

132.4

133.9

117.9
104. 6
100.6
119.1
117. 1
113.2

124.5
113.3
109. 6
126.7
123.4
120. 2

125. 6
107.8
100.0
130, 3
125, 6
122. 5

126.0
108. 5
101.5
131. 2
126. 8
123,0

126. 4
109.7
103. 5
133. 1
126. 0
123. 1

127.3
110. 5
104. 9
134.7
126.. 8
122. 9

128.1
113.6
108, 3
132.2
128.2
124. 4

128.9
117.6
114. 5
139.9
129. 0
126.0

130.0
120.9
118. 1
142. 6
129. 3
127.8

131.6
123.8
123. 7
138. 5
129. 5
129.2

132.6
127. 1
127.8
135.0
130.3
128. 1

133,2
126. 1
125. 2
132.8
130.6
129.6

135. 0

123.5
119.7
128.5

129.2
126. 9
132,3

131.9
130.2
134.0

131.7
131. 3
132.2

132. 8
132.1
133,7

133,9
133.5
134.4

134.7
135. 2
134.0

133. 6
132.9
134. 5

135. 9
136. 7
134.9

137. 5
138.1
136.8

138. 5
139.6
137. 0

140, 1
141.9
137.7

141.9
143. 6
139.7

Transportation equipment.
do
Motor vehicles and parts
do
Aircraft and other equipment _ . _ _ _ _ d o

118.3
134. 1
103.9

127.0
146, 1
109. 5

129,4
149. 1
111.2

130.0
149. 8
111.8

129. 6
149. 8
111. 3

131.3
151,9
112.2

130.8
151.9
111.1

131.1
153.0
110.8

130.1
151.1
110.6

133. 0
156. 2
112.0

134.1
157.4
112.8

134.9
I 58. 3
113.4

134.3
158.6
111.7

Instruments and related products .....do
Clay, glass, and stone products
"do
Lumber and products
doFurniture and fixtures
""""do— "
Miscellaneous manufactures
.Illdo—

123.0
111. 1
106.1
126.7
122.2

130.2
117.5
108.9
133.1
125.0

132, 4
119,1
110.5
135. 3
126.8

132. 5
120,4
112.2
135. 3
126.2

131.9
120.3
111.8
136.4
127.1

132.7
120. 5
111.0
137.6
127.6

132.2
121. 2
112.2
137. 3
128.6

133. 6
124.1
117.3
138.1
129.7

134.2
125.3
116.1
139.0
130.4

134.7
125. 2
115.4
139.8
131.4

134. 6
124. 3
114.9
140.5
131.9

134.8
126,6
109.0
142, 8
133. 2

136.4 - 137. 4 !
126. 4 r 125. 6
116. 1 r' 114. 1
143.2
144.4
133.8 - 133. 4 !

119.8
115.3
118.9
102.3
119.7

125.3
116.9
125.6
99.8
125.1

127. 0
119.0
127.2
103,6
125. 9

127. 7
119.3
127.3
102. 9
127.0

127.6
120.5
128.5
100.0
127.3

128.7
119.4
129. 1
101.2
127. 6

128.9
118.8
129.4
97.8
128.7

129.4
119.8
131.7
99.3
129.1

129.8
118.9
131.8
96.3
130. 4

131.1
119.4
130.5
98.4
132.9

131.7
119.3
132.8
104,7
134. 3

131.5
119.2
133.8
97.3
130.1

Unadj., total index (incl. utilities) cf. . 1 957-59= 100 „
By industry grouping,';
Manufacturing total
do
Durable manufactures
do
Nondurable manufactures
do
Mining
do
Utilities
— _ _ . d o _ _ __
By market groupings:
Final products, totai____.
Consumer goods
Automotive and home goods
Apparel and staples _ _ „ _
Equipment, including defense
Materials
Durable goods materials
Nondurable materials

_

_
.

Durable manufactures 9 __.._... do
Primary metals
_..
do
Iron and steel--,, _
do
Nonferrous metals and products
do
Fabricated metal products
do
Structural metal p a r t s _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . _ d o
Machinery
,
Nonelectrical machinery
Electrical machinery..

do
do
........do—..

Nondurable manufactures.. __
do
Textile mill products..
.
do
Apparel products
do
Leather and products.. _ . . _ _ . . _ _ _ _ . .Ido.I"
Paper and products...
„
do

; Revised,
* Preliminary.
i The total and components are annual totals.
2 italicized total for Jan. 1964 excludes stepped-up rate of Government life insurance dividend
payments to veterans; total disbursements of $172 million multiplied by 12 (to put on annual
rate basis) amounted to $2.1 billion . Figures for transfer payments and total rionagricultural
income reflecting similar exclusion are as follows: Transfer payments—$37.6 billion; nonagricultural income—$460.1 billion.
fSee corresponding note on p. S-l.
{Revised series.
Dollar figures and indexes of cash receipts revised beginning 1961 (indexes shifted to 1957-59




2
4
0
1

-5

' 127.' 8

r 131.2
r 130. 4

135.9
M33.3
131.2

r

134.6
r
r

135. 8
132. 8
-132.2
- 133. 0
- 134. 8
- 131.0

- 134. 7

135, •_

im

132.1

- 135. 1
130. 4
- 132. 5
13;
- 129. 3
131
136. 4 ""132""
- 134. 6
-131.7
131

'• 142. 8
144.2
- 144. 1 - 145. 0
141. 1 - 143. 1

145
140
142

-r 135. 3 130. 9
160. 9 ! - 150. 1
- 111.5 ! - 112.7

107
96
115

r

- 138. 6
126.9
109.4
144. 1
132. 6

132.5 - 133. 1 - 134. 0
125. 3
M21.5 '• 123. 4
134. 6
' 134. 4
103. 1
r 103. 5
r 132. 8
133, 5 i
- 132. 8

139
127
146
135

134.2

base). Physical volume indexes revised beginning 1955 to reflect change to the 1957-59 reference base and incorporation of latest Census revisions. Data prior to May 1963 appear in.
the Dept. of Agriculture publication, Farm Income Situation, July 1964.
9 Includes data
for items not shown separately.
o* Industrial production indexes revised beginning Jan.
1961 (seas, adjusted data incorporate new seasonal factors); data prior to July 1963 will be.
shown later.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-4
1962

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1963

November 1964

1963

1964
!

Monthly
average

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

j Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar. | Apr. May

GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Continued
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION—Continued
Federal Reserve Index of Quantity Output—Con.
Seasonally adjusted indexes—Continued©
By industry groupings—Continued
Nondurable manufactures—Continued
Printing and publishing
1957-59 = 100.
Newspapers.
_do___
Chemicals and products
do...
Industrial chemicals
do...
Petroleum products
do...
Rubber and plastics products
Foods and beverages
Food manufactures.
Beverages
Tobacco products.
Coal...
Crude oil and natural gas
Crudeoll
Metal mining
Rtoneand earth minerals

do..
do-.
do.
do..
_.-do_.

do_.
do..
.
do.
___--do..
_do_
do.

-

Utilities
Electric
Gas

do.
do..
—do..

By market groupings: ©
Final products, total.—--.Consumer goods
—
Automotive and home goods

j
j

do
...do..
do_.

Auromotive products.
do.-., j
.vutos
do
i
A iito parts and allied products.__do
j
ornegoods9
Appliances, TV, and radios
^urniture and rugs

do.
<io.
do..

.oparei and staples
do.
•* j)parel,incl. knit goods and shoes_do_
Consumer staples
.
do_
;' roeessed foods
.
do.
Coverages and tobacco
do.
Prugs, soap, and toiletries
do.
Newspapers, magazines, books._.do..
Consumer fuel and lighting
do.
Equipment, including defense 9
..do... j 119.6
Business equipment
d o _ _ _ . ; 122.1
industrial equipment
do
i 117, 2
Commercial equipment
do
| 143.1
"Freight and passenger equipment..do
117, 2
Farm equipment..
....
d o _ _ _ - l()7. 7
Materials
..___
Durable goods materials 9
Consumer durable
...
Equipment
.
Construction
Nondurable materials9
Business supplies.
Containers
General business supplies

.

..do
do
do
do
do

j
I
!
j
j

117. o
IH. i
127! 5
118.9
no! 4 j

do
do
-do
do

j
i
j
|

120.0 i 126.3
116.5 ! 120! 3
117,1 j 120! 2
lie! 3 j 12U 4

Business fuel and power 9
do
j 111.7
Mineral fuels
do.... j 104! 9
Nonresldentlal utilities....
.do
j 129! 9
.BUSINESS SALES AND INVENTORIES § j
j
Mfg. and trade sales (seas, adj.), totalt t
mll.$ J i 65,078 h 68,002 | 68,029
Manufacturing, totalt
Durable goods industries
. ,'ondurable gooas industries

. _<io
__-!.io!!"
,io~ !.

letail trade, t o t a l { _ . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
„____
ri 0 __ _
* Durable goods stores
__,
____
!ao!! ~>
Nondurable goods stores. _ _ _ _
Jo " ,'
vlemmnt wholesalers, totalt cf-.___!!"!_!,lo
|
Durable goods establishments
.!!do"" \
Vondurable goodsestahJishmentscf
do~~_~_\

19,613
6 24.5
13 ,367
}/ 1,58
.?021
7,136

Mfg. and trade Inventories, book value, end of year i
or month (seas, adj.), totalt
mil $- - - , 100,-( >7l
Manufacturing, totalt
do
57753
Durable goods industries
II!:!!:."! Io~!!j 34,'326
Nondurable goods Industries..
ao
i 23 427
' " '

Retail trade, totalt.....
„
Durable goods stores
Nondurable goods stores
1
Merchant wholesalers,, totalt'rf
"-"!"!
________

ou , w-0

°4 I I Q

! " '

. u.,, ,,u
23 551
'

do....| 27,938 i 29,383"
do... 11 728 I 1 2 5 0 9
~~~do
' ~
'"*'
do
1 i, 580

Durable goods establishments!—
do
Nondurable goods establishments^"".'^"!"

I I lie term business" here mciudes only manufacturing and trade. Business inventories as shown on p. S-l cover data for all types of producers, both farm and nonfarm.
Unadjusted data for manufacturing are shown on p. S-5; those for retail trade on p S-ll
It-ee note marked "t" on p. S-4 of the Nov. 1963 SURVEY. [Revised series. For a
Digitized fordetailed
FRASER
description of the changes ailectirig these series and data for earlier periods see



O«M . 1961 ^T u v i \ m t p 28 of '
) a f f e c t m e t l t iet 111 niMii^on
otal m a n u f c ' c t u r i n g and trade '
sales and inventories have U t n < \p
salers of farm product ra\\ in tUrui!
merchant wliolesalers' sa'o < t i <i i n \ i n t f r i t s r t v 1
factors. Revisions for eariur period appe r 01 j

I
June i July

I

I
!
Aug. i Sept. j Oct.*

November 1964

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

Monthly
average

S-5
1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Feb.

Jan.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

Aug.

July

Sept.

Oct.

GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Continued
BUSINESS SALES AND INVENTORIES— Con.
Inventory-sales ratios:
Manufacturing and trade, totalt,
ratio
Manufacturing, total§
Durable goods industries
Purchased materials
Goods In process
Finished goods
Nondurable goods industries
Purchased materials
Goods in process
Finished goods

1.51

1.50

1 52

1 51

1 53

1 50

1 48

I

AS

1 50

1 48

1 47

1 48

1 45

1.46

1.47

do
do
do
do
do

1.70
1 96
62
80
54

1 69
1 94
59
80
55

1 70
1 98
61
81
56

1 68
1 91
59
79
54

1 71
1 95

1 67
1 95
59
80
56

1 64
1 88
57
77
54

1 Afi

1 67
1 91
57
79
54

1 63
1 87

1 63
1 90

1 64
1 92
57
80
55

1 59
1 84
55
77
52

1.63
1.92
.57
.81
.54

1.64
1 92

do
do
do
do

1 42
60
20
62

1 41
59
20
63

1 41
58

1 44

1 37
56
20
62

1 40
'56
20
64

1 36

1 34

54
19
63

53
19
62

1 35
53
19
62

1 32
51
19
62

1.33
.52
.19
.62

1.33

59
20
65

1- 37
55

63

1 43
59
20
63

1 38
1 82
1 18
1 19
1 60
90

1 39
1 79
1 20
1 18
1 58
90

1
1
1
1
1

41
82
21
18
57
91

1 40
1 75
1 22
1 20
1 58
92

1 42
1 839
12
1 21
1 59

1 40
1 83
1 19
1 20
1 58

1 41
1 85
1 20
1 19
1 58

1 40
1 86
1 17
1 19
1 52
95

1 40
1 86
1 18
1 20
1 55

1 37
1 80
1 16
1 17
1 49

94

1 37
1 83
1 16
1 16
1 50
91

••1 35
'1.74
1.15
1.16
' 1.49
.92

1.36
1.73
1.17
1.17
1. 52

95

1 39
1 87
1 16
3 18
1 52
93

682

756

689

778

781

804

799

681

Retail trade, totalt§
do
Durable goods stores
do
Nondurable goods stores
do
Merchant wholesalers, total §cf
do
Durable goods establishments
do
Nondurable goods establishments d?
do
MANUFACTURERS' SALES, INVENTORIES,
AND ORDERS
Manufacturers' export sales :*
Durable goods industries (unadj ) total mil $
Shipments (not seas adj ) totalf

"Machinery, except electrical
transportation equipment _ _
Hotor vehicles and pirts__
__
istruments and r riatpd nroducts
Nondurable goods industries, total $
'"cod and kindred product"
"'obacco products
__
Textile
.nill products..
_
<J
aper ind allied products

Bv industry group'
Durable goods industries, total 9
^tone, olav, and glass products
°r ima r y m e t a Is
*la<?t furnaces steel mills.
Fabricated metil products
Machinery, except electrical—
Electrical machinery .. ...
Transportation equipment
Instruments and related products

Q9

78Q

/soq

36 028

36 821

35 377

34 594

34 110

18, 071
947
2,944
1 586
1*877

18 278
1 042
2 788
1 421
1*986

19 180
1 089
2 928
1 484
2' 054

18 457

18 118
798
9 745

1 Q 9f)8

1 881

1 807

17 595
788
2 967
i ^.01
1 777

do

2,517
2 398
4^848
3,154
583
36,704
5 832
383
1,378
1,355
2 %8
1 451

2, 595
2 559
4' 553
2 791
625
17 750
6 241
'385
1 515
1 453
2 736
1 456
' 7QQ
34 67°

2,5449
2 52
5 268
3,544
610
17 641
6 184
383
1,501
1 427
2 AJ4
1*442
856
35 914

2, 470

2, 577

2,489

5 221
5 237
3 512
3 387
610
636
16 920 16 476
5 983
5 913
' 394
' 393
1 456
1 356
1 359
1 304

4 940
3 311
537
16 515
5 946
333
1 315
1 302

2,784
2, 523
5 306
3 455
599
17 610
6 171
339
1 457
1 398

l ' 521
784

1 499
767

1 498
836

17 937
'938
2,742
1,392
I 855
- — . _ _ _ 2,610
2, 370
4 897
3 155
577
16 735
5' 916
'377

18 590
986
2, 904
1, 469
1 943
2,615
2 385
5 158

_

do
__ do do
do
do
do
do
do
do

2,366
7 301
4,453
2, 806
557
16,124
5 577
377
1, 263
1,314
9 449
1 433
710

960

2 852
1 IAS

9 184.

1 424
763
qc r\f\ A

Ifi

842
3 158
1, 715
1 Q1 1
1,911

19 144
1 *018
3, 067
1 605
1 994
2.737
2 479
5' 117

19 097
999
3,034
1 649
2 on

589

594

591

606

593

16 6°4
5 870

1 A 7<:J9

3CO

6 193
403

57
79
54

2,674
2 463
5 075

6 247
' 365

6 049

' 3 S3

r

.57
80
.55
.52
19
.62

.92

'693

759

36,001

38, 825

37 069

38 091

37 465

38 622

34 774

19 471
873
3 223

9Q 942

' 987
3 370

19 781
l'oi7
3*318

20 542
1 070
3 333

1 843

1 81 ^

1 906

1 989

1 975

2 075

17 895 ' 17,707 19,734
1,055
984 ' 1,040
2, 983 '3, 111 3,321
1 810
1 745
1 668
2, 090
1,911 ' 2, 029

2,896

2, 957

2,939
2 440
5* 304
3 495
604
17 684
6 247
399
1 428
1 390

3,114
2 605
5 431
3 563
656
18 080
6 499
425
1 506
1 408
9 8^4
1* 540
910

5 619
5 285
3 748
3* 487
609
611
17 849
17 598
9
6 101
610
379
' 368
1 463
1 477
1 497
1 403
1 421
833

9 Q^*}

1 501
863

1 484
Q01
JU1

37

18 476
953
2, 981
1 570
1 910
2, 652
2 432
4 909

O

56
78
53

A"T7

18 272
977
2,892
1 512
1 913
2.582
2 369
4 966

Food and kindred products
do
5 961
Tobacco prod nets. .
do
384
'379
Textile mill products
do..
Paper and allied products
do..
Chemicals and allied products
do..
Petroleum and coal products
do_
Rubber and plastics products
do..
By market category:
Homo goods and apparel
do__
3, 296
3.313
7,002
Consumer staples._
„
._do__
7,258
Equipment and defense prod., excl. auto.do__
4,167 4,242
Automotive equipment
,___do__
3, 140 3,571
Construction materials and supplies
do__
2,770
2, 796
Other materials and supplies
do__
12, 932 13,594
Supplementary market categories:
Consumer durables
do__
1,336 1,380
Defense products
.
do__
2, 091
2, 096
Machinery and equipment
do..
3, 095
3, 215
Inventories, end of year or month:f
Book value (unadjusted), total
do_.. '357,419 359,738
Durable goods industries, total
do-_
33,891 35, 565
Nondurable goods industries, total
do-_
23,528 24,173
3
Book value (seasonally adjusted), total..___do-_
57,753 360,147
By Industry group:
Durable goods industries, total9
do~.
34,326 36, 028
Stone, clay, and glass products
do.1, 492
1,544
Primary metals
.
do. .
5,873
5, 918
Blast furnaces, steel mills.
_do._
3,528
3, 533
Fabricated metal products
do._
3,861
3,999
Machinery, except electrical..
do._
6,486
6, 763
6,910
Electricarmachinery
do._
4,900 5, 055
4,997
Transportat ion equipment
clo._
6,799
7,331
7, 378
Motor vehicles and parts
do._
2,413
2,610
2, 667
Instruments and related products.-do..
1,365
1,446
1,468
r
J
Revised.
i Advance estimate.
Based on data riot seasonally adjusted.
3 Total
and components are end-of-year data. J See note marked "f ' on p. S-4 of Nov. 1963 SURVEY.
§ See note marked "f" on p. S-4.
cf See corresponding note on p. S-4.
*New series. Represents estimated total value of durable goods products directly exported by durable goods manufacturers; data prior to Oct. 1962 are not available, f Revised
series. Effective with the Dec. 1963 SURVEY, data reflect the following major changes: Introduction of the Annual Survey of Manufactures as the new benchmark, revision of sample de-




Q4

1 37
-i 7c

34 774

do
do
-~

62

33 308

do
__.do
do
_ do
do
do
__ do
do

Petroleum and coal products
lubber und plastics products

94

90

do
17 184
do
961
do __. 2,835
do
1 592
do
1,859

do

Durable goods industries, total 9
Stone, clay, and glass products
Primary metals
^last furnaces steel mills
fabricated metal products

678

9Q

60
80
56

18 887
940
3,032
1615
1 967
2,696
2 505
5 018
3, 310

19 359

952

3,174
1 719
1 943
2,738
9 530
5 931

ADA

616

17, 335
6 131

9

387

1 8A

7Q1

19 138
929
3, 154
1 732
1 906
2, 782
2 530
5 056
3 9 "9

19 023
940
3,102
1 653
1 908
2, 838
2 470
5 036

611

619
1 7 '768
G' 279
397

1 o n/tc
9

6 35
389

6 20
'394

OR

o 971

2, 683
9 305
4 387
2, 762
590
16 879
6 104
' 403
1 298
1 332
o 507
1* 516
' 759
1 f)M
3

'2,610
r 9 452
' 3, 572
' 1, 961
'636
' 18,294
' 6, 422
'416
:
' 1, 523
'1,458
r 9 778
1 535
r
836
r 37 iQ8

2, 850
2 654
4, 783
3,048
653
19, 091
6, 770
412
1,618
1, 523
9 979

1,545
890
37 264

' 19.164 19, 258
961
'921
3, 291
'3,216
1,770
1, 785
' 1 914 1, 966
2,864
' 2, 780
' 2, 501 2,474
' c5 102 4 951
T i 4.n8
3 "0
A(53
r f)Al
' 609
'18 004 18 006
6 310 ' 6 478 6 401 '
':i89
' 395
403

19 861
932
3,447
1 961
9 040
2, 936
9 (592
5 008

__ _

1,469 ! 1,468 i 1.476
2 231 ! 2,181
2 095
3,428 i 3,344
3,409

60,094
35,875
24,219
59,991
35,955
1, 539
5, 908
3, 519
3, 971
6,926
5, 073
7,272
2, 614
1, 480

j
!
i
|

60,486
36,173
24,313
60,108

60, 661
36, 394
24, 267
60, 326

60,807
36,608
24,199
60,531

35, 945 36,079 36,277
1,535
1,536
1,551
5, 914
5,972
5,954
3,511
3,561 j 3,547
3, 965
3,978 ! 3,971
6,869 i 6,891
6, 955
5,088 ' 5,039
5, 094
7.359
7,425
7,446
2, 663
2,702
2,716
1,477
1, 503
1, 527

| 60,950
! 36,785
I 24,165
! 60,528
j
!
!
|
I

36,300
1,579
6,014
3,594
3,951
6,963
5,062
7,389
2,713
1,540

60,704 | 60,214 ' 60.45S
36,815 ! 30,451 r 36,6s I
23,889 I J3,7b3 I'23,774
60, 398
60,763

60,948

36, 958
1,571
6. 00 5
3. 6S5
4, 042
7, 270
5,149
7, 466
2, 708
1,557
sign, refinement of industry reporting, expansion of industry groups published, and revision of
seasonal factors. In addition, data by market groupings are presented for the first time. Data
for shipments and new orders not seasonally adjusted are adjusted for trading day variation.
Revisions back to 1947 and a detailed description of the current revision appear in'the Census
Bureau publication, "Manufacturers' Shipments, Inventories, and Orders; 1947-63 Revised."
9 Includes data for items not shown separately.

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and! descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

MANUFACTURERS'SALES INVENTORIES, I
AND ORDERS—Continued
j

November 1981

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-6
1962

End of

year

1964

1963

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Jan. 1 Feb. | Mar. | Apr. | May | June j July

Nov. i Dec.
!

| Aug. | Sept. j Oct.

GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Continued
1
|
!i
j

i!

i

Inventories, end of year or month—Continued!
|
•
Book value (seasonally adjusted)—Continued
|
By industry group—Continued
!
Durable goods industries—Continued
j
By stage of fabrication:
\
917 10,950
Materials and supplies 9
mil. $__ 10,571 10, 879 10,917 10, 878 10, 880 10, 879 10,821 10, 786 10,817 10, 830 10.828 1 10, 866 10,870 I'10,
2,217
2 227 i rr 2,219
2,232 2,251 2. 256 2, 259 2,233 2,232 2, 256 2,280 1 2,249 j 2,243
Primary metals
do.._. 2,333 2,259
3,096 !
3, 052 !r 3, 055
2,973 2,962 \1 2,989 3,028
2,954 2,992 3,009 2,989
3,001
2. 992
Machinery (elec. and nonelee.)___do____ 2,968 3,009
1,896 i
1,928
1,891
!
1,918
1,958
1,782 1,956
1,930
2,012
1,952
1,967
1,989
1,956
1,960
Transportation equipment..
do
1,911
14,129 14,857 14, 579 14, 639 14, 648 14. 857 14,828 14,875 15, 001 15,112 15,127 15, 211 15,325 I' 15, 442 |15.474 i
Work in process 9
do
2,005
j
1,994
!
'2,034
|
1,895
1,970
1,816
1,901 1,852 1,845
1,882 1,901
If926 1,902
1,898
1,969
Primary metals
do
5,348
5, 305
5,421 I'5, 493 I 5,555 I
5,034 5,249
5,172 5,288 5,260 5,249
5,253 5, 361
5, 385
Machinery (elec. and nonelec.)--.do
5,251
4,624
|
4,467
4,468 4,386 4,363 4,467 4,402 4,499 4,539 4,583 4,523
4,533 4,596 I ' 4,640 I
Transportation equipment...
do....; 4,142
9,593 10, 292 10, 040 10, 064 10. 176 10, 292 10,306 10, 284 10,261 10,335 10,345 10,415 10,402 |r 10, 431 '10.534 !
Finished goods 9
.
.do
1,795
1, 780
1,772
1,721 1,758 1,765 1,765 1,765
1,784
1,780 ' 1, 8031,843 i
Primary metals
„
do
1,758
1,790
1.807
3,381 3,707 3,587 3,601 3,653 3,707 3,705 3,714 3,704 3, 726 3,688 3,683 3, 666 3,699 3,768 I
Machinery (elec. and nonelec.)...do
946 j
-973
912
938
824
933
984
898
881
919
1,010
908
897
908
Transportation equipment_---_--dG
908
23,427 24,119 23, 551 23. 741 24,076 24,119 24. 036 24, 163 24,247 24, 254 24, 228 23. 906 23,891 I1"r23,973 23,990 |
Nondurable goods industries,total 9 do
6, 009
5, 910
5, 823 ,
6,137
6.028 6, 052 6, 136 6,195 6,165
6.080 6,028 5,979 6, 057 6.060
5, 991
Food and kindred products
do_
2,391 2,314 2,339 2,317 2,345 2.314 2.357 2,374 2, 344 2,363 2,353 2,322 2 297 r 2, 263 2, 241
Tobacco products
do_
2.789 2,768 2,754 2,763 '2,803 2.83!
Textile mill products....
do
| 2,608 2?886 2,668 2,800 2,895 2,886 2, 846
2,839 2, 821
1,792
1,812 j 1,836 r 1,859 I l,85i
1,800 1.792
1,789 j 1,801
1,797
Paper and allied products
____do
| 1,688 1,800 1,743 1,757 1,772
3,910 I 3.934 '3,936 3,953
Chemicals and allied products
do
3,600 3,818 3,722 3,734 3,769 3,818 3', 872 3, 894 3,902 3,926 3,935
1 , 775
1,786
1,732 ! l',708 ' 1,733 \ 1,715
1, 768
1, 767
1,801
Petroleum and coal products
do
I 1,809 1,736
1,830 1,788 1,795 1.736
1,125
1, 127
1,131 ! 1,133
1.129
1,155 1,159
1,167 1,157
1,127 ! 1'.137
M54 ! M6"
Rubber and plastics products
do
j 1,138 1,157
By stage of fabrication:
I
9,632 9,534 ! 9,528 9,432 | 9.293 i f 9, 351 j 9. 43c
9,660 9,844 9, 826 9, 769 i 9, 666 9,661
Materials and supplies
....do
9,770 9,769
3,347 3,344 3, 428 3,479 3,452 3, 403 3,446 3.459 | 3,452 3.422 ! 3 ; 40 6 | r' 3 , 426 I 3,4F
Work in process
do
3,304 3.479
Finished goods.. „_
.
do....| 10,246 10,87! 10, 544 10, 553 10,822 10, 871 1 10,918 11.099 11,169 11,261 i 11,248 11,052 11 192 | l l , 196 ! 11,09*
i
\
I
i
:
By market category:
6, 179 i fi 391 fi. 38Q 1 6. 242
*\ 955
6, 389
6, 149
Home goods and apparel
do
9,59"
9,502
9, 515
9.525 1 9,447
9,571 ! 9,525
Consumer staples
do
11.828 12, 363 12, 249 12, 189 12, 277 12.363 12.303
Equip, and defense prod., excl. auto
do
3. 241
3,001
3,245
Automotive equipment
do
3, 245
3,258
3. 268
3 200
5.290 i 5,311
5, 135
5, 042
5,290
Construction materials and supplies
do
5, 099
5,189
V>, 412 23, 335 22; 875 23, 059 23. 222 23. 335 23, 297
Other materials and supplies
do
Supplementary market categories:
2,938
2,722
2,865 1 2.923
2.923 ! 2.955
2, 955
Consumer durable"
do
5; 466
5, 490
5, 343
5. 583
5,502
5,583
5, 571
Defense products
do
8,
395
8,485
8.539
!
8,558
8,343
R
098
8,539
Machinery and equipment,
. do
s
'33,167 135,036 36,217 36, 601 35, 174 1 34, 045 35,010
New orders, net (not seas, adj.), totalf
do
17.085 18 300 18, 502 18, 883 18, 140 17,623 18, 558
Durable goods industries tota'i
do
16,082 16,, 736 17,715 17,718 17,034 16,422 16,452
Nondurable goods industries,, total
do
New orders, net (seas, adj.), totalf
d o _ _ _ . 3 33,167 335,036 34,991 35,354 34, 953 35,619 37, 148
By industry group:
Durable goods industries, total 9
do _ _ 17.085 18, 300 18,244 18, 622 18,113 17,974 19,740
3,147
3,013
2,712
2,964 i 2,938
2,718
2, 959
Primary metals
do
1,641
1, 590
1,529
1.456
1,592
1,371
Blast furnaces, steel mills
do
1,400
2, 043
1,910
1.858
1,914
1,848
1,886
1,808
Fabricated metal products
do
2,808
2,669
2,741
2,364
2,574
2.617
2,608
Machinery, except electrical
do
2, 687
2,410
2, 463
2,285
2,263
2,477
2,410
Electrical machinerv
_
do
5,094
5, 433
4,327
4,484
4,680
4,970
5,430
Transportation equipment.
_do
1,730
1,272
801
1,342
1,754
1,189
1,398
Aircraft and parts
_
do
16,082 16,736 16,747 16. 732 16. 840 17,645 f 17,408
Nondurable goods industries, total
do
4, 835
4, 531
4,528
4,635
4.495
Industries with unfilled orders©.. .do. ,. 4,124 4,411
11,957 12, 325 12, 252 12, 204 12,205 | 12,810 12,877
Industries without unfilled ordersf-..-_do
By market category:
3,444
3,199
3,503
3,177
3,136
3,273
Home goods and apparel.. ....
do
3,339
7,700
7.682
7,298
7,334
7.371
7,000
Consumer staples
do
7,257
4, 991
4,069
4,
133
4,424
4,289
Equip, and defense prod., excl. auto
do
4, 155
4,368
3,728
3,806
3, 475
3,611
3, 162
3, 553
Automotive equipment
do
3,578
2,
967
2,
723
2,938
2,712
2,807
Construction materials and supplies
do
2, 767
2,803
Other materials and supplies
do
12, 809 13, 691 13, 791 14,044 13, 739 14,103 14,318
Supplementary market categories:
1 , 420
1,379 1 1,387
1,514
1,312
C onsumer durables
do..,. 1, 325 1,404
2, 673
1,922
1,968 j 1.476
2, 466
2, 081
2, 156
Defense products
.
do
3,617
3, 441
3,273
3,612
3,415
Machinery and equipment
..do.__. | 3, 090 3,326
I
Unfilled orders, end of year or month (unadjusted),
totalf
.
.
mil. $„_ 46,242 49, 149 50, 131 49, 902 49, 696 49, 149 50, 049
\
Durable goods industries, total
do..... 43. 666 46, 193 47, 306 46, 999 46, 684 46, 193 47,154
2,895
2,903
2, 956
3,012
2,825
2,576
2,956
Nondur. goods indust. with unfilled orders©.do
Unfilled orders, end of year or month (seasonally
adjusted), total f
mil. $_. 46, 784 49, 796 49, 982 50,140 50, 132 49, 796 50,, 083
By industry group:
44, 094 46, 676 47,070 47, 169 47,076 46, 676 47, 072
Durable goods industries, total 9
do
4, 022
3, 859
3. 930
3,822
3,930
3,761
3,930
Primary metals. ...
....do
2 168
2, 172
2, 120
2,102
2, 193
2,057
Blast furnaces, steel mills
do
2,120
4,081
4, 062
4,104
4. 059
4,124
3,944
4, 062
Fabricated metal products
do
7,069
6,884
7, 027
6,933
6,780
6,304
7,027
Machinery, except electrical
do
7, 153
7,114
7,058
7,062
7,111
6,964
7,114
Electrical machinery
do
19,
724
20,
060
19,
368
19,869
Transportation equipment
_do. _ „ . 18,062 19, 368 19,998
Aircraft and parts
.
do
13, 570 14,446 15, 199 15,189 14,985 14, 446 14,723
3,011
3,120
Nondur. goods indust. with unfilled orders ©_ do _ _ . 2,690 3,120 2,912 2,971 3,056
By market category:
i
1 . 908
1,977
1,945 i 1,987
1,989
1,736
1,987
Home goods, apparel, consumer staples. . .do
Equip, and defense prod., incl. auto
do
i 24^ 713 26. 197 26, 664 26, 483 26, 502 26, 197 2C, 534
4,
952
4.
986
5,111
5,017
5,116
4, 986
Construction materials and supplies
do
4, 868
Other materials and supplies
do
15,467 16, 626 16, 213 16, 569 16, 668 16.626 16,689
Supplementary market categories:
,408
1,440 1,410
1,418 1,356
1,351 | ' 1,391 ; 1 , 4 0 1 ]
1,338
1,407
1, 313
1,352
1, 254
1,194
1,407
C onsumer durables
do
18, 148 18, 724 19, 746 19, 625 19,429 18, 724 19,062 19,865 19,363 19,613 | 19,670 19,828 20,588 !'20,291 j 20,140 |
Defense products
do
9,828 11.186 10, 754 10, 931 10, 928 11,186 1 1 1 326 11.348 i 11,442 i 11,622 i 11,931 { 12,349 I 12,444 i'12,695 i 12,783 ;
Machinery and equipment
do
r
3
Revised.
i Monthly average.
Advance estimate.
'j Data for total and comand printing' and publishing industries; unfilled orders for other nondurable soods industries
are
ponents (incl. market categories) are monthly averages based on new orders not seasonally adare zero.
zero.
'1 For 'these industries (food and kindred products, tobacco products, apparel
and
petroleum and coal products, chemicals and allied products, and rubber
justed.
tSee corresponding note on p. S-5.
9 Includes data for items not shown sepaand related
related products,
pi
and
plastics
rately.
©Includes textile mill products, leather and products, paper and allied products,
and plastics fproducts) sales are considered equal to new orders.




SUEVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

| 1963

Monthly
average

S-7
1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Feb.

Jan.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Continued
BUSINESS INCORPORATIONS <?
New incorporations (50 States and Dist. Col.):t
Unadjusted
number
Seasonally adjusted
._ .
do
INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL
FAILURES &
Failures, total
.
number
Commercial service
Construction
Manufacturing and mining
Retail trade
.. __ _"
Wholesale trade

_

do
. do.
do
do
do

Liabilities (current), total ...
thous. $
Commercial service
__do.
Construction
do
Manufacturing and mining
...
.do
Retail trade
do
Wholesale trade
do
Failure annual rate (seasonally adjusted)
No. per 10,000 concerns..

15 171

15 534

13824
15689

16 808
16275

12 975
15759

15 472
15867

18 825
16* 193

15 495
16 086

17 676
16 064

17 365
16 242

16 394
15, 932

16, 856
15, 797

17, 145
15, 852

14, 552
16, 074

15, 465
16, 715

1,315

1 198

1 051

1 262

1 115

998

1 217

1 241

1 320

1,197

1,075

1,157

1,096

1,169

1,034

123
219
146
563
106

82
214
192
501
107

113
203
185
550
118

81
208
163
484
98

112
225
215
629
134

114
200
201
557
126

101, 133 112 716
7,831 7,425
20,295 19 280
33, 333 46, 475
29,143 24 947
10, 531 14, 589
160.8

*56.3

113
189
167
467
115
85
6
21
28
15
14

918
579
522
149
644
024

59.4

133
207
217
578
127
91
10
12
32
23
11

129
198
186
479
123

91
198
176
433
100

834 262 112
758
4 171
9S1 20 325
777 197 942
603 26 832
715 12 842

68 427
3 764
13 935
22 662
IQ 349
ll' 217

59.6

55.1

51 2

109
201
205
570
132

109
204
211
572
145

131
210
212
625
142

101
201
216
554
125

96 731 123 935 110 999 112 884
5 721
7 238 11 686 10 355
22 166 14 933 20 776 27 872
29 649 26 260 26 762 30 650
27 376 22 680 19 515 28 151
11 819 52* 824 32' 260 15 856
53 9

55.3

56.6

92
179
188
501
115

93 419 144, 496 125 642
10, 245 80,909
9 037
14 687 15, 349 23 772
37, 782 17, 951 23 309
23 291 21, 694 20 781
7,414
8,593 48 743

95 180 114 565
6,074
22, 555
17 897 32 185
16 079 31 396
25 715 24 958
12 934 19 952

51 3

49.4

53.2

54.9

59.1

56.3

COMMODITY PRICES
PRICES RECEIVED AND PAID BY FARMERS
Prices received, all farm productsO.... 1910-14= 100..

244

242

242

242

242

237

243

240

239

236

235

232

234

232

236

236

do
do
do
do
do

231
243
271
153
226

237
231
271
164
224

232
189
276
171
213

235
205
278
162
223

241
250
274
158
224

241
254
264
164
226

243
270
254
166
230

242
286
249
164
229

241

275
259
166
215

243
230
267
168
225

248
235
271
168
2i P.

241
240
274
168
170

234
237
274
163
162

226
217
258
163
161

228
258
170
164

232
222
261
165
166

do
do
.do..
do

226

248
157
530

279
258
157
494

264
253
161
498

279
264
140
495

294
271
144
490

303
265
144
478

300
268
150
488

292
263
156
490

293
260
167
490

316
252
191
490

327
945
251
490

301
246
322
489

272
247
307
489

283
243
247
487

293
254
202
482

317
260
?08
493

do
do
.do
do
do

255
253
310
145
252

245
253
290
146
269

250
262
294
149
256

248
269
286
148
262

243
272
272
150
265

234
269
260
146
270

242
265
274
154
274

237
260
269
147
281

237
253
273
144
295

230
243
268
136
301

224
007
°63

224
234
264
133
299

234
243
275
139
293

237
252
274
145
288

244

239
272
268
144
284

280
294
270

283
298
273

283
297
273

282
297
272

282
298
271

282
298
270

000

000

97O

282
300
269

300

282
300
269

989
9QQ

979

283
300
272

ooo

299

283
298

ooo

298
970

282
300
269

307
s 79

312
a 70

311

311
70

311
70

311

313

313

313

314

313

313

312

313

313

312

78

7fi

78

77

7c

75

74

75

7fi

105.4

106.7

107.1

107.2

107.4

107.6

do.
do

105 4
106 1

106 7
107 4

107 1
107 8

107 2
108 1

107 4
108 4

107 5
108 5

108 4
ioa 9

do
do
do
do.
do

103 2
103 6
101 8
102 1
115 2

104 1
104 ^
102 1
101 5
116 6

104 4
105 3
102 2
99 8
120 1

104 5
105 2
102 7
103 1
120 0

104 7
105 4
103 1
103 2
121 0

104 9
105 6
103 0
102 1
120 3

m

do.
do

102.8
110 9

103 5
113 0

103 7
113 5

104 2
113 7

104 5
113 9

104 5
114 1

104 3
114 2

do
do
do
do

103 6
101.7
104 1
105.0

105 1
100.2
103 8
111.0

105 4
101.5
104 3
108.1

104 9
100.4
104 6
106.3

105 1
99.7
104 8
108.2

105 4
99.2

inc. Q

iflfi n

1 AC 7

1 AK A

I AC A

98.3

•\f\A K

1O4 1

109.8

112.4

98.3
104 a
113.9

115.1

Housing
Shelter 9*
Rent
Homeownership*
_.
_.
Fuel and utilities*
Household furnishings and operation*

do
do
do
do.
do
do.

104 8
105 6
105 7
105.6
106 1
101.5

106 0
106 9
106 8
107 0
107 0
102.4

106 2
107 1
107 0
107 2
107 0
102.7

106 3
107 3
107 1
107 4
107 3
102.6

106 6
107 7
107 2
108 0
107 5
102.' 7

106 9
108 0
107 3
108 4
107 6
102.9

106 9
108 1
107 3
108 5
107 7
102 7

106 9
108 3
107 5
108 8
106 8
102 7

108 A.

107 5
108 9
107 3
102 8

Apparel and upkeep*
Transportation
Private
Public

do.
do
do.
do

103.6
107 2
105 9
115 4

104 8
107 8
106 4
116 9

105 4
107 Q
106 5
117 1

105 9
109 0
107 7
117 6

106 1
109 1
107 8
117 6

106 1
108 9
107 5
118 3

105 0
109 4
108 0
118 3

105 1
108 6
107 2
118 4

105 3
108 9
107 4
118 3

Health and recreation 9 *
do.
109.4
112 1
112 3
112 4
111 4
Medicalcare
..
do
117 5
114 2
117 7
117 9
117 0
Personal care
_
do
106 5
108 2
108 4
108 4
107 9
Reading and recreation
do
109.6
112.' 7
111.5
112.3
112.8
••Revised.
i Based on unadjusted data.
2 Annual data for 1961-63 for parity ratio
adjusted for government payments made directly to farmers are as follows (unit as above)83; 83; 81. Descriptive material and annual data back to 1933 appear in the Dept. of Agriculture publication, "Agricultural Prices," January 1964.
3 "All items" index on old
basis (discontinued with June index).
«New series. Beginning Jan. 1964 the index reflects
the following changes: (1) updated weighting factors and price data base; (2) improvements
in statistical procedures; (3) a more comprehensive index, incl. single workers living alone, as
well as families of wage earners and clerical workers; (4) expansion of the "market basket"
from 325 to 400 items; and (5) increase in the sample of priced cities to 50 metropolitan areas
and cities in the U.S. incl. Alaska and Hawaii. The new series has been linked to the old

112 7
117 9
10S g
113.1

Crops
...
Commercial vegetables
Cotton
Feed grains and hay
Food grains
Fruit
.
Oil-bearing crops
Potatoes (incl. dry edible beans).
Tobacco
.
Livestock and products
Dairy products
Meat animals
Poultry and eggs
Wool..

_

Prices paid:
All commodities and services
do
Family living items
do.
Production items .
.
do
All commodities and services, interest, taxes, and
wage rates (parity index)J
1910-14=100..
Parity ratio §t .

-

do

971

301

°.oo

OCA

IJA

r 218

9R9

282
I

14fi
984
-**

CONSUMER PRICES
(U.S. Department of Labor Indexes)
All items...
Special group indexes:
All items less shelter
All items less food

—.1957-59=100..

Commodities^
Nondurables
Durables'! 9
New cars
Used cars
4

Commodities less food !
Servicesf
FoodQ
Meats, poultry, and
Dairy products
Fruits and vegetables




fish

_ .

3 107.6 3/07.0
107.6
* 107.7
107 6
IAQ A

107 5
108 4

104 9

104 8

102 9
102 3

102 9
102 2

1 AC 7

e

IAC fj

3 107. 8 3/08.0 3 707. 9 3 108. &
107 7
107.8
108.0
107.8
107 5
•JAO e

104 8
IAC, A
109 Q
101 8
a

mn m

104 1
114 3

104 3
114 5

97.2

107 1

108 3

108.2

107 7

107 9

108 9

108 1

1 04
1 AC
109
101

•JAR A
•JAR 0

•I AC O

-1 AC

1O9 Q

100 8

1O9 O
10O fi

104 3

104 3
115 1

1O4 7.
lie q

1O.4 9

n

10*1 7
97.0

1 0^ ^

1 AC 9

96.6

96.8

115.7

115.7

120.2

98.9
104.3
122. 3

99.2
104. 4
117.3

101.4
104. 6
112.2

108 9

107 0

1 0fi Q
108 9

ioa A.

107 7
108 6
107 4
102 9

107
108
107
102

7
4
2
9

108 7
107 1
102 9

102 8

102 6

102 8

105 6
109 0
107 6
118 4

105 7
109 1
107 7
118 6

105 7
109 2
107 8

1 AC e

-I AC o

1 0s. Q

107 7
108 ft

104 9

inc e>

102 9
101 6

1 08 7

190 Q

m

104 3
114 8

m

8
c
8
2
/>

108 8

IAQ Q

O

106. 4
QQ Q

OS 7

1 99 7

107 1

107 8
•I AQ

108 Q

107 Q

e

1 07 4

118 Q

112 7
112 9
113 4
113 5
113 1
113 5
mQ
m7
118 2
118 5
119 0
119 1
118 7
mo
•I AQ C
108 5
108 4
108 7
108 9
108 7
109 1
113.6
114.0
114^1
113! 1 113.3
1110
114.1
114.3
114.2
series as of Dec. 1963 to provide continuous series (see exceptions in notes "1" and "*"). More
complete information and data are available from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, U S Dept.
of Labor (Washington, D.C., 20210).
cf Compiled by Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. (failures data are for 48 States and Dist. Col.).
fData prior to 1963 exclude Dist. of Col. Revisions for Jan.-Dec. 1962 (seas, adj.) appear
on p. S-7 of the Aug. 1964 SURVEY.
©Revisions for Jan. 1961-Mar. 1963 are available
upon request.
JSee note marked "i"<m p. S-7 of the Feb. 1964 SURVEY.
§Ratio of prices received to prices paid (incl. interest, taxes, and wage rates).
IData
beginning 1962 as shown here are not comparable with "old series" data formerly published.
9 Incl. data not shown separately.
*New indexes.

S-8

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1%3
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

1963

Monthly
average

November 1964

Sept.

Oct.

1964
Nov.

Dec.

Feb.

Jan.

Apr.

Mar.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

100
89
108
100

0
3
2
7

102 3
89 7
112 0
100 8

COMMODITY PRICES—Continued
WHOLESALE PRICEStf

(U.S. Department of Labor Indexes)
Spot market prices, basic commodities:
22 Commodities
1957-59=100..
9 Foodstuffs
do
13 Raw industrials
do
All commodities
do
By stage of processing:
Crude materials for further processing
do
Intermediate materials, supplies, etc _ _ _ d o _ .
Finished goods©
do
By durability of product:
Durable goods
do
Nondurable goods .
do_

1

93.0
89.8
95.4
100.6

193.5
92.9
93.9
100 3

93
91
94
100

97.1
100.2
101.7

95.0
100.5
101 4

94.8
100 5
101 5

101.0
100.1

101 0
99.6

_. do
do
do.

100.8
101.3
100.1

Farm products 9
do
Fruits and vegetables, fresh and dried — do
Grains
__do_
Livestock and live poultry
do

Total manufactures
Durable manufactures
Nondurable manufactures

Foods processed 9
Cereal and bakery products.
Dairy products and ice cream
Fruits and vegetables, canned, frozen
Meats, poultry, and
fish
_

do
do_ _.
do
do
do

0
4
1
3

95
95
96
100

8
1
3
5

95
93
97
100

94.1
100 4
101 9

95.7
100 6
102 1

94.3
101 1
102 1

101 8
99 5

109 0
nn 9

102 2
98 9

102 4
98 4

102 3
98 4

102 4
98 9

10^ 5
98 7

102 4
99 4

102 8
99 2

101 3
o

101 1
102 1

100 9

100 5

1 00 0

100 9
102 4
99 4

100 8
102 6
99 o

100 8
102 4
99 1

101 1
102 5
99 7

101 0
102 5
99 5

101 2
102 5
99 8

101 4
102 8
100 1

94 4
105.9
103 3
82 4

93 7
107.4
103 2
81 2

93 2
113.1
89 8
82 3

94 1
108.9
85 7
87 7

93 6
97.9
85 7
88 4

T 95 7
'101.5
90 2
90 9

93 g
98.5
88 9
85 8

107.3
107.5
88.7

100 4
107 8
107.1
107.3
88.3

99 4
107 5
106.6
106.3
86.9

100 2
107 9
107.1
106.1
90.2

101 2
108 6
107.0
105.3
93.3

101 0
108 3
107.3
102.3
93.3

102 2
108 1
108.7
'102.2
'96.1

101 7
108 2
108.9
102.9
93.4

101.1

101.1

101.1

100.9

101.1

101.1

101.1

101.5

95.2

100.2

100.2
104. 8

96 7
94 5
95.5
88 6
100.2
104 8

%

95.3

96 6
94 4
95.4
87 3
100^2
104 8

94 3
94.6
93 2
100.2
103 9

96 6
94 3
94.8
95 9
101.1
104 1

96 5
93 9
94.7
101 3
100.2
104 8

96 9
94 3
94.6
107 7
99.6
104 8

96 1
95 0
101.3
120 4
91.1

95 1
101.3
116 6
92.2

96 3
95 3
100.9
116 0
92.3

96 7
96 1
100.6
120 2
92.5

96 4
96 6
101.4
121 2
91.4

96 6
93 9
94.6
106 2
99.1
104 8
T 95 2
'97 3
101.5
T
118 4
89.5

96 6
97 7
101.5
119 4
91.9

98.6
91.6
105 2
81.5
91 2

98.6
91.6
105 3
81.5
91 2

98,5
91.2
105 3
81.5
91 2

98.6
91.2
105 4
81.8
90 8

98.6
91.3
105 6
81.8
90 8

98.6
91.3
105 6
81.8
90 8

98.6
91.3
105 6
81.8
90 8

104.5
108 3
88 1
102 0
101. 8
102 0

104.7
108 3
85 7
104 5
101.8
102 2

104.8
1C8 3
90 3
103 3
101.4
101 8

105.4
108 3
92 6
104 7
101.2
101 5

105.6
108 3
96.0
104 5
100.9
101 1

'105.4
108 4
95.5
104 0
100.6
100 7

105.9
109 0
95.4
104 8
100.3
100 4

1C3.0
112.7
112.3
96.5
100 9

103.1
112.9
112.3
96.5
100 9

102.9
113.1
112.3
96.6
100.7

102.9
M13.0
112.4
96.6
100.5

103.0
112.9
112.4
96. 6
100.7

101 5
100 0

101 6
99 2

101 7
100 3

100.6
101.3
99.8

100 7
101 4
99 9

100 9
101 7
100 2

100 9
101 8
100 1

100 9
99 9

97.7
97.7
98.8
96.2

95.7
96.1
101.9
88 8

95 5
88.0
102 9
88 6

95 1
89.1
101 8
88 0

96 2
96.1
100 3
87 9

93 3
94.8
101 8

96 3
95.9
103 9

94 5
97.9
102 0

101.2
107.6
106.9
98.0
99.1

101 1
107.3
107.5
103.9
93.3

100 9
107 0
108.0
105.3
94.2

102 2
107 7
107.4
105.8
93.2

102 5
107 3
107. 9
106.4
91.7

1 nn A.

1 A9 ^

•I f\f)

1 OR Q

1 07 A.

108.1
106.8
87.7

107 0
108.0
107.2
91.8

107.5
107.4
88.9

101.2

101.3

101.2

n
%
Q4. 3

%
Q4 3

95.0.

95.4
99.4

101 Q

7Q Q

Fuel and related prod., and power 9 _ _ do
Coal
do
Electric power
Jan. 1958=100—
Gas fuels
_
do.. .
Petroleum products, refined
1957-59=100..

100.2
96.8
102.8
119.2
98.2

99 8
96.9
102.0
122.8
97.2

99 0
97 2
101.8
121 7
95.9

98 8
97 7
101.4
122 0
95.6

98.8
94.0
103.8
_
86.1
94.2

98.1
91.8
104 6
82.8
92 3

98.1
91.4
104 8
81.9
91 9

98.1
91.2
104 8
81.9
Q1 Q

Q1 D

81.8

81.7

107.4
108.6
106.2
108.5
96.5
96.5

104.2
108 3
84 'o
101 9
98.6
98 9

103. 1

103.4

103.5

77 3

or\ r

103.0
108.2

99.9
inn 7

99.2

99.2

102.3
109.5
107.8
98.4
100.8

102.2
111.1
109.6
97.4
100.0

do
_ do
do. -.
do

100.0
93.2
99.3
99.2

100.1
92.9
99.1
99.1

102. 2
110.9
110.1
97.2
99 3
100.3
93.1
99.1
99.6

102.3
111.2
110.4
97.4
99 Q
100.9
93.1
99.9
99.9

102. 5
111.4
110.9
97.5
99 9
101.0
92.8
99.9
100.2

Nonmetallic mineral products 9
Clay products, structural
Concrete products
__
Gypsum products
Pulp, paper, and allied products
Paper
Rubber and products
Tires and tubes
- --

do
.do
do
do
..do
do
do
do

101.8
103.5
102.6
105.0
100.0
102.6
93.3
87.1

101.3
103.6
101.7
105.4
99.2
102.4
93.8
90.1

101. 1
103.4
101.3
106.1
99.1
102.2
93.4
91.7

101.3
103.4
101.3
106.1
99.5
102.8
94.2
91.7

101.2
103.5
101.4
106.1
99.4
102.9
94.2
91.7

101.3
92.7
100.0
101.0
101.3
103.5
101.4
106.1
99.4
102.9
93.8
91.4

Textile products and apparel 9
Apparel
Cotton products
__._
Manmade fiber textile products
Silk products
Wool products .
__

do
do
_do
do
do
do

100.6
101.5
101.7
93.9
125.9
99.1

100.5
101 9
100.3
93.9
139 9
100.9

100.5
102.3
99.9
94.0
130.1
100.6

100.7
102.5
100.2
94.2
126.1
100.6

101.1
102.3
101.3
94.4
130.5
101.6

Tobacco prod, and bottled beverages 9 —do
Beverages, alcoholic _ _ _
do
Cigarettes
do. .
Miscellaneous
do.
Toys, sporting goods
do

104.1
101.0
101.4
107.3
100.8

106.1
101.0
104.1
110.4
101.0

107.5
101.0
105. 6
111.8
101.1

107.5
100.9
105.6
111.2
101.1

PURCHASING POWER OF THE DOLLAR
As measured byWholesale prices
1957-59=100.,
Consumer prices
do

99.4
94 9

99.7
93 7

99.7
93 4

99.5
93 3

oc o

98.4

m

QA

5
5
5
0

7

94
88
98
100

4
9
5
5

94
87
98
100

3
9
9
4

109 9
QQ fi
QC

0

104.9
QQ 1

89 ft

Q

0

oo -i

96
88
102
100

E

9
7
7
3

i n c -i

1 f)K

98 3
101.3
122 3
93.8

101.3

99 5
98 3
101.3
124 8
96.6

99 0
98 1
101.3
126 8
95.3

98.1
91.2

98.0
91.1

98.4
91.5
105 0
81.5
90 9

98.5
91.8

98.5
91.7

81.5
on Q

81.5

102.7
108 3
76 1
qq 5
99.0
99 2

102. 5
108 ^
74 0

102. 5

99.9
i nn ^

101.0

102. 5
112. 1
111.8
96.9
99 8
101.7
92.0
100.2
101.4

102.5
112.5
111.8
96.9
99 8
101.8
91.8
100.2
101.7

102.7
112.6
112.0
97.0

102.9
112. 7
112.2
97.7
99 9

103.3
112.7
112.3
97.7
101 2

102.0
92.1
100.2
102.8

102.2
92.1
100.2
104,0

102.1
92.0
100.3
103.9

102.3
92.4
100.4
104.0

102.5
92.1
100.7
104.4

103. 0
91.7
101.2
105.8

103.0
91.7
100.5
107.0

103.8
91.8
100.6
110.4

101.1
103.5
101.2
106. 1
99.8
103.1
93.7
91.3

101.2
103.8
101.0
108.6
99.9
103.1
93.6
91.3

101.1
103.9
100.7
108.6
99.3
103.5
93.9
91.3

101.3
104.5
100.6
108.6
99.1
103.6
93.1
89.2

101.3
104.5
100.6
108.6
98.7
103.7
92.6
88.0

101. 4
104.5
100.8
108.6
98.7
1C3. 7
91.6
88.0

101.5
104.4
100.9
108.6
98.7
103.7
91.8
88.0

101.7
104.5
100.8
108.6
98.7
103.7
91.8
88.0

'101.8
104.6
'101.1
108.6
98.7
103.7
91.9
88.0

101.8
104.8
101.1
108. 6
99.1
104.0
92.1
88.0

101.2
102.3
101.5
94.6
126.3
102.8

101.2
102.3
101.3
94.7
121.6
103.2

101.2
102 3
101.2
95.1
116.8
103.3

101.2
102.3
101.1
95.5
116.6
103.3

101.1
102.3
100. 5
95.5
116.4
103.2

101.2
102.7
99.6
96.0
116.4
102.8

101.0
102.8
98.7
96.2
117.0
102.8

101.1
103.3
98.3
96.2
117.0
102.6

101.2
103.3
98.6
95.8
117.0
103.0

101.2
103.3
98.9
'95.7
117.0
102.9

101.4
103.3
99.0
96.1
116.6
103.1

107.5
100.9
105.6
110.9
101.0

107.5
101.0
105.6
112.2
101.1

107. 6
101.0
105.6
112.6
100.9

107.1
101.0
105. 6
110.9
100.9

107.1
100.7
105.6
109.8
101.1

107.1
100.7
105.6
109.5
100.8

107.3
100.5
105. 6
107.2
100.8

107.4
100.3
105.6
106.7
100.9

107.3
100.3
105.6
107.5
101.0

107.5
100.8
105.6
107.3
101.0

107.5
100.8
105.6
109.2
101.2

107.6
100.8
105.6
110.0
101.1

99.3
93 1

99.7
92.9

99.0
92.9

99.5
92.9

99.6
92.9

99.7
92.8

99.9
92.8

100.0
92.6

99.6
92.3

99.7
92.4

99.3
292.3

299.2

Q7 Q

1 nd. 8

"•Revised.
i Figures are for the month of June.
* Indexes based on 1947-49=100
are as follows: Measured by—wholesale prices, 83.5 (Oct.); consumer prices, 75.2 (Sept.).




93.8
100 5
102 1

101 4
99 8

96 3
94 2
95.0
90 2
98.4
104 9

__

92.4
100 3
101 7

101 1
99 5

100.9

Metals and metal products 9 Heating equipment
Iron and steel
-. Non ferrous metals

93.5
100 6
101 3

1 01 fi

96 2
94 2
94.9
88 5
97.1
103 9

do
do
do
do
do

94.2
100 9
101 3

94.0
101 2

109 1

100.9

Machinery and motive prod. 9
Agricultural machinery and equip
Construction machinery and equip
Electrical machinery and equip
Motor vehicles

94.3
100 9
101 ^

95.1
101 3

1 01 4

100.7

do
do
do. ..
do
do
do

97
87
105
100

92.6
101 1

96.3
96 0
94.8
94 *
95.1 - 94.9
80.3
81 3
99.9
97.2
103.8
103 9

Hides, skins, and leather products?
Footwear
.
Hides and skins
Leather
Lumber and wood products
Lumber

95 8
86 8
102 5
100 4

95.1
101 0
101 8

100.7

Furniture, other household durables 9 -.-do
Appliances, household
do
Furniture, household
__do_
Radio receivers and phonographs
do
Television receivers
__do

2
0
4
0

94.8
100 9
101 6

97.5
96.3
96.0
76.3
101.9
103.8

._

95
87
101
100

95
91
98
101

100.8

Chemicals and allied products 9
Chemicals, industrial
Drugs and Pharmaceuticals
Fats and oils, inedible _
Fertilizer materials
Prepared paint -

95 3
87 9
100 9
100 1

95 0
91 1
97 7
100 3

_ do
do
do
do_ _
do
__do_

Commod. other than farm prod, and foods-do

3
2
4
3

7
4
3
7

96.1

99.5
99.1
99.2
102.6
111.9
111.2
97.7
QQ Q

1

I AC (\

Q7 1

99.4
92.9

QQ 7

Qfi 4

T

cfFor actual wholesale prices of individual commodities, see respective commoditiesO Goods to users, including raw foods and fuels.
9 Includes data not shown separately.

SUKVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1964

1963

1963

Monthly
average

S-9

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

July

June

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

* 6, 208

r

6,116

CONSTRUCTION AND REAL ESTATE
CONSTRUCTION PUT IN PLACE f
4,954

5,204

5,932

6,071

5,720

5,260

4,579

4,177

4,643

5,098

5,483

6,185

6,162

Private, total?
do
Residential (nonfarm) 9
do
New housing units
do
Additions and alterations
do
Nonresidentlal buildings, except farm and
public utilities total 9
mil $
Industrial
do
Commercial 9
do
Stores, restaurants, and garages
do
Farm construction
_
do _
Public utilities
do

3,475
2,024
1,553

3,648
2,154
1,672

4,081
2,419
1 932

4,101
2 408
1 940

4,021
2 357
1 909

3,760
2 153
1 734

3,258
1,813
1 451

3,021
1,626
1 316

3,325
1,908
1 477

3,638
2,188
1 610

3,895
2,345
1 703

4,222
2 573
1 879

4,257 r' 4, 228 r' 4, 166
4,089
2,552
2 415
2 311
2 500
1 976 T 1 974 ' 1 909 1 831

988
247
433

1 101

1 099

1 104

1 070

1,015

268
434

963
251
411

1 086

1 130

270
471

981
257
424

1 017

1 154

360

189
106

993
264
425

374

240
115

415

228
111

218
105

197
101

168
98

163
95

155
95

175
99

207
106

220
115

Public, total
Nonresidentlal buildings.
Military facilities
Highways
_ _
Other types

1,480
429
102

1,557
460
0)

1,963
597
0)

1,905
525
(i)

New construction (unadjusted), totalf-

-

mll.$_.

do
do
do
do
,
- do _

0)

199
107

532
418

New construction (seasonally adjusted at annual
rates) total t
mil $ 259,453
41,695
Private total 9
,
do

Non residential buildings.
Militarv facilities
Highways
_

_

254
500

(i)

261
493

(i)

267
493

(i)

(i)

(i)

(i)

167
96

(i)

(i)

254
442

455

431

414

312

286

317

366

404

1,851
508
(i)

1,970
523
(i)

1,699
466
(i)

1,500
458
(i)

556
430

727
501

837
487

685
431

549
386

1,321
435
0)

1,156
429
0)

1,318
464
0)

1,460
525
0)

1,588
517
C1)

2

397
392

266
376

351
413

384
454

481
477

(i)

(i)

258
480

(i)

421

421

710
534

740
526

r

(i)

1 184

220
118
'421

1 172
'293
'506
'232
111
'437

1, 980
'555
(i)

' 2, 007
'565
(i)

2,027
559
C1)

284
497

269
497

(i)

T

770
'534

794
533

299
517

242
107

461

0)
(i)

62,451

63 530

64 966

65 072

65, 193

64, 684

65, 528

66, 509

66,615

64, 983

66, 576

66 641

r

65 991 '66,273

65, 456

44, 633

45, 365

45, 488

45, 778

45, 440

46, 274

46, 923

46, 449

45, 780

46, 006

46, 261

r

45, 906 '45,703

45, 308

24, 292

25, 843

25 953

26 584

27, 000

26, 896

26,907

27, 600

28, 123

27, 538

26, 678

26, 612

26 708

r

26 342 ' 25, 945

25, 555

11,526
2,949
4,955
2,385
1,282
4,318

11,859
2,962
5,200
2,268
1,266
4,494

12, 533
3 049
5,671
2,611
1,265
4 540

12, 431
3,085
5,518
2,477
1,264
4 772

12, 480
3,136
5,469
2,335
1,261
4,473

12, 592
3,158
5,515
2,333
1,261
4,753

12, 476
3,060
5,499
2,330
1,258
4,547

12, 581
3,058
5,546
2,300
1,254
4,547

12, 728
3,074
5,668
2,351
1,253
4,518

12,661
3,076
5,561
2,293
1,252
4,660

12, 756
3,149
5,542
2,252
1,250
4,746

12, 900
3,204
5,562
2,268
1,247
4,832

13,063
3,334
5,574
2,302
1,242
4 828

do

17, 758

18, 679

18, 897

19, 601

19, 584

19, 415

19, 244

19, 254

19, 586

20, 166

19, 203

20, 570

20, 380

do
..do
do

5,145
1,222
6,378

5,524
0)
6,670

5,638
(i)
6,600

5, 815
(i)
7,145

5,803
0)
7,254

6,075
(J)
6,713

5,761
0)
6,685

6,171
0)
6,169

5,993
6,796

0)

6,259
0)
7,068

6,040
(J)
6,410

6,528
0)
6,888

5,828
(i)
7,549

' 6, 115
(i)
7,021

' 6, 292
(i)
7,273

3,442
3
120
1,133
2,309

3,824

3 707

4 313

3 749

3,413

3,201

4,215

4,639

4 601

3 760

3,762

148

4,359

4,504

144

3,346

1,229
2,594

1 154
2 552

1 321
2,992

1 157
2,592

1,155
2,257

1,198
2,149

1,041
2,160

1,339
2,876

1,318
3,042

1,535
3,104

1,491
3,013

1 619
2,983

1 101
2 658

1, 124
2,638

1,084
1 503

1,212
1,716

1 154
1 789

1,331
2 028

1,082
1 519

1,102
1 325

1,082
1,158
1,427
1 372
816 692

1,252
1,991

1,420
2,006

1,362
2 050
1,227

1,400
1,996

1,548
2 000
1, 054

1 275
1 679

1,228
1 717

807

817

.

(i)

43, 772

Residential (nonfarm)
do
Nonresldentlal buildings, except farm and
public utilities, total 9
mil. $.
Industrial
do
Commercial 9
do _
Stores, restaurants, and garages.
do
Farm construction
do
Public utilities
do
Public, total 9

0)

960
246
413

6, 173

13, 271 ' 13, 386 13, 406
3,505 ' 3, 514 3,540
5,609 ' 5, 746 5,776
2,381 ' 2, 530 2,621
1,232
1,226
1,237
T
4 670 ' 4, 792 4,826
r

20, 085 '20,570

20, 148

6,210
0)

(l)

CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS
Construction contracts In 48 States (F. W. Dodge
Corp.): A
Valuation total
mil. $
Index (mo. data seas, adj.)
1957-59=100
Public ownership
mil $
Private ownership
do
By type of building:
Nonresldential
do
"Residential
do
Public works. _
do
Utilities
._
__do ..
Heavy construction:
New advance planning (ENR)§
do
Concrete pavement awards:cT
Total
thous sq yds
Airports
do
P-oads
_ do
Sfrpefs and alleys
do
Miscellaneous
do

133

659
196

683
212

128

662
102

146

748
206

704
444

147

143

629
356 |

140

138

138

138

140

121

131

1,766

2,770

2 666

3,600

4,484

2,656

6,577

3,986

2,664

3,165

3,190

3,143

4,823

3,506

2,860

9,483

10, 053

8 142

13 033

8 164

10 389

10 891

6,820

9,057

12, 997

10 831

9,463

7 246

11 962

6,217
2,789

6,411
3,160

4 968
2 920

8, 139
4 706

5,115
2 850

8,177
2,037

< 8, 464
* 2, 095
< 76

5,159
1,197

6,956
1,046

7,714
2 716

6,474
2,481

240

219

9,861
2,402

13 354
1,395
8,981
2 747

4 840
1 660

9,187
2 241

357

282

145 1
91 7
142.7

143 7
90 8
141.1

127 9

142.8
102 9
140.4

141.0
r
96 7
138.4

125.6
91 3
122.7

477

482

254

189

199

176

256

225

836

611
124

240

161

270

238

231

388

3,676

252

HOUSING STARTS AND PERMITS
New housing units started:
Unadjusted:
Total Incl farm (public and private)
One-family structures
Privately owned
..
Total nonfarm (public and private)
In metropolitan areas
Privately owned

thous
do
do
do
do
do

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates:
Total, Including farm (private only)
Total nonfarm (private only) ._

do
do

124 4
83 0
121.9

136 7
85.1
134.1

148 4
94 0
146 4

167 5
104 3
164 5

122 3
72 4
120.5

97 4
50.9
95.7

100 8
55.3
99.6

101 1
63.7
100.3

133.3
82.2
130.1

152 3
90.7
148.5

160 5
101.4
157.5

164 0
102.1
158.5

122.4
87 7
119.9

134.4
95 8
131.8

145 2
104 1
143 2

164 2
117 3
161.2

119 7
84 6
117.9

95.1
76 8
93.4

99.5
8
75.0
98.3

98.5
73.8
97.7

131.5
96.6
128.3

149.5
102.5
145.7

158.2
115.1
155.2

161.3
118.0
155.8

1 747
1 712

1 864
1 824

1 577
1 544

1 570
1,524

1,718
1,688

1,657
1,613

1,663
1,638

1 531
1 501

1,529
1,507

1 611
1,585

1 505
1,483

1 424
1,402

1,484
1,458

1 371

1 401

1 359

1,402

1 333

1 404

1 377

1 280

1 271

1 306

1 242

1 281

1,231

701

693

111

111

111

111

111

112

112

112

113

113

792

792

793

793

794

798

800

806

808

809

Ne w private housing units authorized by bldg. permits (12,000 permit-issuing places):*
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates:
Total
thous 2 1,229
>756
One-family structures
do

2

12 335
750

764

751

738

715

742

810

767

700

714

720

T

T

663

125.0

CONSTRUCTION COST INDEXES
107
'111
••111
Dept. of Commerce composltet
1957-59=100..
109
110
American Appraisal Co., The:
790
791
756
78S
Average, 30 cities
1913=100
780
Atlanta
.
do
832
863
863
857
862
872
New York
do
836
872
858
869
778
San Francisco
do
720
778
761
775
774
St Louis
do
741
760
765
762
Associated General Contractors (building only)
111
116
1957-59=100..
114
115
116
r
2
Revised.
i Not yet available; estimate included in total.
Annual total (also for
breakdown of new construction value). 3 Computed from cumulative valuation total.
4
Prior to 1964, "miscellaneous" yardage was included with data for roads and streets.
• Effective Jan. 1964, based on 1963 definitions of metropolitan areas; not strictly comparable
with earlier data.
t Revised series.
Revised monthly data for 1946-63 appear in Construction Report
C30-61 Supplement (Bu. of the Census).
9 Includes data not shown separately.
AMonthly averages for 1962 are based on annual
totals including revisions not distributed by months.




863
874
778
776

863
884
778
779

870
884
780
779

870
884
780
779

870
884
780
777

872
884
780
786

872
884
794
786

872
893
799
786

887
895
800
786

887
897
802
786

116

117

117

117

117

118

119

119

120

120

113

120

§ Data for Oct. 1963 and Jan., Apr., July, and Oct. 1964 are for 5 weeks; other months,
4 weeks. Comparable data prior to 1961 not available.
cPData for Oct. and Dec. 1963 and Mar., June and Sept. 1964 are for 5 weeks; other
months, 4 weeks.
*New series (from Bu. of Census reports, Series C-20). The 12,000 permit-issuing places
covered by these data account for a major portion (about 83 percent) of private residential
building in the United States (1959-63 data for 10,000 places are also provided in Series C-20
reports).
t Re vised to 1957-59 reference base; also reflects revision of basic data.

November 1964

SURVEY OF CUKRENT BUSINESS

S-10
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

Monthly
average

1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

CONSTRUCTION AND REAL ESTATE—Continued
CONSTRUCTION COST INDEXES— Con.
E. H. Boeckh and Associates, Inc. :1
Average, 20 cities:
All types combined....
1957-59=100Apartments, hotels, office buildings
do
Commercial and factory buildings
do
Residences
do. _.
Engineering News-Record:
Building
__ 1957-59 =100..
Construction
do
Bu. of Public Roads— Highway construction:
OnmnnQlto ^avcr f n r n t r ^
1Q*>7 59 — 100

107.8
108.8
107.8
106.3

110.2
111.3
110.2
108.5

111.2
112.3
111.2
109.6

111.3
112.4
111.2
109.7

111.4
112.5
111.4
109.8

111.5
112.6
111.5
109.9

111.9
113.0
111.9
110.2

111.9
113.1
111.9
110.3

111.9
113.1
111.9
110.3

112.3
113.4
112.3
110.7

112.9
114.1
112.9
111.1

113.6
114.9
113.6
111.8

114.1
115.3
114.1
112.2

114.2
115.4
114.2
112.3

114.1
115.3
114.1
112.3

110.1
114.7

112.7
118.6

114.2
120.3

114.6
120.6

114.3
120.3

114.4
120.4

114.6
120.8

114.6
121.1

115.0
121.4

115.3
121.9

115.6
122.3

116.2
123.1

116.6
124.3

116.9
124.7

117.1
124.7

»98.6 » 101. 0

101.7

134.5

142.9

152.4
146.2

163.8
144.7

135.8
142.4

122.2
142.3

127.2
136.4

129.8
147.9

149.8
156.1

158.8
155.9

158.5
147.6

165.1
154.1

160.6
166.4

131.6
134.6
167.6

140.7
140.5
176.1

147.2
147.4
207.5

154.9
160.7
219.1

126.0
137.6
181.7

113.3
130.2
143.5

118.4
142.6
113.2

122.7
141.9
118.0

151.1
158.0
147.7

168.7
158.0
176.4

205.9

164.4
154.5

174.8
155. 6
216.5

222.6

18.4

15.8
11.6

14.8
173
11.3
140

15.0
176
11.2
140

11.4
190
8.3
145

10.3
183
9.1
159

11.5
178
9.1
138

14.4
193
9.4
135

19.0
190
11.3
124

18.7
190
11.1
111

15.8
173
9.5
99

17.9
177
10.8
103

15.2
162
10.7
109

15.8
176
8.3
88

15.4
174
10.4
121

15.1
183

14.3

444.50
258. 21

486.68

543.00

433. 39
208. 70

483. 67
206. 20

456. 89
192. 02

232.60

616. 55
251. 51

604. 77
245. 93

605. 39
270. 33

650.14

267. 77

439.85
201.31

570. 30

255. 35

4,290

4,784

4,414

4,216

4,168

4,444

4,395

4,769

4,763

4,781

4,837

2,394 ' 2, 363 ' 2, 164

2,041

103.4

102.4

99.3

102.2

1
117. 0
i 124. 7

CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS
Output index:

Portland cement, unadjusted

do —

172.5
148.5

REAL ESTATE
Mortgage applications for new home construction:
Applications for FHA commitments
thous. units..
oeaso any aojus ea
Q

nil

rT

f- r1 arm ml rafp

d

Home mortgages insured or guaranteed by—
Fed Hous Adm * Face amount
mil.$_. 439. 24 464. 09 505.00 567. 53
Vet. Adm.: Face amount§
do — 221.01 253. 76 267. 35 316.01
Federal Home Loan Banks, outstanding advances 8
3, 479 » 4, 784 4,024 4,226
to member institutions
mil $
New mortgage loans of all savings and loan associations estimated total
mil $
By purpose of loan :
Home construction
do
Home purchase
do
All other purposes
do

1,730

2,061

2,196

2,387

1,856

2,118

1,716

1,712

2,071

2,081

2,145

498
710
521

586
827
648

642
928
626

685
977
725

502

620
776
722

434
696
586

474
674
564

621
784
666

579
831
671

597
881
667

624
1,054
716

2,849
7,204

3,077
8,183

3,177
7,898

3,534
8,461

2,880
7,959

2,987

7,931

2,758
8,530

2,575
8,097

2,935

8,711

3,089
9,475

3,090

9,421

3,388
9,469

mil. $.. 105. 42

117. 13

08.35

109. 52

94.91

113. 12

139. 33

118. 85

126. 45

124. 93

105. 98

New nonfarm mortgages recorded ($20,000 and
Fire losses (on bldgs., contents, etc.)

757
597

'635
1,037
691

'1,025
'602

498
964
579

108. 56

108. 08

99.47

100. 55

573

DOMESTIC TRADE
ADVERTISING
Printers' Ink advertising index, seas. adi.:t
Combined index
1957-59=100..
Bu^iness papers
do. ..
Magazines
do

113
108
119

118
112
127

124
115
131

119
113
127

114
113
131

124
117
134

120
112
126

123
108
128

123
113
133

125
108
128

123
108
137

128
121
138

127
111
142

102
88
75
118

96
88
95
144

103
79
106
151

95
101
101
142

90
83
86
125

106
85
106
146

102
72
78
151

103
87
84
160

99
91
83
158

107
104
76
160

100
86
87
157

103
86
82
159

105
79
103
157

mil. $_. 3 199. 7 2 208. 2
do
a 13. 1 2214.6
3
do
69.6
63. 3
do
339.6 '39.9
Soaps, cleansers, etc
do
320.9 221.9
Smoking materials
do
322.2 223.9
All other
do
340.8 238.4
Spot (natl. and regional, cooperating stations):
Gross time costs, total
mil. $__ 3 180. 3 2 217. 8
Automotive, incl. accessories
do
28.1
35.9
Drugs and toiletries
do
336.1
242.8
Foods, soft drinks, confectionery. _
do
360.4 273.0

200.8

Newspapers
Outdoor
Radio (network)...
Television (network)

do
do
do
do

Television advertising:
Network (major national networks) :
Gross time costs, total
A utomotive,incl. accessories
Drugs and toiletries
Foods, soft drinks, confectionery

Soaps, cleansers, etc
Smoking materials
All other

do
do
do

Magazine advertising (general and natl. farm magazines) :
Cost, total
__ mil $
Apparel and accessories
do
Automotive, incl. accessories
do
Building materials
do
Drugs and toiletries
do
Foods, soft drinks, confectionery
_ . _do

220.8

16.3
72.3
43.0

224.1
15.2
74.5
45.3

222 2
14.6
69 1
43.7

22.6
24.2
33.8

21 6
25.0
42 6

24 4
28.0
36.8

24 5
24 5
45 8

185.3
7.6
34.9
60.2

242.9

255.9
9.7
52.3
92.3

263 7
11.4
47 0
93 1

20.3
10.1
73.1

24.5
10.4
66.7

26.5
12.4
73 3

13.3
67.9
39.1

222.9

349.4

37.4

2
9.7
261.2

22.4
8.6
51.5

73.0
4.6
7.9
2.3
7.1
10.6

77.6
4.8
8.5
2.2
8.0
10.4

82.1
9.1
6.1
3.0
8.0
8.9

321.1

8.4
48.7
82.3

99.6
7.0
14.8
2.2
9.9
12.4

103.2
5.7
12.7
1.8
10.8
13.6

77.2
3.9
5.9
1.5
9.9
11.0

54.0
2.0
7.0
.9
6.2
9.0

73.0
3.3
9.1
1.8
8.0
10.9

86.7
6.7
9.8
2.3
9.1
12.8

93.3
7.5
10.6
3.5
8.6
11.8

102.7
6.3
11.5
3.6
9.8
12.9

83.5
2.2
8.9
3.0
9.5
11.6

60.5
.6
6.3
2.0
7.7
10.2

58.5
6.0
4.3
1.5
7.4
8.5

85.7
9.5
8.0
2.9
8.4
9.5

Beer, wine, liquors
_
_. do
4.2
4.5
5.5
4.7
Household equip., supplies, furnishings. .do
8.4
5.8
4.9
5.5
Industrial materials.
__ do
3.7
5.1
4.5
3.7
Soaps, cleansers, etc
do .
.8
1.0
1.4
1.0
Smoking materials
do
2.8
3.0
3.3
3.0
All other
do
28.4
23.8
29.6
25.8
r
Revised.
1 Index as of Nov. 1, 1964: Building,
117.0; construction, 124.8.
2
3
Annual average based on quarterly data.
End of year.
HCopyrighted data; see last paragraph of headnote, p. S-l.

6.9
7.7
5.5
1.4
3.9
33.2

8.8
4.4
2.8
.4
3.8
24.8

1.7
2.7
1.8
.7
2.4
19.7

3.3
3.6
3.1
.9
3.1
26.0

4.2
5.6
3.4
1.0
2.8
28.9

4.5
7.1
4.9
2.1
2.7
30.0

5.2
9.6
5.4
1.9
3.2
33.2

4.8
7.7
4.6
1.2
3.7
26.3

3.7
4.3
3.2
.8
3.2
18.5

2.7
3.3
3.2
.7
3.0
18.0

4.2
6.0
4.6
1.6
3.2
27.9




9 Includes data for items not shown separately.
§ Data include guaranteed direct loans sold; these became sizable after 1962.
tRe visions for Jan. and Feb. 1963 are available upon request.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

S-ll
1964

1963

Monthly
average

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

DOMESTIC TRADE—Continued
ADVERTISING— Continued
Newspaper advertising linage (52 cities):
Total
nail . lines
Classified
-_. do _.
Display, total
Automotive
Financial
General
Retail

_ _ _

233.2
60.5

238.0
62.5

246.7
65.0

267.7
65.9

258.4
61.8

260.6
53.8

210.6
59.8

210.4
60.9

248.0
66.3

265.1
68.6

275.9
74.8

247.0
68.4

226.5
66.9

238.0
70.5

248.2
64.9

do
do
do
do
do

172.7
12.4
4.8
25.1
130.3

175.6
12.5
4.9
23.8
134.3

181.7
12.7
4.7
26.2
138.1

201.8
16.0
5.5
28.9
151.4

196.6
13.0
4.7
25.8
153.1

206.7
8.7
5.3
24.0
168.8

150.8
10.6
6.8
18.2
115.2

149.5
12.1
4.2
20.8
112.3

181.7
12.7
5.4
25.4
138.2

196.5
15.7
5.6
28.8
146.4

201.1
17.1
4.8
29.2
150.0

178.6
16.2
5.2
25.9
131.3

159.6
12.8
5.8
19.6
121.4

167.5
11.8
3.9
17.5
134.4

183.4
15.6
4.4
24.9
138.5

mil. $

19,613

20, 536

19, 267

21,528

21, 494

25, 104

19, 154

18,758

20, 502

21,186

22, 508

6,245
3, 566
3,344
222

6,675
3,830
3,600
230

5,999
2,990
2,779
211

7,599
4,387
4,148
239

6,985
3,949
3,712
237

7,208
3,690
3,377
313

6,031
3,677
3,488
189

6,122
3,684
3, 505
179

6,741
4,058
3,847
211

7,360
4,453
4,215
238

7,693
4,551
4,289
262

7,719
4,387
4,110
277

7,399
4,159
3,896
263

'7,011 ' 6, 786 i 7, 058
' 3, 853 ' 3, 660 i 3, 089
3, 435
'3,611
225
'242

RETAIL TRADE
All retail stores:
Estimated sales (unad].), total

._

Durable goods stores 9
- do
Automotive group
. ...
do
Passenger car, other auto, dealers
do
Tire, battery, accessory dealers
do

22,242 '22,145 '21,778 '21,246

i 22, 781

Furniture and appliance group
Furniture homefurnishings stores
Household appliance TV radio

do
do
do

901
583
318

968
622
346

980
647
333

1,095
719
376

1,077
703
374

1,333
790
543

905
584
321

920
600
320

973
638
335

1,004
663
341

1,043
685
358

1,112
735
377

1,098
708
390

'1,111
'735
'376

'1,075
694
381

Lumber, building, hardware group
Lumber, bldg. materials dealersd"
Hardware stores

do
do
do

947
728
219

964
743
221

1,055
842
213

1,119
897
222

1,002
771
231

918
610
308

712
536
176

709
542
167

798
616
182

938
721
217

1,047
801
246

1,129
879
250

1,109
872
237

'1,052
'823
'229

1,037
808
229

Nondurable goods stores 9
Apparel group
- -Men's and boys' wear stores
Women's apparel, accessory stores
Family and other apparel stores
Shoe stores

do
do
do
do
do_
do

13, 367
1,195
228
456
301
209

13, 861
1,205
232
466
300
207

13, 268
1,161
203
448
296
214

13,929
1,191
218
472
304
197

14, 509
1,308
254
509
343
202

17,896
2,172
471
834
572
295

13, 123
1, 026
208
407
234
177

12,636
927
176
375
220
156

13, 761
1,283
206
502
309
266

13, 826
1,140
204
463
262
211

14,815
1,282
240
506
303
233

14,523 '14, 746 '14,767 '14,460
'1,209 '1,272
1,238
1,118
233
254
'220
221
482
'463
465
427
320
'314
302
275
237
'212
217
195

i 15, 723
i 1,375

do
do.
do
do
do_

669
1,442
4,801
4,344
1,554

681
1,506
4,929
4,463
1,614

647
1,526
4,684
4,238
1,599

667
1, 556
4,910
4,449
1,649

666
1,486
5, 153
4,689
1, 625

906
1,533
5,194
4,679
1,713

671
1,436
5,018
4,558
1,566

656
1,386
4,849
4,395
1,480

680
1,485
4,891
4,406
1, 585

665
1,547
4,898
4,414
1,617

713
1,650
5,248
4,739
1,708

705
1,711
5,114
4,613
1,754

707
1,796
T 5, 484
'4,971
1,820

'708
1,805
5, 283
4,780
1,801

'708
1,680
5,149
4, 658
1,691

1756
1,757
5, 039
5, 138
1,781

General merchandise group 9
do
Department stores
do,
Mail order houses (dept. store mdse.). do
Variety stores
do
Liquor stores
do_

2,267
1.320
163
371
450

2,388
1,390
177
385
472

2,275
1,340
172
354
437

2.417
1.404
197
378
466

2,728
1,590
248
414
510

4,399
2,625
307
793
724

1,872
1,094
140
289
433

1,875
1,069
146
313
427

2,303
1,336
178
389
434

2,310
1,366
179
361
446

2,479
1,463
173
399
485

2,491
1,481
170
395
472

2,380
1,384
158
398
500

2,591
1, 513
195
'421
'489

2, 553
1,521
189
402
476

2, 830
1,088

20, 426

20,716

20, 558

21,019

21, 000

21,533

21,223

21,392

21,777

21,773

21, 935 '22,266 '22,175

121,536

6,939
3,894
3,646
248

7,010
4,026
3,788
238

7,218
4,126
3,880
246

7,002
3, 885
3.645
240

7,060
3,989
3, 755
234

' 7, 324 '7,421
4,448
'4,259
4,218
' 4, 025
230
'234

Drug and proprietary stores
__
Eating and drinking places
Food group
Grocery stores
__
Gasoline service stations

_

Estimated sales (seas adj ) total t

do

r

Durable goods stores 9
Automotive group
Passenger car other auto dealers
Tire battery accessory dealers

do
do
do
do

6,606
3,717
3,495
222

6,941
3,980
3,748
232

6,734
3,791
3, 556
235

6,831
3,935
3,685
250

6,855
3,951
3,711
240

7,262
4,162
3,925
237

Furniture and appliance group
Furniture homefumishings stores
Household appliance TV radio

do
do
do

985
648
337

1,028
666
362

986
640
346

1,021
637
384

1,019
671
348

1,073
707
366

1,088
711
377

1,095
701
394

1,080
699
381

1,108
735
373

1,107
709
398

'1,094
'719
'375

1,054
677
377

Lumber building hardware group 1
Lumber bldg materials dealersd"
Hardware stores

do
do
do

975
761
214

986
764
222

994
754
240

952
716
236

949
730
219

1,007
779
228

936
727
209

912
707
205

974
754
220

992
765
227

954
732
222

'938
'711
'227

958
723
235

Nondurable goods stores 9
Apparel group
Men's and boys' wear stores
W^omen's apparel accessory stores
Family and other apparel stores
Shoe stores

do
do
do
do
do
do

13, 820
1,204
238
465
303
198

13,775
1,150
217
451
286
196

13, 824
1,186
224
463
294
205

14, 188
1,250
239
482
307
222

14, 145
1,250
231
497
302
220

14,271
1,291
246
505
326
214

14, 284
1,228
233
477
292
226

14, 382
1,272
241
504
308
219

14,559
1,295
250
502
320
223

14,771 '14,875 '14,942 '14,754
1,322
' 1,363
1,267
1,316
260
244
'269
257
522
'519
488
509
311
'351
338
333
'224
208
218
217

do
do
do
do
do

688
1,470
4,897
4,441
1,605

683
1, 530
4, 943
4,484
1,618

677
1,506
4,973
4,512
1,638

694
1,528
4,991
4,523
1,681

694
1,580
5,031
4,548
1,638

666
1,593
4,991
4,513
1,641

702
1,584
5, 112
4,605
1,629

689
1,599
5,064
4,574
1,674

713
1,589
5, 034
4,540
1,670

721
1,623
5,202
4,704
1,683

General merchandise group 9
do
Department stores
do
Mail order houses (dept. store mdse.) .do
Variety stores
do
Liquor stores
do

2,390
1,386
181
386
466

2,303
1,321
173
390
478

2, 355
1,355
183
381
473

2,474
1,457
184
397
483

2,481
1,464
181
410
471

2,592
1,538
197
408
482

2,489
1,467
188
404
491

2,514
1,467
192
421
486

2,589
1,543
190
420
495

2,620
1,533
200
427
503

Drug and proprietary stores
Eating and drinking places
Food group
Grocery stores
Gasoline service stations

'722
726
1,633
1,642
5, 234
••5,261
' 4, 769 4, 748
1,690
1,701

741
1,609
f), 301
4,802
1,685

2,734
1,630
205
'439
'494

2, 594
1,518
192
429
501
29, 727
12,024
4, 758
2, 074
2,377

2,686
1,580
192
443
495

Estimated inventories, end of year or month :f
Book value (unadjusted), total
mil. $__ 27, 071
11, 472
Durable goods stores9 --.
do
4,778
Automotive group
do
1,861
Furniture and appliance group
do
2,264
Lumber, building, hardware group... do

28,500
12,255
5,353
1,975
2,316

28,400
11,280
4,253
1,992
2,363

29,696
11,844
4,660
2,066
2,344

30,606
12,399
5,036
2,106
2,361

28,500
12,255
5,353
1, 975
2,316

28,595
12,570
5,659
1,939
2,296

29,327
12,953
5,961
1,955
2,317

30,200
13,384
6,159
2,023
2,416

30,566
13,508
6,157
2,055
2,447

30,352
13,481
6,085
2,064
2,452

30,118
13,380
6,027
2,040
2,452

29, 851 '29,227
13, 112 '12,127
5,849 ' 4, 874
2,041 ' 2, 024
2,388
2,398

15, 599
3,405
3,395
4,495
2,266

16,245
3,380
3,554
4,767
2,512

17,120
3,785
3,536
5, 359
2,792

17,852
3,925
3,667
5,743
3,051

18,207
3,955
3, 707
5,879
3,143

16,245
3,380
3, 554
4,767
2,512

16,025
3,354
3,553
4,623
2,400

16,374
3,514
3,642
4,699
2,446

16,816
3,611
3,698
4, 896
2,556

17,058
3,655
3,691
5,035
2,613

16,871
3,570
3,673
4,978
2,608

16,738
3,499
3,664
4,931
2,555

16, 739 '17,100 17,703
3,482 ' 3, 728 3 900
3,715
3, 631
3,619
5,033 ' 5, 1 J f> ,r>, 420
2,929
2,707
2,616

Book value (seas, adj.), total.
do
27, 938 29,383 28,752 28,921 29,254
Durable goods stores9
do
11,728 12,509 12,032 12,116 12,341
Automotive group
do
4, 861
5,435
5,075
5, 149
5,301
Furniture and appliance group
do
1,899
2,013
1,961
2,006
1,990
Lumber, building, hardware group. _do
2,349
2,402
2,387
2, 372
2,399
'Revised.
i Advance estimate.
9 Includes data not shown separately.
^Comprises lumber yards, building materials dealers, and paint, plumbing, and electrical stores.
{Revised (back to Jan. 1953) to reflect use of new seasonal factors and new adjustments
for trading day differences.
Revisions for periods not shown here appear in the July
1963 Census report, "Monthly Retail Trade Report, Adjusted Sales, Supplement."

29,383
12,509
5,435
2,013
2,402

29,608
12,666
5,494
2,011
2,379

29,586
12,708
5, 499
2, 022
2,357

29,661
12,913
5,650
2,037
2,357

Nondurable goods stores 9
Apparel group _.
Food group
.
General merchandise group
Department stores*.




do
do
do
do
do

U,239

1

1

0, 428

15, 108

29,961 29,926 30,180 30, 129 '29, 967 30, 135
13,045 13,024 13,079 12,924 '12,762 12,804
5,624
5,724
5,701
5,619 ' 5, 570 5, 071
2, 045
2,066
2,054
2,041
2,070 ' 2, 024
2,383
2,391
2,371
2,399
2,357
2,377
tRevised series. Revised to take account of benchmark data from the 1962 and 1963
Annual Surveys of Retail Trade; revisions through 1962 appear on pp. 16-19 of the Dec.
1903 SURVEY and those back to Jan. 1963 on p. 28 of the Sept. 1961 S U R V E Y .
*New series; for earlier periods back to Dec. 1956 see p. 32 of the Apr. 1964 SURVEY.

November 1964

SUKVEY OF CUKEENT BUSINESS

S-12

1962 | 1963

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1964

1963

Monthly
average

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

192 07

192 31

192 56

Oct.

DOMESTIC TRADE—Continued
RETAIL TRADE—Continued
All retail stores—Continued
Estimated inventories, end of year or month§—
Continued
Book value (seas, adj.)—Continued
Nondurable goods stores 9
mil.
Apparel group. „
doFood group
do.
General merchandise group
do.
Department stores*
do.
Firms with 4 or more stores;
Estimated sales (unadjusted), total
Firms with 11 or more stores :
Estimated sales (unadj.), total 9

16,805
3,581
3,578
5,147
2,695

16,913
| 3,605
j 3,585
5,219
! 2,747

._.

Apparel group 9-----Men's and boys* wearstores
Women's apparel, accessory stores
Shoe stores
Drug and proprietary stores-Eatingand drinking places
Furniture, homefurnishmgs stores

do
do
do
do
.do
|
-do
do.___

General merchandise group 9
do
Dept. stores, excl, mail order sales... do
Variety stores,
do
Grocery stores
do
Lumber yards, bldg. materials dealerscf-.do
Tire, battery, accessory dealers
do
Estimated sales (seas, adj.), tota!9t-

j
I
j
!
I

do.

Apparel group ? ._
.do
Men's and boys' wear stores
____do.
Women's apparel, accessory stores
do
Shoe stores.......'
do.
Drue and proprietary stores.
Eatingand drinking places
Furniture, homefurnishings stores

do.
do
..do.

General merchandise group9
do
|_
Dept, stores, excl. mail order sales
do.__.|
___
Variety s tores
.
do
!_ _
Grocery stores„__
do____|
Lumberyards, bldg. materials dealers cT- do
j
Tire, battery, accessory dealers
do..
All retail stores, accounts receivable, end of rno.:
Total
mil. $__]'14,299
Durable goods stores
__..do
i 8, 241
Nondurable goods stores.
do
| 8,058
Charge accounts
„
do
j 7,441
Installment accounts
._
do
' 6, 858
Department stores:
i
Ratio of collections to accounts receivable:
Charge accounts.
percent..)
Installment accounts
..do
j
Sales by type of payment:
i
Cash sales
....percent of total sales__
Charge account sales
__do--__
Installraent sales
do

EMPLOYMENT AND POPULATION
POPULATION
Population, U.S. (incl. Alaska and Hawaii):
Total, incl. armed forces overseas© .... m i l _ _ » 186.66
EMPLOYMENT
Noninstitutional population, est. number 14 vears
of age and over, total, unadj
_mil_.|
i
Total labor force, inci. armed forces
thous..
Civilian labor force, total
do
Employed, total
.
do
Agricultural employment
do
Nonagricultural employment
do
Unemployed (all civilian workers)
Long-term (15 weeks and over)
Percent of civilian labor force
Not in labor force

5

2

I

189.38 j 189.89

!

190. 14

190. 39

190. 61

190. 81

191 01

191 23

191 44

191 64

191 85

130.08

132.12

132.85 I 133.02

133. 20

133. 36

133.52

133. 68

133. 87

134.04

134. 22

134.40

134. 59

74,681
71,854
67, 846
5,190
62,657

75,712
72, 975
68.809
4,946
63, 863

75,811
73, 062
69, 546
5,326
64, 220

76, 086
73,344
69, 891
5,350
64, 541

76, 000
73, 261
69, 325
4,777
64, 548

75, 201
72, 461
68,615
4, 039
64,576

74, 514
71, 793
67, 228
3, 993
63, 234

75,259
72, 527
68, 002
3,931
64,071

75, 553
72,810
68,517
4,017
64, 500

76, 544
73, 799
69, 877
4,429
65, 448

77, 490
74,742
71,101
5,007
66, 094

79, 389
76. 645
71, 953
5, 853
66,100

78,958
76,218
72,405
5,819
66,586

78,509
75,758
72,104
5,400
66,704

76,865
74,122
70,805
5, 230
65, 575

do
4.007
4,166
do
| 1,119 1,088
5.7
- !
5.6
thous..| 55,400 56,412

3,516
886
4.8
56,686

3,453
919
4.7
56, 596

3,936
864
5.4
56, 852

3.846
928
5.3
57, 824

4, 565
1, 106
6.4
58, 685

4, 524
1,163
6.2
58, 099

4,293
1S322
5.9
57, 965

3,921
1,237
5.3
57, 135

3,640
1,084
4.9
56, 376

4,692
1,007
6.1
54, 652

3,813
857
5.0
55, 258

3,654
790
4.8
55,891

3,317
764
4.5
57, 721

132. 50 i 132. 68

Civilian labor force, seasonally adjt
do
73,091 73,168 73, 572 73,224 73, 667 73,835 73,760 74, 583 74,595 74,340 74,230 74,316
Employed, total...
.
do
69,044 69, 067 69, 222 69, 205 69,567 69,832 69,807 70, 559 70, 754 70, 387 70. 591 70,488
Agricultural employment
do
4,877
4, 939
4,903
4,890
4,797
4,936
4,748
4,600
4,865
4,838
4.885
4, 810
Nonagricultural employment
do
64,167 64,128 64,319 64, 315 64,631 65,035 65, 207 65, 811 65, 889 65, 549 65,706 65, 678
Unemployed (all civilian* workers)
do
j
4,047
4,101
4,019
4,350
4, 003 3,953
4,100
4,024
3,841
3, 953
3,639
3,827
Long-term (15 weeks and over)
do
1,078
1,114
1,022
1,060
1,105
1,007
927
1,047
934
1,070
958
902
Rates (percent of those in group):
j
All civilian workers
5.5
5.6
5.5
5.9 ,
5.6
5.4
5.4
5.4 i
5.1
5.3
4.9
5.1
Experienced wage and salary workers
5. 5
5.5
5.5
5.4
5.7
5.3
5.2
5.3
5.1 I
5.0 1
4.8
5.3
4.8
4.9
-•Revised.
i End of year.
2 As of July 1.
§ See note marked "t" on p. S-ll.
©Revisions for May 1960-Nov. 1962 are available upon request.
9 Includes data not shown separately.
*Ne\v series; see corresponding note on p. S-ll.
t Revised monthly data (back to Apr. 1948) appear in the "Monthly
(^Comprises lumber yards, building materials dealers, and paint, plumbing, and elecLabor Force," Jan. 1964, U.S. Dept. of Labor, Wash., D.C., 20210.
trical stores.
fSee note marked " J" on p. S-ll.




74,159
70, 334
4, 800
65, 534
3,825
929

192 81

74,187
70, 325
4, 745
65, 580
3,862
945

5.2
4.9
Report on the

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

Monthly
average

S-13
1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

1 Feb.
!

Mar. | Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.*

EMPLOYMENT AND POPULATION—Continued
EMPLOYMENT— Continued
Employees on payrolls (nonagricultural estab.):f
Total, unadjustedf
thous

55 841

57 174

58 211

58 426

58 220

58 585

56 909

57 045

57 388

57 945

58 500

59 212

58 993 ' 59, 256 ' 59, 821

59, 783

16, 859
9,493
7,367

17, 035
9 659
7 376

17, 398
9 801
7 597

17, 367
9 811
7 556

17, 229
9 789
7 440

17, 139
9 765
7 374

16, 935
9 666
7 269

16, 982
9 676
7 306

17,051
9 734
7 317

17, 106
9 801
7 305

17,186
9 844
7 342

17, 404
9 951
7 45cJ

17,354 r 17, 553 ' 17, 842
9 904 ' 9, 888 ' 10, 156
7 45C ' 7, 665 ' 7, 686

17,515
9,903
7,612

652
83
152
299

634
82
139
293

641
84
134
295

637
84
136
290

634
84
136
292

631
83
137
295

614
82
135
290

611

134
907

611
83
130
288

624
85
129
289

631
86
128
291

649
88
129
302

644
80
129
305

645
80
129
305

2,909
3,903
797
271

3 029
3,913
774
273

3 378
3 982
780
276

3 333
3 968
776
970

3 176
3 944
770
279

2 995
3 931
773
282

2 628
3 876
755
934

2 681
3 879
753
283

2 760
3 883
754
273

2 977
3 992
762
278

3 191
3 949
764
279

3 373
4 000
770
270

3 493
4 025
774
262

r 3, 552
4,039
'773
261

880
200
688
611

898
210
688
612

934
212
693
618

936
212
691
611

925
213
685
611

913
214
685
610

885
215
685
609

888
214
688
608

889
215
691
609

899
217
699
611

913
219
701
613

946
222
709
619

954
225
718
628

11, 582
3,061
8,521
2,798
7,949
9, 188

11 865
3,143
8 722
2,866
8 297
9 535

11 942
3 199
8 743
2,887
8 436
9 547

12 014
3 208
8 806
2,884
8 472
9 7*51

12 166
3 208
8 958
2, 878
8 406
9 787

12 774
3 2S8
9 536
2,880
8 379
9 926

11 917
3 201
8 716
2, 875
8 313
9 751

11 837
3 ig7
8 650
2,885
8 362

11 926
3 188
8 738
2,895
8 415
9 847

11 987
3 195
8 792
2,913
8 543
9 873

12 100
3 207
8 893
2,924
8 641
9 878

12 952
3 251
9 001
2,958
8 742
9 834

'55,841 157 174
do
do-- - 16, 859 17 035
do
9,493
9,659
271
do
277
589
do
586
385
390
do
594
do..
608
1,164
do
1,166

57 453
17 076
9,705
275
588
392
610
1,164

57 646 57 580
17 119 17 061
9,688
9,718
275
277
595
589
392
391
614
611
1 155 1, 155

57 748
17 127
9,737
276
598
394
612
1 166

57 850
17 119
9,726
276
596
394
612
1,169

58 183
17 175
9,750
270
601
395
618
1 177

58 327
17' 242
9,814
268
607
399
623
1 183

58 502
17 301
9,868
266
599
401
621
1 202

58 590
17 323
9,853
262
592
401
623
1 206

58 782 58 912
17 367 17 409
9,942
9,896
253
258
595
590
410
406
628
630
1 221 1 240

Fabricated metal products
do
Machlnerv
do_.
Electrlcal equipment and supplies. _ _ d o

1,128
1,490
1,579

1, 153
1 520
1, 582

1,165
1 531
1,574

1,164
1 545
1,571

1,162
1 548
1, 557

1,169
1 555
1,566

1, 164
1 559
1,564

1,176
1 547
1,559

1,186
1 567
1,563

1,194
1 575
1,570

1,189
1 585
1,571

1,195
1 595
1,573

1,197
1 6C6
1,583

Transportation equipment
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous manufacturing Ind

1 542
360
391

1 614
372
393

1 635
373
398

1 647
373
395

1 619
373
398

1 629
375
397

1 691
375
396

1 631
375
401

1 640
377
401

1 660
377
403

1 643
376
405

1 643
380
407

1 639
381
4C8

7 367
1,760
91
903
1,267
614
925
846
195
406
360

7 376
1.738
89
890
1,298
621
928
866
188
409
350

7 371
1,723
86
886
1,306
622
935
869
190
402
352

7 401
1,742
89
890
1,312
620
934
871
189
402
352

7,373
1,733
95
889
1,291
622
931
870
189
406
347

7 390
1,741
91
888
1,295
624
939
871
188
405
348

7,393
1, 741
88
891
1,299
624
940
872
186
407
345

7 425
1,743
89
897
1,310
627
942
872
185
412
348

7,428
1,735
90
899
1,309
627
943
876
185
416
348

7,433
1,724
90
897
1,318
629
947
873
185
419
351

7,470
1,725
90
898
1,336
630
953
877
184
422
355

7,471
1,712
90
897
1,348
631
953
884
184
418
354

7,467
1,710
90
897
1,337
633
952
885
184
422
357

630
629
652
Mining
_
do
632
634
3,057
Contract construction
do
3,066
2,909
3 029 3,071
3,928
3,937
Transportation and public utilities
do
3,903
3 913 3,950
11,582 11 865 11 922 11,935 11,941
Wholesale and retail trade. . ___
do
2,887
2,887
2,798
Finance, Insurance, and real estate
do
2,873
2 866
8,423
7,949
Services and miscellaneous
do
8 297 8 377 8,430
9,653
9,643
9 188 9 535
9 552
Government
do
Production workers on mfg. payrolls, unadjusted:!
12,
756
12, 494 12, 585 12, 923 12, 895
Total, nn adjusted t -- --- -- thous
Seasonally adjusted
do
12 611 12, 649 12, 590
7,180
7,204
7,059
6,946
Durable goods Industries, unadjusted, .do
7,193
7,081
7,110
Seasonally adjusted. __
do
7 097
119
120
119
Ordnance and accessories
__do
120
119
534
543
524
526
Lumber and wood products
do
551
332
334
324
Furniture and
fixtures
do
320
333
501
504
490
479
Stone, clay, and glass products
do _
510
928
929
942
Primary metal Industries.
do
936
942
424
408
410
421
420
907
913
884
864
Fabricated metal products __ _. do
909
1,059
1, 056
1, 053
1,036
Machinery
do
1,055
1,065
1,074
1, 057
1,060
1,067
Electrical equipment and supplies. ..do
1,157
1,149
1, 113
1,061
1,125
Transportation equipment 9
do
608
599
572
534
Motor vehicles and equipment
do
584
363
361
356
351
Aircraft and parts . ._
do
356
241
240
237
230
240
Instruments and related products
do._ .
337
342
316
315
341
Miscellaneous mfg. Industries
do _ .
5, 576
5,691
5,526
Nondurable goods Industries, unadj
do
5,548
5,730
5, 509
5,539
Seasonally adjusted
.
do
5,514
1,169
1,248
1, 155
1, 176
Food and kindred products
do
1,285
• 87
94
77
79
Tobacco manufactures
.do
95
802
804
812
797
Textile mill products
do
803
1,151
1,161
1,180
1,125
Apparel and related products
do
1,180
492
488
493
486
Paper and allied products
do__
495
598
594
590
599
Prlntlng, publishing, and allied incL.do
597
522
Chemicals and allied products
do
517
524
526
527
118
125
120
120
Petroleum refining and related Ind.-.do
121
94
101
94
Petroleum refining do
95
95
318
314
315
Rubber and misc. plastic products d6
317
315
309
319
309
Leather and leather products
do
309
311
J
'Revised.
v Preliminary.
Total and components are based on unadjusted data.
t Beginning with the Sept. 1963 SURVEY, data for employment, hours, earnings, and
labor turnover reflect adjustments to Mar. 1962 benchmarks. The revision affects series
back to Mar. 1959 and, for seasonally adjusted data, all series beginning Jan. 1952, with only

630
3,C69
3,915
11,963
2,892
8,447
9 705

623
3,017
3,923
12, 072
2,904
8,474
9,718

624
3,169
3,934
12, 143
2,911
8, 515
9,712

625
3,162
3,930
12, 143
2,918
8,552
9,755

631
3,144
3,954
12, 211
2,925
8,543
9,793

628
3,159
3,961
12, 209
2,930
8,572
9,808

638
3,179
3,964
12, 268
2,937
8,596
9,833

Manufacturing establishments _
Durable goods Industries __ __
Nondurable goods Industries

__do
do
_do

Mining, total 9 --Metal mining
Coal mining
. . .
Crude petroleum and natural gas

do__ .
do
do
do

Contract construction
do__
Transportation and public utilities? .. --do
Railroad transportation
do
Local and Interurban passenger transit do
Motor freight trans and storage
Air transportation
Telephone communication
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
Wholesale and retail trade
Wholesale trade . _
Retail trade
Finance, Insurance, and real estate
Services and miscellaneous
Government
Total, seasonally ad justed f
Manufacturing establishments
Durable goods Industries
Ordnance and accessories
Lumber and wood products ..
Furniture and
fixtures
Stone, clay, and glass products
Prlmary metal Industries
_.

do
do
do
do
do do..
do
do
do
do

do
do
do

Nondurable goods Industries
do
Food and kindred products
do
Tobacco manufactures
do Textile mill products
__
do
Apparel and related products
do
Paper and allied products
do
Printing, publishing, and allied lnd_.do
Chemicals and allied products
do
Petroleum refining and related lnd.__do
Rubber and misc. plastic products .. -do
Leather and leather products
do




oq

9 §Qg

' 960
226
720
' 631

'642
82
130
299
' 3, 452
' 4, 043
765
277

642

3,429
4,027

971
227
716
623

12 247 ' 12, 276 ' 12, 309 12,399
3,311
3,307 ' 3, 298
3 286
9,088
8,969 ' 9,011
8 961
2,991 ' 2, 964 2, 954
2,991
8, 765 ' 8, 729 8, 757
8 785
9 454
9, 435 ' 9, 840 10, 060
r

58 955 '59 049 58 983
' 17, 392 ' 17, 516 17, 264
9, 808
' 9, 932 ' 10, 057
245
'247
"•246
T
584
'586
591
' 407
' 408
410
629
' 629
626
' 1, 240 ' 1, 250 1,239
' 1, 209 ' 1, 220 1,179
f 1 615 ' 1 631 1 636
' 1, 578 ' 1, 595 1,588
r

' 1, 697
'381
'413

1,506
383
412

' 7, 460 7, 459
' 1, 713 ' 1, 704
'84
'87
r
'898
895
' 1, 334 ' 1, 339
'632
633
'953
'953
'885
'884
184
184
'424
'423
356
354

7, 456
1, 705
91
901
1,338
632
948
882
184
418
357

1, 626
380
411

634
'633
634
643
3, 155
3,187 ' 3, 186 ' 3, 138
3,
995
'4,011
4,003
3,985
12, 300 '12,306 ' 12, 289 12,318
2,944 ' 2, 944 ' 2, 949 2, 957
8, 655 ' 8, 678 ' 8, 668 8,713
9,789 ' 9, 812 ' 9, 845 9,947

12, 584 12, 634 12,710 12, 892 12,814 ' 13, 009 13, 322 13,017
12, 759 12, 813 12, 824 12, 864 12,892 r 12, 884 13,018 12, 773
7,241
7,132
7,332
7,198
7,268 ' 7, 253 ' 7, 533 7,299
7,236
7,207
7,278
7,260
7,311 '7,312 ' 7, 440 7, 205
106
104
' 107
109
113
107
112
105
'551
538
' 559
532
506
554
518
522
558
350
'344
'348
328
337
327
330
336
329
520
'527
' 528
506
521
480
494
522
486
989
966
1,000
979
941
998 ' 1, 004 ' 1, 023 1,008
414
469
477
452
462
434
444
466
925
'930
'957
911
927
898
906
904
9C8
'1,112 ' 1, 136
1,131
1,116
1,104
1,124
1,112
1,114
1,077
1,035
1,047
1,037
1,036
1,062
1,046 ' 1, 062 ' 1, 098 1,100
1,158
1,146
1,153
1,160
1,163
1,121 ' 1, 030 ' 1, 190 1,020
634
467
'489
608
604
600
612
608
584
350
339
'348
349
344
357
354
366
339
' 241
' 245
247
236
238
240
237
239
238
355
321
'353
339
309
330
313
315
321
5, 452
5,469
5,510
5,560
5,436
5, 546 ' 5, 756 ' 5, 789 5,718
5, 524
5.552
5,588
5,586
5,553
5 581 ' 5, 572 ' 5, 578 5, 568
1,204
1,078
1, 128
1,057
1,063
1,164 ' 1, 250 1, 259
1,119
' 84
<J7
' 94
66
83
70
66
67
66
813
802
810
813
795
798
808
794
799
'
1,214
1,
205
1,150
'
1,
215
1,177
1, 160
1,181
1,156
1,152
500
'503
491
485
490
498
499
492
488
'602
610
602
598
600
'609
603
599
599
528
522
534
533
533
528
533
533
531
114
116
114
' 116
117
' 117
114
115
117
93
92
91
92
91
90
91
91
90
315
332
317
319
320
327
'335
316
318
308
307
304
314
314
302
313
313
319
minor revisions prior to that.time. Revisions not shown are available in the 1963 edition of
BUSINESS STATISTICS and in BLS Bulletin 1312-1, "Employment and Earnings Statistics for
the United States, 1909-62,"654 pp., $3.50, GPO, Wash., D.C., 20402.
9 Includes data for industries not shown separately.

12,665
12, 653
7.155
7, 129
119

12, 472
12, 639
7,064
7,120
118
502
324
467
945
418
891
1,083
1, 051
1,152
605
363
237
294
5, 408
5,519
1,081
76
788
1,136
484
592
519
114
93
313
304

12,518
12, 697
7,075
7,148
114
504
325
471
958
428
892
1,081
1,040
1,148
598
360
237
305
5,443
5, 549
1,064
74
79,5
1,174
483
594
521
114
93
315
308

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-14

1962 | 1963

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

Monthly
average

November 1964
1964

1963

Sept,

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept,

2 302
'241

2 314

2 325

2,326

2 290

246

249

247

243
*685
' 76.2

Oct.*

EMPLOYMENT AND POPULATION—Continued
EMPLOYMENT— Continued
Miscellaneous employment data:
Federal civilian employees (executive branch) :
United States
thous..
Wash., D.C., metropolitan area
do

2,311
230

2 328
'239

Railroad employees (class I railroads) :
Total
do .Index, seasonally adjusted
1957-59=100..

720
279.5

714
277.1

703

699

694

693

680

676

677

685

688

693

78.2

78.5

79.3

79.5

73.8

74.3

74.9

75.7

75.3

75.2

p 697
'75.6

P695
"76.1

116.4
113.7
90.5

127.0
118.0
90.6

149.5
122 6
94.0

149 7
129 6
92 8

131. 5
121 5
90.5

119 2
122 4
91 4

102.4
117 7
87 8

109.2
119 4
86.9

114 1
120 4
85 9

127.1
122 0
89.4

139 7
123 6
92 5

149.8
126 1
96 2

1 57. 1
124 4
94.4

' 162. 6
126. 6
'96. 2

40.4

40.4

40.3
40 6

3.3

40 6
40 8
2 9

41 0
41 3
2 8

41 3
41 4
3 1

40.9
40 6
3 2
41 7
41 4
3 4

40.9
40 7

3.2

40.7
40 7
3 0
41 5
41 4
31

3.0

3.2

40.4
40 7
2 8
41 0
41 2
2 9

40.7
40 6

2.9

40.8
40 5
31
41 6
41 5
3 3

39.8
40 1

2.8

40.7
40 6
3 0
41 4
41 9
3 2

40. 5
40 5

2.8
41.1

40.7
40 7

40.5
40 7

2.8
40.9

41 3
41 4
3 1

41.1
39.8
40.7
40.9
40.2
39. 0

41. 1
40.1
40 9
41.3
41.0
40.0

41 3
40.8
41 6
41.8
40.7
39.3

41 2
40 8
41 6
42 1
40 4
38.7

40.8
39 7
41.3
41.5
40 6
39. 0

41 5
40 0
41 9
40 6
41 3
39.5

40 S
rh 6
3() 4

39 ^
41 i
40 0

40
3<»
40
10
41
40

3
f,
7
7
1
0

40 2
39 7
40 7
40 8
41 4
40.5

40 4
39 9
40 7
41 6
41.6
40.9

40 2
40 5
40 5
42 1
41 8
41.0

40 5
40 8
41 1
4° 1
42 0
41. 1

41.1
41.7 '
40.6

41. 4
41.8
40-4

41. 9
41.9
40.7

41 8
41 8
40 6

41.5
41.8
40.4

41 9
42 5
40 8

40 9
41 «•
40 0

42 3
40 2

n 2

41 2
42 4
40 2

41 5
42 5
40.3

41 8
49 7
40 4

42.0
42.7
41.8 :
40.9 ;
39.7 !

42. 0
42,8

41 9
42. 1
41.7
41. 1
39. 9

42 7

42 8
44 3
41 4
41.0
3D 8

43 0
44 7
41.5
41.0
39 S

41 5
4' °
41. 1

3W 4

U o
4'°
41.0
H 1 ",
39 "

41
41
40
40,
39

4
7
9
4
8

42 0
42 9
41. 0
40. 5
39 6

39.6

39.6

SH 7
bM 1

39 4
39 '.»

39. 5
39. ft

4o :i

4u
3,"
40
36
42

2
3
9
3
c
,

2 312

2 314

2 313

239

240

240

i 2 452
1*243

2 293

2 291

2 293

2 304

239

240

241

241

679
76.2

INDEXES OF WEEKLY PAYROLLS!
Construction (construction workers) !_1957-59= 100..
Manufacturing (production workers)!
do
Mining (production workers)! - do. - -

150.4
' 131 1 126 7
94.6

HOURS AND EARNINGS t
Average weekly gross hours per production worker
on payrolls* of nonagric. cstab., unadjusted:!
All manufacturing estab., unadj.!
hours..
Seasonallv adjusted
do
Average overtime
do
Durable goods industries
do
Seasonally adjusted
do
Average overtime
do
Ordnance and accessories
do
"Lumber and wood products _ _._
do
Furniture and fixtures
do
Stone clay, and srlas^ products
do
Primary metal industries
_. ... ._ do-_
Blast furnaces, steel and rolling mills. do

;
,
!

Fabricated metal products
Machinery
_
_ _ _ _ Electrical equipment and supplies

do
do do

:

Transportation equipment 9
Motor vehicles and equipment
Aircraft and parts..
_ __ _ _
Instruments and related products
Miscellaneous mfg. industries

1
do
!
do
do. _. i
!
do
!
do

i
i

l

:

•
Nondurable goods industries, unadj
do
Seasonally adjusted.
_ _ do. ..
Average overtime
.
_ _ . ..do. ..
Food and kindred products . do
Tobacco manufactures
do
Textile mill products
doApparel and related products
do
Paper and allied products .
do

41.5

40. 8
39.6

3.1
41.3
41 3

43 q

41 6
41.1
40 l

3.0
41.2
41 1

3M X

41. 5
41 5
'3 5

40.6
40 6
3.4
T
41 5
7
41 5
' 3 6

40, 7
40 6
3 2
41 4
41 9
3 4

39 9
40. 5
40 8
42 1
41.6
41.1

40 i
40.9
41 9
42 1
r
41.8
' 41. 2

' 40 1
r
40 0
r
41 4
T
41 fi
r
42 S
43.1

40
40
49
41
41

41 9
49 9
40 5

41 6
42 4
40.3

' 42 1

r

' 40.7

41 5
42 2
41 0

42 0
49 9
40 9
40.7
39 4

42 5
43 8
41 2
41.0
39 7

41 6
49 3
41 0
40.8
39 3

r
41 6
4° 3
42 5
43 Q
T
' 40 9
40 9
41. 0
' 41. 0
' 39 9 T 39 3

40 1
37 X
40 7
30 4
42.4

39.4
39.8
2. 7
40 3
39 5
40 7
36 1
42.5

39.7
39.8
2. 8
40 9
39 3
41 1
35 9
42.7

39.9
39.7
2. 9
41 0
39 7
41 3
36 2
43.0

39.8
39.5
2.9
41 1
38 9
40 8
36 3
43.0

r 3£ 9

38. 5
41 6
41 4
41.2
40 8
37.7

38. 5
41 6
41 3
40.9
40 9
36.5

38. 5
41 7
4? 0
41 3
41 4
37.6

38.4
41 7
42. 1
41.2
41 6
38.5

38.3
41 5
42 3
41.4
40 8
38.6

'38.8
r
41 3
r
42 1
41.3
r
41 9
'38.5

41 9
41 1

2.9

r 40

2

r

41 7
41 9
40 7

4
4
3
9
7

41 4
49 0
40.7
40 0

40.9
38.6
40.6
36.2
42.5

2. 7
40.9
38. 6
40.6
30. 1
42. 7

39.9
39. 7
3. 0
41.6
39.7
40.6
36. 3
43.2

39.9
39 8
2. 9
41 o
39 7
41 3
36 3
43.2

39 6
39. 5
2. 8
41.0
38 9
41 3
35 8
42. 8

39.9
39.6
2. 8
41.1
39 4
41 3
35 9
43 0

do
do
do ._.
do do do

38.3
41. 5
41.6
41.2
41.0
37.6

38.3
41.5
41.7
41.4
40.8
37.5

38.6
41.5
42.2
41.7
41. 4
37.5

38.4
41 4
41 7
41 1
37.8

38. 2
41.4
41.5
4!. 5
41.0
37.2

38 9
41 7
41.4
41.5
41.7
38.9

37.4

3* 2
41 3
41, 1
41.3
40 6
3S 2

N T onmanufacturlng establishments:!
Mining 9. .
- .
.. do
Metal mining _
_ . . _ . _ _ _ _ d o - ._
Coal minine
do
Crude petroleum and natural gas
do ..

41.0
41.5
°36. 6
42.0

41.6
41.2
"38. 8
42.1

42.1
41.6
39.2
42.1

42.3
41.3
39 0
42 5

41
41
37
4'>

3
2
8
2

41.6
42.1
39 7
42.3

41.2
42. 3
39 3
41 . 9

41.4
42.1
3S 2
42,3

41 1
42.0
3fi 6
42 4

41 5
41.6
37 6
42 1

49
42
33
42

o
0
7
1

42 3
41. 8
40 2
42.0

do
do
do
do

37.0
35.6
40.5
36.3

37.3
36. 0
41.3
36.5

38. 3
36. 6
42.9
37.2

38.9
37.3
43.6
37. 7

36 4
35. 1
40 0

35 3
34.3
36. 7
35.5

34. 1
32. 8
30. 6
34.1

35. 9
35.1
38 9
35. 4

36 5
35. 9
39 1
36.0

37 1
36. 0
40 5
36 4

37 9
36.5
49 i
37 1

38 2
36.6
42 4
37.3

?s--?

Transportation and public utilities:
Local and suburban transportation
do
Motor freight transporation and storage. do
Telephone communication
do
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
do
Wholesale and retail trade §
do
Wholesale trade
do
Retail trade §
do

42.6
41.5
39.9
41.0
38.7
40.6
37.9

42 2
41.6
40. 0
41.2
38.6
40.6
37.8

42.1
42.0
40. 5
41.4
38.6
40. 6
37.7

42. 0
42. 3
40. 4
41.4
38.4
40 7
37.5

41 8
41.3
40 8
41.4
38 3
40 5
37 3

41 9
41.9
39 6
41.5
38.8
40 9
38. 0

42 0
40. 5
39 3
41. 5
38. 1
40 2
37. 1

41 5
41.0
39 6
41.0
38 2
40 3
37 2

40 9
41.2
39 5
41.0
38 2
40 5
37 1

41 9
41.5
39 3
41.0
38 2
40 6
37 2

49 g
41.8
39 8
41.2
38 3
40 7
37 3

43 0
42.1
40 0
41.2
38 7
40 8
37 8

42 7
42.3
40 2
41.7
39 1
40 9
38 3

Services and miscellaneous:
Hotels, tourist courts, and motels
do
Laundries, cleaning and dyeing plantsd" -do

39.1
38.9

39.0
39.0

39.2
39.1

39.1
39.0

38.8
38.8

38.6
38.9

38,8
38.0

39.1
38. 3

39.0
38.6

38.8
38.9

38.6
39.3

38.4
39.0

39.3
38.7

Average weekly gross earnings per production
worker on payrolls of nonagric. estab.:!
All manufacturing establishments!
dollars.. 96.56
104. 70
Durable goods industries
do
116.31
Ordnance and accessories
do
Lumber and wood products
do
79.20

99.38
108. 09
119. 60
81.80

100. 53
109. 45
121.01
86.50

100. 53
109.71
121. 13
85. 68

100.85
110.00
120. 36
82. 97

102.41
111.90
123. 26
83. 20

99. 90
109.21
121 18
79. 90

101. 15
109. S8
119 29
81.97

101.40
110. 29
119 39
82.18

102.06
111.51
119 99
84.19

102. 97
112.47
19Q 20
86.27

103.48
113.01
191 50
87.72

102.97
111.92
119 70
87.48

103. 07 103. 94
112 05 T 113. 71
121 10 T 191 50
89.57
'87. 60

102. 97
111.78

do
do
.do

79.37
98.57
119. 80

81.39
102. 42
124. 64

84.03
104. 50
123. 73

84.03
105.67
122. 41

83.43
103. 75
123.42

85. 06
101.50
126. 38

79. 59
99. f>0
125.77

82. 21
101.75
126. 18

82. 62
102. 00
127. 51

82. 62
104.83
128.54

81.81
106. 93
129. 58

83.43
107. 36
130. 20

83.23
85.48 r 85. 28
107.36 107. 78 T 107. 33
128.96 ' 130. 00 '136.53

87. 14
107. 68
129. 69

Fabricated metal products
do
Machinery _ _ _ _ _ _
do
Electrical equipment and supplies.. _ do

104. 81
113.01
97.44

108. 05
116 20
99.38

110.20
117 32
100.53

109. 93
117 04
100. 28

109. 56
117 88
100. 60

111 04
120 70
102.41

108 79
118 71
100.40

100 18
1°0 56
100. 90

109 59
121 26
100. 90

111 22
121 98
101 56

112 0°
122 98
101 81

11° 29
193 55
109 47

111 07 ' 113 25 T113 01
1 21 69 r ^91 } |190 6~"
101 96 1Q9 r,g 1Q9 97

110 81

Transportation equipment
do
122. 22 126. 42 127.80 131.52 132. 68
Instruments and related products
do
99.80 101. 59 102 75 102. 75 102. 91
Miscellaneous mfg. industries
do...
78.21
80.39
80.60
81.40
81. 59
r
Revised.
*> Preliminary.
° Average for 11 months.
i Includes Post Office employees hired for the Christmas
season; there were about 144,000
2
employees in the United States in Dec. 1963.
Based on unadjusted data.
Digitized forsuch
FRASER

133. 30
102 91
82. 39

127.41
99 90
79.87

126.99
101 66
82. 16

126.68
101 40
82.78

129.36
102 06
82. 76

129.36
109 5f}
81. 95

131.75
103 73
85. 28

1 28. 54
103 99

127. 10
103 38
s '4 fin

Printing, publishing, and allied ind
Chemicals and allied products
Petroleum refining and related Ind
Petroleum refining
. .
Rubber and misc. plastic products
Leather and leather products

Contract construction
General building contractors
Heavy construction
Special trade contractors
_. ._

Furniture and
fixtures
Stone, clay, and glass products
Primary metal industries



41. n

3b 't
40 o
3d 1( )
42
37 ',
43 I
41 3
41.4

40 ;.

42 4
38 1

37 1

81 35

40.1
39.7
3. 1
41 1

T

41 3
36 7
43.3

r 49 2

' 39. 5
' 39. 3
'3. 1
r
41 2
39 8
34 9
' 43.1

39.8
39.7
3. 1
40 S
40 i
41 6
36 1
43.2

'38.7
41 9
' 43 0
' 42 4
T
41 9
' 37, 2

3S. 7
41 4
41 9
41 1
41 8
37.3

r 39 3
r

' 41 2
r 39 7
r
41 6

41
41
37
41

38 6
37.0
'43 1
37 6

36 5
35. 2
39 x
36 0

r 49 3
r

39 0
r 40 §
38 2

41 8
42 2
41 h
41.4
38 4
40 6
37 4

'39.4
'38.7

38.1
38.5

42.4

r 40 9
41. 1

r

4
6
4
5

129. 38 ' 133. 25
103 73 r 104 14
r 89 10

r 81 XZ

J99 X_0

88.07

191 ^4.

103 73

tSee corresponding note, bottom p. S-13.
9 Includes data for industries not shown
separately.
§Except eating and drinking places.
cf Beginning Jan. 1964, data relate to nonsupervisory workers and are not comparable
with the production-worker levels for earlier periods.

November 1964

S-15

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

Monthly
average

1964

1963
Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

Aug.

May

June

July

91.43 '
91.14
97.00 '
97. 82
80.13 ' 75. 08 '
73. 10 '
71.81
64.25 * 65. 69 '

Sept.

Oct.?

91. 04
98. 06
72. 31
71. 04
62. 82

91.54
97. 51
72. 58
75. 71
64. 98
111.89
115.71
116.75
134. 50
107. 43
08. 63

EMPLOYMENT AND POPULATION—Continued
HOURS AND EARNINGS— Continued
Average weekly gross earnings per production
worker on payrolls of nonagric. estab.f — Con.
All manufacturing estab.f— Continued
Nondurable goods Industries
dollars..
Food and kindred products
_- _.doTobacco manufactures.
do_._
Textile mill products
do
Apparel and related products
do

85.54
91.62
71.41
68.21
61.18

87.91
94.48
73.73
69.43
62.09

89. 38
95.68
71.46
69.83
64.25

88.98
94.35
71.46
71.04
64.25

89.10
95.94
73.13
72.28
63.01

90. 17
96. 59
74.86
72.69
63.54

87. 85
95.91
72.69
70.40
60.00

89.04
95. 68
68.84
71.98
64.61

89.67
95.84
75. 00
71.63
64.79

89.83
90.32
80.19
71.03
63.90

90.52
98.16
80.17
72.75
63.54

90.97
97.99
81.39
73.10
63.71

Paper and allied products _ _ _
..do
Printing, publishing, and allied Ind
do
Chemicals and allied products
do.
Petroleum refining and related Ind
do
Rubber and misc. plastic products - do.
Leather and leather products
do

102.00
107. 62
109. 98
126. 88
100.04
64.67

105. 90
110.30
112.88
131.77
100. 78
66. 00

108.43
112.71
114.13
134.20
102.67
67.13

108.43
111.74
113.85
131.77
101.93
67.66

107. 43
110.78
113.85
132. 39
102.91
66. 59

108. 36
113.98
115.09
132. 89
105. 08
69. 63

106. 09
110.67
113.85
132.16
101.25
66.95

107.10
111.93
113.99
132. 07
101.09
68. 76

106. 85
113.58
114.40
131.24
101.59
68.24

107. 53
113.58
114.40
130.92
102.25
06.43

108. 46
113.96
115.51
133. 14
104. 74
68.43

109. 65
113. 28
116.34
133.46
105. 66
70.46

110.51 r 111.71 '112.00
112.99 114. 85 '115.71
110.20 110. 05 '119.83
134.09 r 133. 88 ' 140. 61
103.03 ' 107. 68 '108.94
70. 25 r 70. 40 ' 68. 45

N T onmanufaeturing establishments :t
Mining 9
_ _ ._ do
Metal mining _
do
Coal mlnine
do
Crude petroleum and natural gas
do..

110. 70
117. 45
113.09
109. 20

114.40
118.66
119.95
111.99

117.04
121.06
123.48
113. 67

116. 75
120. 60
121.68
113.05

113.99
119.89
117 94
113.10

116.48
122. 51
125.85
113. 79

115.36
123. 09
124. 97
112.71

115.09
122. 51
121.09
112.94

113.85
122. 64
115.60
112. 78

115.37
122.30
121.45
111.57

117.60
123. 90
125. 78
111.99

118.44
123. 73
131.86
110. 88

117.32
122.07
21.32
113.21

' 11 9. 43
'121.95
' 131. 01
ail. 90

117 99
124.80
124. 17
112.88

Contract Construction
__, do
General buildin^ contractors
do
TTeavv construction
_.
_ do_ .
Special trade contractors
do

122.47
112.50
122.31
128. 50

127.57
117.72
128.03
133. 59

132.90
121.88
136.85
137.64

134. 98
124.58
138. 65
139. 49

125. 58
116.53
124. 00
131.38

124. 96
115.93
118.17
133. 48

122. 08
111. 52
118.95
129. 24

127.09
118.29
123.31
133.81

128. 48
120.98
121. 99
135. 36

131.33
122. 70
127.98
137.23

133. 03
123. 37
133. 88
139. 13

133. 70
123.34
135. 26
139. 50

134.87 137. 03
123.74 120. 54
138.35 ' 140. 94
140. 98 142. 50

130. 07
122.14
129.75
137. 52

Transportation and public utilities:
Local and suburban transportation
do
Motor freight transportation and storage-do
Telephone communication
do
Electric, gas, and sanitary services
_do

100 11
113. 30
98.95
116. 85

101.70
117.31
102. 40
121. 13

102.30
120. 12
105.30
123. 37

102. 48
120. 13
105. 04
122.96

102, 41
117.29
106,08
123.79

102. 24
120. 67
103, 36
124.92

103. 32
116. 24
102. 18
124. 09

101.68
118.49
102.56
123. 00

98.98
119.89
102. 70
123. 00

103. 49
121.18
101.79
123. 00

105. 65
122. 47
101.28
124.42

106. 64
122. 93
104. 40
124. 42

100. 75 ' 105. 33
123.09 '125.08
104.52 r 104. 52
125.93 ' 124. 94

104.
124.
109.
127.

. - _ . _ _.. do_ __ 75.08
_.do
96.22
do
65. 95

77.59
99. 47
68. 04

78. 36
100.69
68. 61

77.95
100.94
68. 25

HK1 85
08. 26

77. 60
101. 43
68. 40

78.11
100. 10
68.26

78. 69
1 00. 75
68.82

78. 09
101. 00
68. 64

79. 07
102.31
69. 19

79. 60
102. 97
09.75

80. 50
102. 82
70.69

81.33
81.12
103.07 ' 103. 22
71.02
71. 43

80. 04
103. 12
70. 31

Wholesale and retail trade§
Wholesale trade _.
Retail traded

r

92
49
52
10

Finance, Insurance, and real estate:
Hanking
do
Insurance carriers®
do
Porvlces and miscellaneous:
Hotels, tourist courts, and motels
do
Laundries, cleaning and dyeing plants Ado

71.80
93. 46

74.97
96. 28

75. 14
96.72

74,97
96, 79

75.35
96. 80

76. 13
97. 67

76.70
91. 36

77.08
92.14

70. 09
91. 55

75. 92
91. 03

70. 20
92. 04

75.89
91. 99

70. 50
92. 03

' 70. 13 70 (\:\
' 92. 23 92. 14

46.14
50. 57

47. 58
51.87

48.22
52. 00

48.09
51.87

47, 72
51 . 99

47, 86
52, 13

47.72
53. 58

47.70
54. 00

47.97
54.81

48.89
55. 63

49. 02
50. 59

47. 02
50.10

47. 95
55. 73

' 47. 28 47. 63
' 55. 73 50. 21

Average hourly gross earnings per production
worker on payrolls of nonagrie. estab.:t
All manufacturing establishments!.... ...dollars..
Fxcludlne overtimed"
do
Durable uoods Industries
do
Excluding overtimed" _ _ _ _ _ _ d o

2.39
2.31
2.56
2.48

2. 46
2. 37
2.63
2,54

2.47
2.38
2. 65
2.55

2 47
2. 38
2, 65
2. 55

2.49
2.40

.:£

2.51
2.42
2. 69
2.58

2.51
2.43
2.69
2.60

2.51
2.42
2. 68
2.59

2.51
2.43
2. 69
2.60

2.52
2.44
2.70
2.01

2 53
2.44
2.71
2.61

2.53
2.44
2.71
2.60

2. 53
2.44
2,71
2. 01

2' 42
2.70
2.60

Ordnance and accessories...
_.do
Lumber and wood products
do
Furniture arid futures
__
._ _ _ - do
Stone, clay, and el ass products
do...
Prlmary metal Industries
do. . .
Blast furnace^, steel and r o l l i n r mills. do._.

2.83
1.99
1.95
2.41
2.98
3.29

2.91
2.04
1.99
2. 48
3. 04
3.36

2.93
2.12
2.02
2. 50
3. 04
3.35

2.94
2.10
2. 02
2.51
3, 03
3. 33

2. 95
2. 09
2. 02
2. 50
3. 04
3.33

2,97
2. 08
2.03
2.50
3. 06
3. 36

2, 97
2.07
2.02
2.50
3.06
3.35

2.96
2.07
2.02
2.50
3. 07
3.37

2.97
2.07
2. 03
2. 50
3.08
3.37

2.97
2.11
2. 03
2.52
3.09
3.39

2.99
2.13
2. 02
2.54
3.10
3.40

3.00
2.15
2.03
2. 55
3,10
3.39

3. 00
2.10
2. 04
2. 55
3.10
3.38

3. 02
2. 19
2. 04
2. 56
3. 11
3.40

M<i!'hhicr\
. _. . do
Flectrioal e q u i p m e n t and supplies . _ _ d o . .
Transportation e q u i p m e n t ? - .
_.___do___
Motor vehicles and equipment
do. .
Aircraft and parts
_
do
I i i M n r n p n t s and related products
do
\Tiscpllancous mfg. industries...
do

2 55
2. 71
2.40
2. 91
2. 99
2.87
2.44
1.97

2.6]
2, 78
2,46
3.01
3. 10
1. 95
_.' 49
2 03

2. 63
2. 80
2.47
3. 05
3.14
2.99
2 50
2.02

2. 63
2. 80
2.47
3. 08
3.18
2 99
2. 50
2,03

2. 04
2. 82
2. 49
3. 10
3.21
3. 00
2.5!
2 05

2.65
2.84
2.51
3. 10
3.21
3. 01
2,51
2.07

2.66
2.84
2.51
3.07
3. 17
3.01
2.51
2.08

2. 05
2.85
2. 51
3.06
3 14
8.02
2. 51
2.08

2. 66
2.86
2.51
3. 00
3. 14
3. 01
2.51
2.08

2.68
2.87
3' 08
3. 17
3. 02
2. 52
2,09

2.68
2.88
2. 52
3.08
3.18
3.03
2. 52
2.08

2. 68
2. 88
2.53
3. 10
3. 20
3.03
2. 53
2. 08

2.07
2.87
2. 53
3. 09
3. IS
3. 05
2. 53
2.07

2. 69 ' 2. 71
2 ss
2. 8<
1 r,S
2. 52
3 1)
3.11
' 3. 23 3 27
3. 00 ' 3 ON
2 r )4
2. 53
' 2. 00 2 0"

2. 07
2 ss
2 ">.
i 07

do
- do _.
do
. do
- rlo...
do
do

2.16
2.09
') 24
1.85
1.68
1.69
2,40

2 22
2 15
2 31
1 91
J.71
1 7L'
2 4S

2.24
L 16
2,30
1 80
1.72
1.77
2 51

2. 23
2 1H
?. 29
1 SO
1 71

2 25
1 17
2 34
1 ^
1 . T.J
1. 76
2 51

2.20
2. 19
2. 35
1.90
1. 70
1. 77
2.52

2.27
2 20
2. 38
1.97
1.76
1.77
2. 52

2. 26
2! 19
2. 38
1.95
1 . 76
1.78
2.52

2.27
2.20
2.39
2.00
1.76
1.78
2.52

2.28
2. 20
2. 39
2.03
1 . 70
1.77
2.53

2.28
2. 20
2. 40
2.04
1.77
1.77
2.54

2. 28
2. 20
2.39
2.05
1.77
1.76
2.55

2.29
2 21
2.38
2.00
1 . 70

2. 28
2. 20
2. 36
' 1.93
1. 77
1. 79
2. 58

2 30
2 22

P r i n t i n g , j>nb!*'s|jinp, and allied ind
rlo
Chemicals nnd allied products..
do
Petroleum rcfinine and related ind
do
Petroleum refining
. do
Rubber and n i f ? < . plastic products _ _ _ r*o__ ..
Leather and leather products
do

2.81
2.65
3.05
3.19
2.44
1 72

2 88

1 <1

1 9"

3 32
2 47
1 ""0

3.' 19
,< A?,
2 51

2.93
2. 70
,3.19
3.34
2. 49
1.80

2.95

3 io

2.93
2.76
3.2]
3.37

2. 92

3 ib

2.92
2 75
3 18
3.35
2 48Q
1 7

,117
3. 33
2.49
1.81

2. 95
2.75
3. 17
3 33
2. 50
1.82

2.90
2.77
3. 17
3. 34
2.53
1.82

2.95
2. 79
3. 17
3. 35
2. 54
1.83

2. 95
2,80
3. 1 7
3.35
L82

r

do
do
do
_ do
do
do
do
do

2.70
2.83
o 3.09
2.60
3.31
3.16
3.02
3.54

2.75
2.88
° 3. 12
2.66
3.42
3.27
3.10
3.66

2.78
2.91
3.15
2.70
3.47
3.33
3.19
3.70

2.80
2.97

3.80

2. 83
2. 90
3. 30
' 2. 69
3. 55
3, 42
'3.27
3.79

2. 72
3. 58
3.47
3. 26
3.82

Transportation and public utilities:
Local and suburban transportation
do
Motor freight transportation and storage. do
Telephone communi cation
do
Electric, gas and sanitary services
do

2.35
2.73
2.48
2.85

2.41
2.82
2.56
2.94

2.43
2.86
2.60
2.98

Nondurable poods industries
R\ eluding 'nerttmed"
_-.
Food
and.
kindred
product?
>p
ohacco manufactures. _
Tov H lTn<H products -- -\ippan*! ;i'cl r< Uued products
_
Pap'T and '>]!J<~'^ products

2 51

.V 7:

2. 90
r 2. 81

2
2
2
2

r
>0
4h
74
03

'3 03
'2 H
2 Oh
1 )S

' 3 r11)
3 .J

' 2 32
' 1 1\
1 ^
1 SJ
1 SO
r 1 M

2 hi)

' 2 M<)
' 2 Hh
3 27
' ,-5 4h
' 2 O'l
' 1 S4

I TM

L 79

5! 20
3.35
2. 50
1.79

2.76
2. 92
3.12
2. 66
3.47
3.34
3.18
3.70

2.76
2. 91
3.12
2. 68
3. 45
3. 32
3.10
3.68

2.80
2.91
3. 17
2. 69
3. 54
3.38
3.22
3.76

2.80
2.91
3. 18
2. 69
3.58
3. 40
3.25
3.79

2.78
2.91
3.17
2.07
3.54
3.37
3.17
3.78

2.77
2.92
3. 10
2. 06
3.52
3.37
3. 12
3. 76

2.78
2.94
3. 23
2. 65
3. 54
3.41
3.16
3.77

2.80
2.95
3.25
2. 00
3.51
3.38
3.18
3.75

2.80
2.96
3.28
2. 04
3. 50
3.37
3.19
3.74

2.44
2.84
2. 60
2.97

2.45
2.84
2. 60
2.99

2.44
2.88
2.61
3.01

2.46
2.87
2.60
2.99

2.45
2.89
2.59
3.00

2.42
2.91
2.00
3.00

2.47
2.92
2. 59
3.00

2.48
2.93
2.02
3.02

2.48
2. 92
2.01
3.02

2.50
2.91
2.00
3. 02

2.49
' 2. 95
2. 00
' 3. 04

2.51
2.95
2.02
3.07

2.03
1.94
2.03
2.01
2.03
Wholesale and retail trade§
do
2. 49
2.48
2.37
2.48
Wholesale trade
_
do
2.45
1.83
1.82
1.74
1.80
1.82
Retail trade §
do
Services and miscellaneous:
1.23
1.23
1.23
1.18
1.22
Hotels tourist courts and motels
do
1.34
1.33
1.33
Laundries, cleaning and dyeing plantsAdo
1.30
1.33
r
Revised, p Preliminary. ° Average for 11 mont' is. § Ex cepteati ig and d rink ing p laces,
tSee corresponding note, bottom p. S-13. 9 Includes data for!ndustrie snot sho vvn so par itely.
Digitized ©Effective
for FRASER
Jan. 1964, data exclude earnings of nor ioffi.ce sa esmen a nd are n ot compcirable
with earlier figures.
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/

2.00
2.48
1.80

2.05
2.49
1.84

2.06
2.50
1.85

2.00
2.51
1.85

2.07
2. 52
1.80

2.08
2.53
1.87

2. 08
2.52
1.87

2.08
2. 52
1.87

r

2.08
2 53
L87

2. 10
2. 54
1.88

Nonmanufaeturlng establishments:!
Mining?
Metal mining
Coal miniri or
Crude petroleum and natural gas
Contract construction
Oeneral building contractors
TTeavv construction
Special trade contractors

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

3 33
2 _s
1 79

2.07
3. 54
3.39
3.24

3. 18
r 3. 3f

L83

r

2
2
2
2

K
4i
70
h'l

i 04
2 IS
2 Oh
i li

} 10
2 r)4
2 0«

1 n
l si

1 S2
1 HO
_. ")0

2 (*(i

_. s_*
i .J1
i 3<>
1 S4

2.85
3. 00
3 32

1 25
1.24
1.22
1.20
1.24
1.23
1.22
1.23
1.20
1.27
1.46
1.44
1.44
1.44
1.41
1.34
1.42
1.44
1.41
1.43
cfD erived b y assuini ngthat o vertime lours are paid at t ie rate oi time an one-hal f. AEffectiv _ Jan. it 04, data relate tc n on sup Tvisory workers and are not com parable ivith the
produ ction-wo rker leve Is for ear Her peric ds.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

3-16

1962 j 1963

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

November 1964
1964

1963

Monthly
average

Oct.

Sept.

Jan.

Nov. | Dec

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

3.202
4.680

3.233
4.728

9 785

3.282
4.769
1.13

2 774

! Aug.

Sept.

3. 295
4.787

3. 295
4.807

3. 300
4.812
1.01

127

EMPLOYMENT AND POPULATION—Continued
HOURS AND EARNINGS— Continued
Miscellaneous wages:
Construction wages, 20 cities (ENR): §
Common labor
$ per hr__
Skilled labor
...do
Farm without board or rm 1st of mo
do

2.946
4.348
i 1.01
2 740
* 2.31

Road-building com labor (otrly )
do
LABOR CONDITIONS
Help-wanted advertising, seas, adj t ..1957-59 = 100. .
Labor turnover in manufacturing estab.: f
Accession rate, total. _mo. rate per 100 employees..
Seasonally adjusted
do
New hires
do
Separation rate, total
_
do
Seasonally adjusted
do
Quit
_ _ . d o __
Lavoff
do
Seasonally adjusted
do
Industrial disputes (strikes and lockouts) :
Bednning in month:
Work stoppages
number _ _

3.082
4. 525
1, 05
2 823
J
2 38
1

3.134
4.602

3 139
4 611

2 789

2 748
9 45

9 785
-.
/oo

2 785

99

3 154
4.636
1 14
2 765
2 27

3 169
4. 640

3.169
4.644

2 803

2 764

3.187
4.658
1.14
2 765
2 37

110

109

107

111

112

118

116

117

118

120

118

121

124

123

126

3.9

2. 9
3 6
18

2.5
39
1 4

3.6
39 7
0

3.4
4 0
2 0

3.7
4 0
2 2

3.8
4 0

3.9
3.8

5.1
4. 1

5.1
3.9

2 4

3.9
3 9
2 6

4.4
4. 1

2.5
4.1

4.8
3 9
31

1 7

2.4
3.5
3.9
1.3
1.4
1.6

2.5
3.6
4.0
1.5
1.4
1.7

3.6
3.5
3.9
1.4
1.3
1.6

2.9
4.3

3 8

2.0

3.4
4.2
3.7
2.1
1.4
1.5

M. 5
"3. 6
"3.3
* 4.9
"3.9
T 2.6
' 1.5
» 1. 5

3009
12

410
176

360
134

420
133

340
83

275
342

3.9

301
102

280
78

1, 550

1,340

1,924

4.9

548
2

1, 939

4.1

39

1.4
1.8

560
3

3 134
4.602

4.1

1.4
2.0

In effect during month:
'Work stoppages
number
Workers involved
thous
Man-days idle during month
do__-EMPLOYMENT SERVICE AND UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE
Nonfarm placements
thous
Unemployment insurance programs:
Insured unemployment all programs
do
State Programs:
Initial claims
do
Insured unemployment weekly avg do
Percent of covered employment:^
Unadjusted
_.
Seasonally adjusted©
Beneficiaries weekly average
thous
Benefits r>aid
mil $
Federal employees, insured unemployment
thous
Veterans' program (UCX):
Initial claims
_ _ . _.do _
Insured unemployment weekly avg do
Beneficiaries weekly average
do
Benefits paid
__
.mil. $_
Railroad program:
Applications
thous
Insured unemployment
weekly avg do
v
Benefits paid
mil $

3.134
4.591

4 0

1 7

2 3
18

18

1.1
1.5
1.7

346
96

223
80

132
27

210
60

225
80

220
65

370
100

375
125

360
100

450
163

1,010

1,130

800

1,100

287
81

.8

1.1

500
155

574
153

467
152

336
82

985

1,420

1,410

977

1,309
1 783

1,285
1 806

1 261

4.4

4.3

3.0

957

3 8

3 7

18

2

3.5

2 1
18

1.5
1.9

1 372

3.3

4.0

3 7

2.4
1.8

1.2
2.0

570
218

2,180

1.5

2 1

585
227

660
194

1,930

1,710

572

572

515
409

595
147

2, 320

1, 350

639

554

549

414

478

541

2 2 200

2 1 886

1,848
2 395

1, 181
9 943

1,136
9 050

1,086
1 755

976

1 997

1,238
1 343

937

858

1 447

1 261

1. 125

5.7

5.3
3.9

4.9

4.2
3,8

3.4
3.7

3.1
3.7

3.1
3.6

2.9
3.5

2.5
3.4
943

493

432

443

2 i 667

22 113

2 9 559

1 157
1 333

1 200
1 542

1 865
1 972

3. 1
4 1
1 070
172 0

3.6
4 1
1 127
165 0

4 3
1 524
233 0

4 2
1 997
319 3

4.7

1.2
1.6

4 2

2 408

662
1 445

664
2

3.7

3.8

2

2

1,552

2

908

1 390

2

1,445

2

1, 358

2

1,218

1 525
223 0

1 541
231 2

4 0
1 107
163 1

29

31

28

29

32

34

39

40

38

32

07

n

26

25

24

28
50
47
6.6

29
55
52
7.6

28
42
40
5.7

31
43
38
5.9

29
48
39
5.4

39
60
59
7.6

39
73
67

29
72
71
9.6

28
67
59
8.9

27
57
64
9.7

20
46
48
7.0

25
42
42
6.6

32
44
38
6.2

26
43
41
6.3

25
36
36
5.9

17
62

13
47
8.3

15
41

12
41

11
45

12
47

16
27

6 4

7 5

6 7

8 6

11. 1

10.2

2 015
283 8

38
1,887
292 6

1 678
258 0

1 347
201 5

1 142
183 1

1,108
180 5

1,085
164 5

148 4

7
51

5
45

13
42

8 5

7 4

4 9

38
31
4.9

32

88

5
32
5.2

29

9 9

2,938
7 765
2 042
5 723

3, 056
8 119
2 079
6 040

3,102
7 737
2 038
5 699

3,102
7 920
2, 039
5 881

3, 049
8,326
1,973
6,353

3,149
8 036
1 948
6 088

3,137
8,879
2,006
6 873

3,127
8 879
2 070
6 809

3,175
8.444

13
53

FINANCE
BANKING
Open market paper outstanding, end of mo.:
Bankers' acceptances
-- mil. $
Commercial and finance co paper total
do
Placed through dealers
do
Placed directly (finance paper)
do
Agricultural loans and discounts outstanding of
agencies supervised by the Farm Credit Adm.:
Total end of mo
mil $
Farm mortgage loans:
Federal land banks
do
T./oans to cooperatives
do
Other loans and discounts
do
Bank debits:
Unadjusted:
Total (344 centers)
_
... -. bll. $
New York City
do...
6 other leading centersl
do
Seasonally adjusted:
Totnl (344 centers)
do
New York City
_
do
6 other leading centers^
do
337 other centers
do
Federal Reserve banks, condition, end of mo.:
Assets total 9
mil $
Reserve bank credit outstanding, total 9 -do
Discounts and advances
do
U.S. Government securities
.do
Gold certificate reserves
do
Liabilities, total 9
Deposits, total 9 Member-bank reserve balances
Federal Reserve notes in circulation

3
3
3
3

2, 650 8 2, 890
6 000 8 6 747
2, 088 8 1, 928
3 912 « 4 819

2. 709
7 161
2 0^8
5 063

2
7
2
5

733
869
230
639

2,744
8 170
2 172
5 998

2
6
1
4

3

5, 753

8 6, 403

6 430

3

6 418

6 366

6 403

6 460

6 542

6,627

6,727

6,813

6 940

7,048

7 081

7.084

3, 310
8 840
3 2, 253

3, 259

3,280

3,291

3,406

3,445

3,481

3,516

3,551

3 586

3,620

858

3,333

3,364

848

3 310

2,436

2,290

2,217

2,253

2,261

2,330

2, 405

2,496

2,585

2,667

2,715

2,707

2,656

286.4
118.0
58.5

312.9
129.7
64.6

310.4
130.3
63.1

337.2
136. 9
71.3

296.6
116.7
63.8

357. 1
151.0
74.6

360. 8
153.9
73.5

294. 9
121.1
60.5

342.9
145.8
71.1

349.9
148. 2
72.8

329.6
135.3
68.6

353. 6
151. 2
70.9

362 9
154.5
72.9

319.4
128.3
65.8

' 339. 0
142.9
r
68.0

353. 5
146.1
72.0

329 7
140.1
67 0
122 6

326.7
133.7
69 4
123.6

312 7
125.4
67 3
120 0

333. 0
139. 6
69. 7
123 7

339 9
143. 7
69 6
126.6

316. 1
129.4
65. 5
121. 1

331.6
138. 1
68 4
125.1

350.2
146.0
72.4
131.8

327
135
67
125

334 2
140.2
67 5
126 5

354 0
151. 5
71 4
131 1

338. 1
140. 4
68 8
128. 9

T

350.5
146.0
71.7
132.8

735




840

866

849

815

786

747

8
1
7
0

757

r

782

787

809

351. 6
149.5
70 4
131 7

r

56,020 3 58,028

55, 615

56, 336

57, 848

58, 028

56,389

56, 928

56, 629

57, 101

57 158

57 742

57, 882

57 964

59, 421

59, 643

33, 3902 336,418
38
863
3
30,820 833,593
3
15, 696 3 15,237

34, 302
138
32, 563
15, 309

34, 587
332
32. 758
15,310

35.919
868
33, 667
15, 294

36,418
63
33, 593
15,237

34, 643
364
32, 752
15,231

35, 274
570
33, 169
15,185

35,314
130
33, 770
15, 190

35, 115
116
33. 169
15, 195

36, 066
226
34, 229
15, 176

36, 589
34, 794
15, 185

36, 797
239
35, 051
15, 188

36, 941
185
35,164
15,192

37, 111
95
35. 350
15, 190

37, 902
415
35. 709
lo, 185

3

do

3

do
do
do

3

56, 020 8 58,028

55, 615

56, 336

57, 848

58, 028

56.389

56, 928

56, 629

57, 101

57 158

57 742

57 882

57 964

59 421

59, 643

18, 722 3 18,391
3 17,049
317,454
3
30, 643 8 32,877

18, 093
16, 772
31, 265

18, 187
16, 922
31,472

18, 200
16, 952
32, 290

18,391
17,049
32, 877

18,120
16.983
31,988

18, 532
17, 146
31,899

18, 258
17,060
32, 088

17,913
16,629
32, 177

18 232
16,890
32,411

18 250
16,973
32, 835

18 445
17, 327
33, 109

18 365
1 7, 055
33, 330

18 396
17, 121
33, 590

18,883
17,883
33, 856

29.7

30.4

30.1

30.2

30.3

30.0

29.7

29.5

29. 4

29. 2

28.8

Ratio of gold certificate reserves to deposit and
30.3 !
30.8
829.7
FR note liabilities combined
percent.. 331.8
31.0
l
Revised.
? Preliminary.
Quarterly average.
Excludes persons under extended duration provisions (thous.): 1963—Sept., 36; Oct., 31;
Nov., 20; Dec.,
9; 1964—Jan., 3; Feb., 2; Mar., 1; Apr., 32; May, 54; June, 58; July, 46; Aug., 38;
3
Sept., 38.
End of year.
{Revised back to 1951 to incorporate adjustments as follows: Enlargement of sample;
updated seasonal factors; new weights for component indexes based on labor force in cities
r
2

0 99Q

6 9'^4

3,052
3
735
3
1, 966

3

3

890
747
928
819

covered; and shift of index base to 1957-59 = 100. Monthly data (1948-62) appear on p. 24 of
the Mar. 1964 SURVEY.
©Revisions back to 1959 are available.
tSee corresponding note, bottom p. S-13.
§ Wages as of Nov. 1, 1964: Common labor,
$3.305; skilled labor, $4.815.
cfInsured unemployment as % of average covered employment in a 12-month period.
^Includes Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, Detroit, San Francisco, and Los Angeles.
9 Includes data not shown separately.

November 1964

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

End of year

S-17

1963

Sept.

Oct.

1964
Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

9ft

Oct.

FINANCE—Continued
BANKING— Continued
All member banks of Federal Reserve System,
averages of daily figures :
Reserves held total
mil. $ 120,040
U9,468
Required
do
1572
Excess
_ _ _ do
1304
Borrowings from Federal Reserve banks .. -do
1268
Free reserves do
Weekly reporting member banks of Fed . Res . System ,
condition, Wed. nearest end of yr. or mo.:
Deposits:
65, 843
Demand ad justed c?
mil. $
102, 109
Demand total 9
do
71, 531
Individuals, partnerships, and corp
do
5,125
States and political subdivisions
_. do
4,749
U S Government
do
14,
321
Domestic commercial banks
do 50, 386
Time total 9
- do _
Individuals , partnerships, and corp.:
34, 920
Savings
do
9,221
Othertime do
82, 947
Loans (adjusted), totaled
- do__
35, 351
Commercial and industrial
do
5,928
For purchasing or carrying securities
do
7, 365
To nonbank financial institutions
do__
15,519
Real estate loans
-do. _ _
22, 812
Other loans
do
48, 147
Investments total
- - - do
32, 369
U S Government obligations, total
do._
24, 514
Notes and bonds
do
15, 778
Other securities
.-_
do
Commercial bank credit (last Wed. of mo., except
for June 30 and Dec. 31 call dates), seas. adjusted:!
Totnl loans and investments©
bil. $
LoansO
-- do__
U S. Government securities
do___
Other securities
do
Money and interest rates: §
Bank rates on short-term business loans:
In 19 ctties
percent..
7 other northern and eastern cities

do

120 746 19 945
120 210 19 533
1
412
536
321
1327
1
91
209

20 003
19 596
407
313
94

20 114
19 705
409
376
33

20 746
20 210
536
327
209

20 675
20 248
427
256
171

20 148
19 753
395
304
91

20 213
19 856
357
259
98

20 273
19' 898
375
213
162

'20 219 20 558
19 886 20 170
' 333
388
270
255
78
118

9ft ftfiQ
9ft 9fifi
007

90 1 ^1
41 3

265
132

334
79

331
90

67, 844
104, 335
74, 513
5.338
4,556
13.320
59, 227

61 885
95 237
66, 320
4 902
6 229
12 270
56 711

63 809
90 875
67, 322
4 762
2 304
11 452
57 553

63 950
93 771
69, 001
5 060
2 714
11 569
57 951

67 844
104 335
74, 513
5 338
4 556
13 320
59 227

64 940
90 224
67, 605
4 926
1 545
10 739
60 276

62 565
90 575
65, 460
5 188
3 755
10 810
60 930

62 532
95 811
66, 659
5 349
5 130
12 192
61 446

63 959
91 232
66, 813
5 529
2 948
10 464
62 223

61 472
91 474
64, 312
5 300
4 997
11 218
63 100

62 664
98 717
67, 206
5 405
7 98fi
11 784
63 112

63 674
90 754
66, 397
4 897
3 604
10 441
63 921

CO

AOQ

fi°. 799

QO

079

QQ A7Q

66, 168
5 071
4 r 1 -I

68, 867
5 224

68, 627

1 9 090

19 010

U

R4 44ft

fi4 71 Q

38, 083
13.310
92, 901
38, 793
6,621
8,595
17, 880
23, 809
48, 404
29, 018
23, 127
19, 386

37 342
12 013
87 366
36 145
6,229
7 731
17 455
23 647
47 618
28 367
23 400
19, 251

37 534
12 639
86 598
36 296
5,407
7 243
17 651
24 097
47 156
27 990
23 150
19 166

37, 699
12,796
88 578
37 254
5,852
7 226
17 846
24 874
46 720
27 926
93 328
18 794

38 083
13 310
92 901
38 793
6,621
8 595
17 880
23 809
48 404
29 018
23 127
19, 386

38 131
14 057
89 122
37 195
5,929
7 339
17 991
24 606
46 746
27 759
22 362
18, 987

38 291
14 390
89 875
37 590
5,695
7 511
18 161
24 664
46 Q72
27' 591
23 260
19 381

38 704
14 418
92 002
38 308
6,033
8 179
18 366
25 939
46 371
26 870
22 680
19 501

38 437
14 950
92 208
38 057
5,952
7 881
18 520
26 029
46 472
26 713
92 752
19 759

38 726
15 468
93 658
38 243
6, 598
8 013
18 706
26 010
46 133
26 567
29 5$s
19 566

39 053
15 360
96 022
38' 785
6,903
8 887
is' 936
26 975
46 698
26 621

39 168
15 943
94 568
38 498
6,384
8 064
19 120
27 125
45 764
25 701
22 104
20 063

228.3
133.9
65.2
29.2

246.5
149.4
62.1
35.0

241.5
145.4
62.2
33.9

241.2
146.1
60.8
34.3

244.2
148.4
61.4
34.4

246.5
149.4
62.1
35.0

246.7
151.0
60.8
34.9

248.4
151.8
61.2
35.4

251.4
153. 9
62.1
35.4

251. 8
155.4
60.8
35.6

253. 5
157. 3
60.3
35.9

35.00
4 78
25.01
2
5.32

25.01
2 4 79
25.01
2 5 30

5.01
4 81
5.01
5.30

a

Discount rate, end of year or month (N.Y.F.R.
3.00
3.50
Bank)
.percent
34.05 84.26
Federal intermediate credit bank loans
do
3
5. 56 35.50
Federal land bank loans
do
Home mortgage rates (conventional 1st mortga^es) : *
85.84
New home purchase (U.S. avg.)
percent
35 98
Existing home purchase (U S avg )
do
Open market rates, New York City:
3
3.01
33.36
Bankers' acceptances (prime, 90 days).__do
3
3.26 33.55
Commercial paper (prime. 4-6 months). .do
33.07 83.40
Finance Co. paper placed directly, 3-6 mo__do
34.50 3 4. 50
Stock Exchange call loans, going rate
do
Yield on U.S. Government securities (taxable): 3
3-month bills (rate on new issue)
percent.. 2. 778 33.157
33.57 33.72
3_5 year issues
_ _
_ do Savings deposits, balance to credit of depositors:
N. Y. State savings banks, end of yr .or mo-.mll. $.. 23,917 25, 693
452
539
U.S. postal savings 1
do

5.00
4.76
5.04
5.29

4.99
4.77
5.02
5.29

c noc

fiQQ

40 061
16 464

%
ft1 ^
on nq-i

OQ QQ(\

20 539

256. 3 ' 254. 5 ' 258. 7
160. 0 ' 159. 7 r 161. 5
'58.4
'60.0
'60.2
36.4
36.3
'37.0

261.7
163.0
61.2
37.5

20 077

309
i ftfi

39 477 39 873
16' 000 15 854
97 7H4
39' 953
6, 796
8 558
19* 533
26 982
4g 094
27' 207
91 ' 955
20 887

99* 49ft

r
r

^ftfi
491

6,505
8°,4ft
1 Q onn

27 124
4fi QO-I

9fi °>Q9

5, 867
8

f)00

10 71Q

27 ^51
4- 0 1 0
9tt Q98
9Q 890

260.8
163.1
59.9
37.8

4.98
4 72
5.01
5 31

4.99
4 74
5.03
5 29

3.50
4.44
5.50

3.50
4.50
5.50

3.50
4.51
5.50

3.50
4.53
5.50

3.50
4.54
5.50

3.50
4.62
5.50

3.50
4.63
5.50

3.50
4.70
5.50

3.50
4.73
5.50

3.50
4.74
5.50

3.50
4.74
5.50

3.50
4.74
5.50

3.50
4.75
5.50

5.81
5.94

5.82
5.93

5.82
5.97

5.80
5.98

5.83
5.98

5.81
5.95

5.79
5.94

5.79
5.92

5.77
5.92

5.76
5 89

5.76
5 93

5.77
5 90

5.77
5.93

3.63
3.88
3.63
4.50

3.63
3.88
3.72
4.50

3.71
3.88
3.75
4.50

3.63
3.96
3.84
4.50

3.70
3.97
3.82
4.50

3.75
3.88
3.76
4.50

3.75
4.00
3.83
4.50

3.80
3.91
3.80
4.50

3.75
3.89
3.76
4.50

3.75
4.00
3.88
4.50

3.75
3.96
3.81
4.50

3.75
3.88
3.76
4.50

3.75
3.89
3.75
4.50

3.75
4.00
3.91
4.50

3.379
3.88

3.453
3.91

3.522
3.97

3.523
4.04

3.529
4.06

3.532
4.02

3.553
4.15

3.484
4.18

3.482
4.07

3.478
4.03

3.479
3.99

3.506
3.99

' 3. 527
4.03

3.575
4.04

25,154
466

25, 236
461

25, 368
456

25, 693
452

25, 940
447

26, 089
436

26,411
430

26, 421
425

26, 585
421

26, 900
415

27, 051
411

27, 272
407

27, 606
403

27, 713
397

69 203
53, 597
22, 189
13 638
3 354
14,416

68 786
53, 552
22, 271

68 913
53, 795
22, 471

69 816
54,382
22, 830

70 945
55, 120
23, 255

3 328
14, 748

3 364
14,902

71,907
55, 914
23, 702
13 730
3 395
15,087

72, 456
56, 496
24, 024
13 813
3 426
15, 233

73, 069
57, 055
24, 251
13 923
3,466
15,415

73, 495
57, 446
24, 295
14 046
3,493
15, 612

3.50

CONSUMER CREDIT*
(Short- and Intermediate- term)
Installment credit, total
Automobile paper
Other consumer goods paper
Personal loans
By type of holder:
Financial institutions total
Commercial banks
Sales finance companies
Credit unions
Consumer finance companies
Other
Retail outlets total
Department stores...
Furniture stores
Automobile dealers
Other

63 164
48, 034
19, 540

69 890
53, 745
22, 199

66 538
51, 718
21, 725

67 088
52, 257
21, 971

67 746
52, 695
22, 107

69 890
53, 745
22, 199

3 246
12, 643

3 389
14, 391

3 377
13,914

3 400
14, 041

3 407
14, 135

3 389
14, 391

41, 782
19, 005
12, 194
4,902
4 131
1,550
6,252
3,013
1,073
345
1,821
15 130
"do"" 5 456
4,690
do
766
do

46, 992
21,610

45, 687
21,145
13, 073
5,458
4,381
1,630
6,031
3,025
1,009
321
1,676
14 820
5 844
4,927
917

46,161
21,391
13, 187
5,529
4,425
1,629
6,096
3,077
1,015
325
1,679
14 831
5 830
4,952
878

46, 462
21. 486
13, 302
5,569
4,461
1,644
6,233
3,172
1,032
326
1,703
15 051
5 894
4,987
907

46, 992
21,610
13, 523
5,622
4,590
1,647
6,753
3,427
1,086
328
1,912
16 145
5 959
5,047
912

do..
do
do
do
do
__do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

5,622
4,590
1,647
6,753
3,427
1,086
328
1,912
16 145
5 959
5,047
912

Si* n L a ™me Tloa s total"
Commercial banks
_
Other financial institutions.
T
Revised.
1
2
3
Average for Dec.
Quarterly average.
Monthly average.
cf For demand deposits, the term "adjusted" denotes demand deposits other than domes tic commercial interbank and U.S. Government, less cash items in process of collection:
for loans, exclusive of loans to domestic commercial banks and after deduction of valuation
reserves (individual loan items are shown gross: i.e., before deduction of valuation reserves).
9 Includes data not shown separately.
tData have been revised as follows: Commercial bank credit (seas. adj. only), back to 1948; consumer credit—unadj., back to 1962;




1 °. 7fifi

1 ^ 4^1

3 335
14,479

3 321
14, 552

47,454 47, 653 48, 191 48, 824 49, 543 50, 082 50, 583 50, 937
23, 527
21, 799 21,919 22, 224 22, 559 22, 907 23, 176 23, 389
H 47K
13, 788 13, 802 13, 893 14, 027
6,204
6, 283
6,014
5,584
6,109
5,668
5,607
5,776
5,889
4,797
4,845
4,701
4,748
4,592
4,597
4,595
4,628
4,657
1, 729
1,718
1,693
1,690
1,654
1,667
1,665
1,670
1,692
6,472
6, 509
6,414
6,371
6,297
6,142
6,098
6,191
6,296
3,332
3,371
3,267
3,063
3,231
3,044
2,949
3,106
3,182
1,044
1, 048
1,037
1,028
1,022
1,065
1,047
1,013
1,020
363
365
355
360
334
328
340
330
348
1,733
1, 725
1,750
1,841
1,742
1,757
1,772
1,732
1,746
15 606 15 234 15 118 15 434 15 8°5 15 993 15 960 16 014 16 049
6 299
6 233
6 218
P> 354
5 958
6 002
5 900
6 048
6 206
5,335
5, 361
5,313
5,036
5,152
5,329
4,991
5,076
5,230
964
922
920
993
896
889
909
926
976
seas, adj., back to 1960. Revisions are available as follows: Commercial bank credit—
1948-63, in the June 1964 Fed. Res. Bulletin; consumer credit—1962 unadj., in the Nov. 1963
Fed. Res. Bulletin; 1960-62 seas, adj., on p. 28 of the June 1964 SURVEY.
©Adjusted to
exclude interbank loans.
§ For bond yields, see p. S-20.
*New series (FHLBB); data prior to Dec. 1962 not available.
KData are as of end of
consecutive 4-week periods ending in month indicated, except June figure which is as of June
30 (end of fiscal year).
47, 300
21,630

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-18
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962 | 1963
Monthly
average

November 1964

1963
Sept.

Oct.

1964

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

FINANCE—Continued
CONSUMER CREDIT*— Continued
Total outstanding, end of year or month — Con.
Noninstallment credit— Continued
Charge accounts, total
mil. $.Other retail outlets
Credit cards
Service credit

.-

Installment credit extended and repaid:
Unadjusted:
Extended total
Automobile paper
Other consumer goods paper
All other
Repaid total
Automobile paper
Other consumer good*? paper
All other
Seasonally adjusted:
Extended total
Automobile paper
All other
Repaid total
AUIO O 11 p \

-

5,684
927

do
-do
-do

4,252
505
3,990

5,871
895
4, 456
520
4, 315

4,833
620
3,667
546
4,143

4,898
639
3,743
516
4,103

4,999
667
3,817
515
4,158

5,871
895
4,456
520
4,315

5,339
782
4,014
543
4,367

4,805
655
3,590
560
4,471

4,634
614
3,485
535
4,482

4,833
610
3,667
556
4,553

5,099
626
3,910
563
4,520

5,238
610
4,028
600
4,522

5,240
576
4,008
656
4,502

5,231
588
3,960
683
4,484

5,223
694
3 928
671
4,472

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

4,594
1,650
1,307
1,637
4,218
1,456
1,245
1,517

5.068
,834
,417
,817
,593
,613
,320
1,659

4,755
1,524
1,384
1,847
4,563
1,618
1,289
1,656

5,487
2,040
1,547
1,900
4,948
1,794
1,404
1,750

4,981
1,734
1,517
1,730
4,543
1,598
1,316
1,629

5,974
1,767
2,094
2,113
4,924
1,675
1,374
1,875

4,784
1,689
1,380
1,715
4.932
1.699
1,508
1,725

4,552
1,686
1,212
1,654
4, 597
1,604
1,383
1,610

5,322
1,983
1,488
1,851
5,079
1,783
1,504
1 792

5,578
2,127
1,495
1,956
4,991
1,768
1,470
1,753

5,584
2.137
1,547
1,900
4,846
1,712
1,424
1,710

5,949
2,245
1.632
2,072
5,155
1,798
1,501
1,856

5,747
2 166
1 543
2,038
5,165
1 844
1 460
1 861

5,519
1 984
1,540
1,995
4,960
1 757
1,430
1 773

5, 393
1 830
1, 592
1,971
5,002
1 786
1,469
1 747

5,093
1,730
1,425
1,938
4,752
1,659
1,347
1,746

5,311
1,910
,457
,944
,780
,676
,362
1,742

4,979
1,792
1.432
1,755
4,596
1.638
1,324
1,634

5,272
1,914
1,523
1,835
4,812
1,707
1,384
1,721

5,276
1,888
1 493
1,895
4,848
1 684
1 441
1,723

5,421
1,953
1 578
1,890
4,842
1 716
1,395
1,731

5 480
1 942
1 665
1 873
4 956
1 735
1 468
1 753

5,371
1,961
1 544
1 866
4,959
1 759
1 453
1,747

5 552
2,023
1 589
1,940
5,059
1 776
1 483
1,800

5, 399
1,962
1,537
1,900
5,029
1,768
1,486
1,775

5 541
1 996
1 546
1 999
5 058
1 781
1 448
1 829

5 529
2 017
1 570
1 942
5 094
1 789
1 496
1,809

5 617
2 024
1 f88
2 005
5 104
1 802
1 491
1,811

11, 652
4,423
9, 549 10, 740
2,102 -6,318

9,617
9,812
-194

10, 503
6,628
10, 069
9,848
433 — 3 219

11,525
9,393
2,132

8,334
12 168
9 390 10, 163
—
1 829
2 778

10,652
9,533
1 119

14, 286
4 745
10, 290 10 217
3, 996 — 5 472

10, 552
11,218
— 666

11.739
9,700
2 039

do
do
do
do

--_- "-

All other

,

do

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FINANCE
Net cash transactions with the publlc:d*
8,850
9,381
Receipts 3from
mil. $
9,323
9,763
Pavment' to
do
-472
-382
Excess of receipts or payments ( — )
do
Seasonally adjusted quarterly totals: §
"Receipts..
do
Payments
do
Excess of receipts, or payments (— )
do
Budget receipts and expenditures:
8 983
Receipts total
.. __
do
7,059
7,293
Receipts netf
-do
103
105
Customs
do
4 340
Individual income taxes
do
1,821
1,897
Corporation income taxes
-- _-do__ 1,108
1,346
Emplovment taxes
do
1,612
1,650
Other internal revenue and receipts
do
7 659
Expenditures, totall
do
796
852
Interest on public debt
do ...
439
Veterans' services and benefits
do
4,
425
National defense
_ _ d o 2,052 4,414
2,189
All other expenditures
__ _do
Public debt and guaranteed obligations:
Gross debt (direct), end of mo., total..
bll. $.. 1 303. 47 1309.35

28, 472
30 395
-1,923

n

790

10, 095
104
5 OCA
3,603
1,098
1,567
7 815
856
438
4,215
2,334

4 371
3,400
123
1 651
557
468
1,571
8 776
865

1O 37Q

7,131
106

8,803
103
3

396
1,440
1,428

FQ9

28, 438
29, 341
-903

29, 668
30, 491
-823

28, 976
29 962
-986
12, 235

13 961

101
3 873
583
404
1,619
8 492
925
481
4.348
2,819

87
6 975

108
3 991

5,895

100
5 398

2, 835
1,887
7,521
8HQ
450
4, 365
1,946

1, 579
1,629
7 871
907
455
4,378
2, 143

1, 765
7,930
895
415
4,564
2, 071

2, 864
1, 672
7 511
899
449
4, 666
1, 523

9,559

4,710
2,750

863
454
4,081
2,386

3,726
1,147
1,820
8 OQQ
903
455
4,515
2,442

306. 64

306. 44

308. 22

309. 35

308. 58

310. 36

309. 59

307. 60

302. 66
Interest bearing, total
_
do
258. 01
Publlcissues _ _
do. _.
13.48
Held by U.S. Govt. investment accts.do
44.65
Special Issues
do
3.97
Nonlnterest bearing
do
Guaranteed obligations not owned by U.S. Treas1
.
5
2
.69
1.74
ury end of month
bil $
U.S. savings bonds:
i
47.
87
48.74
i 49. 03
Amount outstanding, end of month
do
.36
.35
.40
Sales series E and H.
do
.47
.42
.42
Redemptions
__do
LIFE INSURANCE

302. 46
259. 18
13.76
43.28
3.98

305. 21
261. 56
14. 14
43.66
4.13

304. 50
262. 58

306. 13
263. 25
14. 39
42. 88
4.22

305. 40
262. 18
14. 23
43.22
4. 18

303. 38
261. 38
13. 93
42.00
4.22

1299.21 1305.21
1 255. 7S 1261.56
i 11.99 i 14. 14
i 43. 43 i 43. 66
14.26
14.13

Institute of Life Insurance:
Assets, total, all U.S. life Insurance companies §
V.11

o>

Bonds (book value), domestic and foreign,
total
bil $
U S Government
do
State county municipal (U S )
do
Public utility ( U S )
do
Railroad ( U S )
do

7 784

304. 09
260. 54
14.01
43. 55
4.12

41.92
4.08

p 4,810

5 131
3, 487
120
1 549
646
624
2,192
7 410
957

9 662

11 766

112
4 967

122
4 924
3,950
1, 148
1,621
8 450
927

p 5,677
"2,435

449
3,542
2,946

2, 338
1,826
8 083
913
479
'T 3, 784
2, 991

311.53

311. 71

311.18

314. 09

315.61

315.64

307. 21
262. 18
14. 16
45.03
4. 32

307. 36
260. 73
14. 34
46.63
4.36

306. 86
201. 12
14. 02
45.74
4.33

309. 62
262. 18
14. 20
47.44
4.46

311.12
263. 76
14. 30
47.37
4.49

311.22
264. 96

v 1, 855
p 9, 513
p 948
p gQQ

4RQ
r
r

4, 194
2, 846

46.26
4.42

.71

.72

.74

.76

.79

.82

.80

.80

.81

.82

.85

.89

.82

48.82
.39
.42

48.93
.33
.34

49.03
.36
.39

49.11
.47
.53

49.21
.41
.43

49. 26
.40
.48

49.30
.38
.45

49.37
. 37
. 41

49.44
.38
.45

49.50
.39
.47

49.57
.36
.41

49.63
.36
.43

49.70
. 37
.41

i 133 29

138 76

139. 61

140 21

140 90

141.87

142. 53

143. 07

143. 68

144. 31

H4. 96

145 82

146. 48

i 63. 72
16.17
14.03
116.51
13.48
i 28. 64

65.79
5.82
3.89
16.46
3.47
30 33

66.08
5.83
3.89
16.47
3.46
30.62

66.36
5.79
3.89
16.48
3.45
30 98

66.10
5.76
3.88
16.43
3.43
30 94

66.63
5.78
3.86
16.44
3.42
31.41

66.79
5.80
3.86
Ifi. 42
3.42
31.46

66.76
5.73
3. 85
16.44
3.41
31.51

66. 91
5.69
3.85
16.43
3.41
31.64

67.11
5.73
3.83
16.47
3.40
31.76

67. 12
5.63
3.82
16.47
3.39
31.90

67.69
5.76
3.81
16.51
3.41
32.18

67.74
5.76
3.82
16.49
3.41
32. 22

5.77
2. 35
3.32
51. 13
47.27
4.38
6.77
1.27
6.43

5.85
2.36
3.39
51.44
47. 52
4.39
6.82
1.28
6.53

5.90
2.37
3.43
51.81
47.82
4.40
6. 87
1.17
6.61

5.94
2.39
3.44
52. 12
48.08
4.42
6.91
1. 18
6.64

6.02
2.42
3.49
52.47
48.38
4.44
6.96
1.26
6.71

6 06
2.48
3.47
52.83
48.71
4.45
6 95
1.25
6.60

6.13
2.53
3.49
53.17
49.01
4.46
6.99
1.35
6.64

838. 2
364. 0
72.1
12.1
77.4
146.6
165.4

938.0
397.6
81.3
13.8
82.5
167.3
195.5

885.5
386. 5
75. 5
13.7
79.6
158. 5
171.7

830.2
356.9
72.0
13.7
75.0
147.8
164.8

917.4
377.7
78.1
14.4
79.5
165.7
202.0

857.8
370.4
69.1
11.9
82.8
150.5
173.1

840.7
355. 9
66.5
12.1
77.1
143.4
185.7

Stocks (book value), domestic and foreign, total
5.74
5.56
16 30
5 58
5 68
5 56
bil $
2.35
2.29
2.31
12.18
2.30
2.34
Preferred ( U S )
do
3.29
3.18
14.03
3.17
3.25
3.18
Common (U S )
do
50. 83
49.54
49.23
146.90
49.81
50.54
Mortgage loans total
do
47.01
45.80
46.06
45.52
i 43. 50
46. 75
Nonfarm
do
4.37
4.36
4.34
4.37
14.11
4.35
Real estate
do
6.73
6.62
6 65
i 6 23
6 58
6 69
Policy loans and premium notes
do
1.28
1.34
1.32
1.34
i 1.46
1.44
Cash
do
6.29
6.11
6.11
5.92
i 4. 57
6 10
Other assets
do
Payments to policyholders and beneficiaries in
885. 8
731.3 1, 083. 0
777.1
835.7
860.7
798.5
U S total
mi] $
400. 3
368. 1
307.5
323 2
350.7
324.6
369.7
Death payments
do
78.7
70.6
67.4
59,5
63.8
67.4
73.1
Matured endowments
do
13.1
12.6
11.5
11.8
12.9
12.6
14.8
Disability payments
do
93.2
71.9
71.9
76.0
69.8
75.1
74.4
Annuity payments
do
151.5
143.7
149.4
127.1
147.7
163. 5
149.1
Surrender values .__ .
do
149.5
183. 5
145.9
165.0
181.9
387.5
Policy dividends
do
180.4
T
p
1
Revised.
Preliminary.
End of year; assets of life insurance companies are
for net
annual statement values.
JSee similar note on p. S-17.
cfOther than borrowing.
actions.
§Revisions available upon request are as follows: Net cash transactions with the public
adj.), 1962-lst qtr. 1963; assets all life insurance cos., Jan.-July 1963.
Digitized for(seas,
FRASER



10 525 "14, 438

6,580

28, 162
30, 645
-2,483

receipts and total expenditures reflect exclusion of certain interfund trans-

SUKVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964
1962

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1963

Monthly
average

S-19
1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

FINANCE—Continued
LIFE INSURANCE-Continned
Life Insurance Agency Management Association:
Insurance written (new pald-for Insurance) : t
Value estimated total
mil. $_.
Ordinary
_
do
Group and wholesale
do
Industrial
do
Premiums collected :J
Total life insurance premiums
Ordinary
Group and wholesale
_.
Industrial
.
_.

do —
do
do_ .
do

6,631
4,686
1,358
587

7,455
5,284
1,574
596

7,361
5,099
1,662
600

8,406
5,996
1,764
646

7,537
5,548
1,388
601

9,281
6,096
2,651
534

6,932
5,070
1,350
512

7,563
5,336
1,609
618

8,553
6,124
1,798
631

9,090
6,308
2,174
608

7,987
5,913
1,427
647

8,917
6,155
2,140
622

7,695
5,836
1,286
573

7,791
5,543
1,643
605

8,000
5,578
1,834
588

1,052
778
155
120

1,134
847
169
117

1,072
802
163
107

1,162
881
172
109

1,075
817
152
105

1,376
946
209
221

1,175
892
176
107

1,153
875
166
112

1,195
908
180
107

1,164
884
176
103

1,144
861
175
108

1,183
890
191
102

1,188
893
188
107

1,163
868
188
108

1,126
840
184
101

15, 583 15, 582
107
-23
28, 139 28, 416
2,094
1,749

15, 513
94
28. 142
2,489

15, 512
55
56,294
2,404

15, 462
15
84, 438
2,011

15,461
109
28, 334
2,357

15,462
49
56, 307
1,813

15, 463
-21
28, 155
1,855

15, 461
-48
4
2,379

15,462
43
28, 146
2,082

15, 460
11
0
1,799

15,463
3
28, 230
2,362

MONETARY STATISTICS
Gold and silver:
Gold:
Monetary stock, U.S. (end of yr. or mo.) .mil. $._ 115,978 115, 513 15, 582q
-66
-21
Net release from earmark J
do
Exports . _
__ thous. $ 31, 747 16, 982 56, 286
12, 578
1,321
3,701
Imports
do
Production world total
South Africa
Canada
United States
Silver:
Exports
Imports
Price at New York
Production:
Canada
Mexico
United States

2 107. 9
74.4
12.1
4.5

>112.5
80.0
11.6
4.3

80.9
11.5

82.0
12.2

81.6
11.7

78.6
10.8

78.7
10.7

79.9
9.8

84.9
10.3

82.3
11.6

83.4
10.7

85.4
10.8

86.9
11.3

87.2

1,262

3,480

1. 084

5,910
1.279

2,945
6,798
1.293

5,756
7,178
1.293

11, 439
4,658
1.293

3,780
6,433
1.293

5,230
6,638
1.293

7,010
6,189
1.293

4,623
6, 007
1.293

11,310
3,097
1.293

3,883
7,168
1.293

4,672
5,010
1.293

6,341
6,707
1.293

6,466
5,184
1.293

thous. fine oz_. 2,566
3,437
do
43,029
..
do

2,487
3,286
3,843

2,285
3,245
3.707

2,707
2,542
3,218

2,890
3,489
3,682

2,263
3,373
3,593

2.550
3,321
3,000

1,986
3,924
4,150

2,224
3,049
3,776

2,372
3,444
3,996

2,673 ' 2, 708 2,423
2,839
3,579
3,974
4,879 3,603

3,787

135.3

137.7

35.9

36.2

37.2

37.7

36.2

36.3

36.8

36.9

37.2

37.7

37.8

38.0

38.2

• 146. 2 • 150. 6
» 30.1 « 31.5
» 116. 1 « 119. 0
« 91.1 • 105. 5
«5.9
»5.9

150.6
31.9
118.6
108.3
6.6

152.5
32.1
120.4
109.5
5.3

154.8
32.6
122.1
110.2
4.4

157.2
33.1
124.1
111.0
5.2

157.8
32.4
125.4
113,2
4.2

153.8
32.3
121.5
114.6
4.8

152.9
32.6
120.3
115.7
6.1

155.0
32.7
122.3
116.7
4.2

152.4
33.0
119.4
118.1
6.9

153.6
33.3
120.3
119.2
7.8

155.2
33.7
121.5
120.1
7.0

155.1
33.8
121.3
121.1
6.4

156.9
33.8
123.1
122.0
6.6

151.6
31.9
119.7
108.1

152.3
32.0
120.3
109.3

153.5
32.3
121.2
111.1

153.2
32.4
120.7
112.3

153.8
32.6
121.2
113.9

153.8
32.7
121.1
115.1

154.2
32.9
121.3
115.7

154.5
33.0
121.5
116.4

154.5
33.3
121.3
117.4

155.6
33.4
122.1
118.5

156.7
33.5
123.3
119.4

157.2
33.7
123.5
120.6

158.0
33.8
124.2
121.7

44.3
84.8
44.6
29.0

46.8
96.9
46.7
29.9

46.2
87.2
48.4
30.1

43.6
80.7
46.0
29.0

46.3
89.0
47.5
29.8

47.1
92.1
47.8
30.6

44.8
86.2
45.4
29.5

46.7
91.6
46.9
30.1

49.1
95.5
49.3
31.6

46.8
90.9
47.6
30.4

47.5
94.5
47.1
30.5

49.6
100.2
49.1
31.2

47.1
92.8
47.1
30.6

48.0
97.0
49.0
30.7

4, 871

4,785
417
97

5,461
397
103

5,121
341
85

6,121
400
108

•234

96
153
606
938
204
129
184

55
194
636
1,117
145
160
265

61
162
630
1,022
70
174
262

93
194
765
960
217
200
325

6 167
•358
6325

202
362
312

171
363
370

152
416
323

227
553
361

6 111

114
365
607

109
807
570

111
822
489

150
945
622

2,164

3,131

2,410

2,600

529

532

660

542

2,486

4,199

mil $
do
do
do
thous. $
do
_dol. per fine oz
.

Currency In circulation, end of yr. or mo

bil. $..

Money supply and related data (avg. of daily fig.) :J
Unadjusted for seas, variation:
Total money supply
bil. $..
Currency outline banks
do
Demand deposits
do
Time deposits adjustedl
do
U 8 Government deposits
do
Adjusted for seas, variation:
Total money supply
Currency outside banks
Demand deposits
Time deposits adjusted^

-

3

6,208

do
do
do
do

Turnover of demand deposits except Interbank and
U.S. Govt., annual rates, seas, adjusted:
Total (344 centers)
ratio of debits to deposits..
New York City
..
do
6 <"»ther centers cf
do
337 other reporting centers
do

41.5
77.8
41.2
27.7

13, 388
3,400
1.293

15, 462

1.293

PROFITS AND DIVIDENDS (QTRLY.)
Manufacturing corps. (Fed. Trade and SEC):
«4,430
Net profit after taxes, all industries
mil. $
• 342
Food and kindred products. . do
• 88
Textile mill products
do
Lumber and wood products (except furniture)
•41
mil. $__
Paper and allied products
do
•157
•560
Chemicals and allied products
do
•809
Petroleum refining
do
•145
Stone, clay, and glass products .-_
do
•133
Primary nonferrous metal
do..
•ISO
Prlmarviron and steel
do
Fabricated metal products (except ordnance,
machinery, and transport, equip.)
mil. $_. •152
•327
Machinerv (except electrical)
do
«305
Elec. machinery, equip., and supplies
do
Transportation equipment (except motor
6
110
vehicles, etc.). _ _ .
_..
mil $
6
572
Motor vehicles and equipment
do
•508
All other manufacturing industries _
do

6

6362

•88
«62
•158

6

607
6

958
6 148
8 141

6640
8
510

Dividends paid (cash), all industries. __
do
• 2, 320 6 2, 467
Electric utilities, profits after taxes (Federal Re6546
serve) t
mil. $.. •516
Transportation and communications (see pp. S-23
and 8-24).
SECURITIES ISSUED
Securities and Exchange Commission: J
Estimated gross proceeds, total . . .. mil $
By type of security:
Bonds and notes, total...
do
Corporate..
do_
Common stock
_ _ _ do
Preferred stock
do

2,496
2,352

2,635

1,673

2,977

2,117

2,521
2,852
1,586
1,958
747
992
784
732
906
109
91
85
81
106
35
5
34
54
29
r
3
Revised.
1 End of year.
Estimated; excludes U.S.S.R., other Eastern European
countries, China Mainland, and North Korea.
3 Effective Aug. 1962 for silver in commercial bar form (priced H cent higher than on former basis; Mo cent higher effective Nov. 15,
1962).
4 Based on refinery production (U.S. Bu of Mint data); not comparable with
later figures shown, which are from Amer. Bu. of Metal Statistics.
« Average of daily
figures.
6 Quarterly average.
« Corrected.




2,312

2,482

2,022

2,121

4,930

2,267

3,056

2,229 2,360
1,933
2,031
2,261 « 4, 070
3,559
2,119
2,686
621
1,376
863
714
863
1,008
1,091
668
683
53
87
95
80
1,349
167
98
289
65
30
27
8
3
23
50
57
82
64
tRevisions will be shown later as follows: Insurance written for Jan.-Apr. 1903 (all series)
and 1962 (total and ordinary); premiums collected, Jan-July 1963; profits of electric utilities,
1962; securities issued, 1961-62. Revisions back to 1947 for money supply and related data are
available in the June 1964 Fed. Res. Bulletin; these revisions result from adjustments to new
benchmarks and from revisions of seasonal factors beginning 1955.
§Or increase in earmarked gold (—).
\ Time deposits at all commercial banks other than
those due to domestic commercial banks and the U.S. Govt.
d"Includes Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, Detroit, San Francisco, and Los Angeles.

SUEVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-20
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1964

1963

1963

Monthly
average

November 1964

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

FINANCE—Continued
SECURITIES ISSUED— Continued
Securities and Exchange Commission}:— Continued
Estimated gross proceeds— Continued
By type of Issuer:
Corporate total 9
mil $
Manufacturing
do
Extractive (mining)
do
PuMtc utility
do
Railroad
do
Communication
do
Financial and real estate
do

892
225
8
227
54
24
285

812
203
22
175
7
31
311

1,593
387
922

3,387
2,449
767

1,441

877

801

1,292
720
572
63
86

716
455
262
81
80

620
307
313
72
109

900
393

922
222

767
458

448
5,458
1,138
4.475

466
5,388
1,146
4,431

451
5,314
1,114
4,395

465
5,207
1,077
4,281

5,241
1 145
4,231

94.6
110 3

94.7
111.6

94.9
111.8

95.2
112.1

95.3
111.8

95.1
111 0

95.1
110.8

84.10

83 84

84.38

84.70

84.70

84.59

84 31

84.37

230 97
213. 65

253 06
240. 93

288 43
228 37

257 85
236 45

242 25
229. 17

247 56
227. 28

197. 81
186. 44

221 98
211 69

280 62
248 73

226 21
209.23

244 06
232. 30

282 05
222 06

252 29
231 22

235 66
221. 26

238 63
218. 63

190. 38
178. 75

212 29
201 31

234.32

284. 85

226. 12

212. 95

226. 94

200. 45

215.15

190. 12

166.90

205. 15

222. 93

4.54

4.55

4.56

4.55

4.56

4.58

4.59

4.59

4.58

4.57

4.57

4.57

4 32
4 43
4 51
4.83

4.33
4 44
4 54
4.84

4
4
4
4

4
4
4
4

4
4
4
4

36
46
56
83

4.38
4 47
4 56
4.83

4
4
4
4

40
49
59
85

4 41
4 50
4 60
4.85

4 41
4 51
4 60
4.85

4 40
4 50
4 58
4.83

4.41
4.49
4.57
4.82

4
4
4
4

4
4
4
4

4 46
4 44
4 65

4 47
4 44
4 66

4.47
4 45
4 68

4 48
4 49
4 68

4 50
4 51
4 gg

4 48
4 51
4 67

4 49
4 51
4 67

4 53
4 53
4 69

4.54
4.53
4 69

4 54
4 55
4 70

4 52
4 54
4 68

4.52
4.54
4.65

4 52
4 53
4 65

4 53
4 52
4 66

3 18
3.23

3.19
3.27

3 24
3.32

3.31
3.41

3 26
3.34

3. 13
3.23

3 17
3.17

3 32
3.32

3 26
3.29

3.16
3.21

3 20
3.20

3 19
3.18

3.19
3.20

3 26
3.25

3.26

4.00

4.04

4.07

4.10

4.14

4.15

4.14

4.18

4.20

4.16

4.13

4.13

4.14

4.16

4.16

892
271
17
235
19
109
158

1,020
295
18
222
36
91
260

871
287
6
79
51
40
358

1,116
247
18
278
17
46
453

891
226
17
174
27
16
345

1 459
531
2
203
44
65
426

985
166
54
137
30
159
335

710
128
10
161
35
84
113

805
165
30
195
24
36
329

2,234
195
45
174
48
1,385
270

1,155
217
14
501
25
27
232

1,461
374
20
271
22
269
459

1,604
716
713

1,615
601
842

802
347
452

1,861
394
1,282

1,226
333
688

853
357
483

1,497
474
1 006

1 312
413
810

1 316
399
844

2,696
1,444
1 204

1,112
367
660

] , 595
383
900

875

1 007

862

1,101

879

1 444

972

702

796

2 215

1,141

687
471
216
63
126

749
450
299
127
130

730
373
357
67
65

912
368
544
88
100

606
354
252
61
212

1 098
674
424
30
316

845
473
372
43
85

523
330
193
17
162

677
341
336
42
77

2 094
1,788
306
37
83

953
662
292
72
116

713
397

842
457

452
283

1,282
427

688
613

483
259

1,006
267

810
470

844
593

1 204
869

660
515

U05
Cash on hand and in banks
-mil.$__
i 4, 149
Customers' debit balances (net)
do
*
1,
216
Customers' free credit balances (net)
do
i 2, 820
Money borrowed
_ _ _ _ do

U61
i 5, 541
U,210
i 4, 481

431
5,356
1,180
4,169

423
5,524
1,176
4,251

478
5,621
1,211
4,485

461
5.541
1 210
4 481

464
5,546
1,262
4,251

465
5,405
1,199
4,191

474
5,387
1,231
4,156

458
5,531
1 165
4 428

Bonds
Prices:
Standard <fc Poor's Corporation:
Industrial, utility, and railroad (Al-f issues):
Composite (10 bonds) d"__-dol. per $100 bond. . 96.2
112.1
Domestic municipal (15 bonds)
do

96.8
111.3

95.9
110.7

95.9
109.9

95.9
108.5

95.4
109 5

95.3
111. 2

95.7
112.3

95.2
109.9

86.94

86.31

85.77

85.50

85.03

84 64

84.42

84.60

144. 14
148. 83

145. 04
137. 82

120 86
113 87

131 47
121 30

162 77
158. 36

322 41
240 58

286 79
253 71

138. 80
143. 27

138. 94
132. 17

113 14
107 96

122 60
114. 33

158. 16
153. 92

317 40
235 87

121. 21

123. 61

94.41

107. 04

173. 13

4.62

4.50

4.52

4.52

4.33
4.47
4.65
5.02

4.26
4 39
.48
.86

4
4
4
4

31
41
50
84

4.47
4.51
4.86

42
41
65

3.14
3.18
3.95

Noncorporate, total 9 .
_do
U.S. Government.. -._
__.do
State and municipal
do
New corporate security issues:
Estimated net proceeds total
--do
Proposed uses of proceeds:
New money total
do
Plant and equipment
- - do
Working capital
do
Retirement of securities
do
Other purposes
do
State and municipal issues (Bond Buyer):
Long-term
- do
Short-term
_ - _.do

T
r

787
446

952
540

SECURITY MARKETS
Brokers' Balances (N.Y.S.E. Members Carrying
Margin Accounts)

U.S. Treasury bonds taxable!
. _ _ _.do.
Snles:
Total, excl. U.S. Government bonds (SEC) :
A l l registered exchanges:
Market value
mil $
Face value _ _ _
do
New York Stock Exchange:
Market value
do
Face value
__ _ _ do
New York Stock Exchange, exclusive of some
stopped sales, face value, total
mil. $_.
Yields:
Domestic corporate (Moody's)
percent..
By ratings:
Aaa
do
Aa
do
A
do
Baa
do
By groups:
Industrial
_
do
Public utility
do
Railroad
do
Domestic municipal:
Bond Buyer (20 bonds)
do
Standard & Poor's Corp. (15 bonds)
.do
U.S. Treasury bonds, taxable©

do

35
46
54
85

37
49
56
83

456

42
48
55
82

42
49
55
81

3.23

Stocks
Cash dividend payments publicly reported:
Total dividend payments _
mil. $

» 15, 076 216,188 2, 230. 6 1,071.4

480.7 3 316 7 1, 187. 5

594.7 2, 377. 0 1,131 1

454.2 2, 566. 0 1,157 8

475.3 2 517 5 1 211 7

do
do
do

» 2, 360 2 2, 487
233 1
» 7, 823 28,510
1, 406. 0
3
582
>549
110.0

216 9
358.4
15.1

124 8
449 2
165.6 2 164 8
3.4
175 1

305 1
346.2
18.1

240.2
209. 3
170.8 1, 542. 9
2.2
110.6

221 2
353 3
18 2

104.0
229 3
164.5 1, 722 5
3.9
112.3

241 1
362 1
16.6

115. 5 273 9
166.2 1 625 2
4.1
111 0

246 4
385 3
17 5

do
do
do
do
do

2
1, 456
« 1,411
a 1, 773 2 1, 900
2377
a 353
2642
a 606
2232
a 201

120.1
215 1
56 4
62.1
27.8

244.5
134 9
21.2
62.9
17.5

3.2
136 7
6.2
30.4
10.4

2
8
6
4
6

247.0
135 0
26.4
90.2
19.5

3.0
140.1
8.8
47.7
12.8

109.6
223.8
62.4
57.4
30.1

289 4
140 1
23 8
66 7
18.4

3.5
137 5
5 7
23 7
11.4

111.6
225 8
63 9
65.6
35.0

288.7
141 1
21 1
70.3
16.8

3.2
139.7
8.9
26.2
11.5

9
1
7
2
5

292.1
144 7
31 8
71 7
22.2

6.42
6.98
3.21
3.50
4.46
5.84

6.41
6.97
3.30
3 49
4.45
5.86

6.51
7.10
3.30
3.60
4.45
5.86

6.80
7.39
3.32
3 60
4.51
5.86

6.82
7.41
3.33
3.67
4.51
5.86

6.89
7.52
3.33
3 67
4. 54
5.86

6.91
7.55
3.34
3.70
4.55
5.90

6.93
7.56
3.38
3.72
4.55
5.90

6.95
7.58
3.38
3 72
4.55
5.90

6.97
7.61
3.38
3 72
4 55
5.90

6.98
7.61
3.38
3 76
4 55
5.90

7.03
7.68
3.39
3 76
4 55
5.90

7.05
7.69
3.46
3 76
4.55
6.12

7.05
7.70
3.48
3 91
4 55
6.12

7.12
7.77
3.49
3 96
4 55
6.11

Price per share, end of mo. (200 stocks) 9 —do
177.87 202. 32 206. 58 214. 67 211.74
Industrial (125 stocks)
_
do.
189. 95 218. 24 223. 69 234. 19 228. 76
Public utility (24 stocks)....
do. . 91.50 102. 79 105. 14 102. 53 100. 82
Railroad (25 stocks)
do.... 63.39
78.49
79.11 78.73
80.68
r
Revised
1 End of year.
2 Annual total.
{Revisions for 1961-62 will be shown later.
9 Includes data not shown separately,
cf Number of bonds represent number currently used; the change in the number does not
affect the continuity of series.

216. 57
234. 99
102.31
84.06

Finance
Manufacturing.
Mining.
Public utilities:
Communications
Electric and gas
Railroads
Trade
Miscellaneous

_

Dividend rates and prices, common stocks
(Moody's) :
Dividends per share, annual rate (200 stocks)
dollars..
Industrial (125 stocks)
daPublic utility (24 stocks)
do
Railroad (25 stocks)... .
do
Bank (15 stocks)
_
do
Fire insurance (10 stocks)
do




5.99
6.43
2.97
3.36
4.30
5.31

124
216
87
62
36

222. 47 225. 21 227. 79 229. 62 232. 35 236. 24
241. 38 246. 19 250. 46 251. 53 255. 45 257. 62
103. 69 104. 23 103. 13 104. 00 104.11 105.40
88.26
87.99
88.66
84.81
99.52
94.99
^Prices are derived from average yields on basis of an
OFor bonds due or callable in 10 years or more.

240. 48
263. 49
110.76
100. 64
assumed

109
230
65
66
35

236. 88 242 73 243 14
260. 03 268. 38 269. 08
110. 86 112.67 115.11
94.14
98.13 102.41
3 percent 20-year bond.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962 1 1963

Monthly
average

S-21
1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

3.07
3 07
3.20
4 21
3 14
2.48

3.04
3 02
3.28
4 21
3 02
2.49

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

3.00
2 98
3.25
3 92
2 94
2.45

2.95
2 95
3.21
3 78
2 98
2.45

2.92
2.91
3.06
3 74
2 95
2.39

2.98
2.96
3.12
3.99
2 90
2.49

2.90
2.87
3.09
3.98
2 76
2.52

Oct.

FINANCE—Continued
SECURITY MARKETS-Continued
Stocks— Continued
Dividend yields and earnings, common stocks
(Moody's) :
Yield (200 stocks)
percentIndustrial (125 stocks)
do__.
Public utility (24 stocks)
do._.
Railroad (25 stocks)
_
do _
Bank (15 stocks)
do
Fire insurance (10 stocks)
do

3.37
3.39
3.25
5.30
3.31
2.48

3.17
3.20
3.12
4.46
3.15
2.51

3.10
3.12
3.14
4.41
3 12
2.57

Earnings per share (indust., qtrly. at ann. rate;
pub. util. and RR., for 12 mo. ending each qtr.)
Industrial (125 stocks)
„_. -dollars- Ml. 10
M.73
Public utility (24 stocks)
do
1
5.73
Railroad (25 stocks)
_
do _

112.43
i 4.99
16.29

11.05
4.91
6.37

4.50

4.30

4.30

4.26

4.28

4.32

221.07
639. 76
121.75
132.61

253. 67
714. 81
138. 36
165. 30

262. 53
738. 52
142. 74
172. 71

262. 16
747. 52
138. 68
170. 41

261. 09
743. 24
137. 59
171.16

266 33
7^9 94
137. 77
176 16

Dividend yields, preferred stocks, 14 high-grade
(Standard & Poor's Corp.)
..percent
Prices:
Dow-Jones averages (65 stocks)
Industrial (30 stocks)
Public utilitv (15 stocks)
Railroad (20 stocks)
Standard & Poor's Corporation rd"
Industrial, public utility, and railroad:
Combined index (500 stocks)
1941-43=10..
Industrial, total (425 stocks) 9
do
Capital goods (122 stocks)
do
Consumers' goods (188 stocks)
do
Public utility (50 stocks) ___
do
Railroad (25 stocks)
do
Banks:
New York City (10 stocks)
do
Outside New York City (16 stocks).. ..do....
Fire and casualty insurance (22 stocks) f _ _ do

3.03
3.03
3.22
4.57
3 08
2.52

3.21
3.23
3.29
4.46
3 25
2.61

3.15
3.15
3.25
1 37
3 17
2.57

3.10
3 12
3.21
4 33
3 13
2.52

14. 45
4 99
6.29

3.03
3 01
3.25
4 20
2 99
2.46

4. 31
272
776
140
180

31
62
19
93

4 31
276
793
140
184

74
03
09
55

4 34
282
812
139
191

93
18
25
97

12.60
5. 15
7.30

15 15
5 13
6 97

13 85
5 02
6 81
4 37
286
820
139
196

09
94
02
15

4 41
289
823
140
202

33
12
86
08

4 41
290
817
141
206

08
63
56
59

2.93
2.89
3.03
3 87
2 89
2.55

4.37

4.29

4.25

4.25

302 02
844 24
147. 37
218 78

298 13
835 30
149. 24
211 25

305 85
863. 55
151.85
214.44

311. 73
875. 26
153.93
222. 00

62.38

69.87

72.85

73.03

72.62

74.17

76.45

77.39

78.80

79.94

80.72

80.24

83.22

82.00

83.41

84.85

65.54
58.15
54. 96
59.16
30. 56

73.39
63.30
62.28
64.99
37.58

76.63
64.96
66.45
67.09
39 00

77.09
65. 57
67.09
65. 55
38.31

76.69
66.45
66.44
64.81
38 60

78.38
68. 54
66.38
65. 64
39 92

80.85
71 89
67.36
67 26
41 00

81.96
72 92
68.11
67 20
41 54

83.64
75 48
70. 15
66 78
42 86

84.92
76 52
70.93
67 30
43 27

85.79
76 50
72.67
67 29
44 86

85.13
75 85
72. 42
67 46
46 29

88.19
77.76
75.47
70.35
48 93

86.70
75.91
75.40
71 17
47 17

88.27
77.97
77.74
72 07
47 14

89.75
79. 13
79.08
73.37
48.69

33.75
66.19
57. 43

36.75
74.81
63.38

38.33
77.31
64,96

37.04
76.05
63.79

36. 67
75.24
63.00

36. 29
75. 37
63.73

37.60
77. 39
65.46

37.06
75. 90
66.19

38.49
76.90
67.06

39.20
77.17
67.07

39.88
77. 66
67.62

38.91
76.69
66.96

39.78
76.98
68.31

39.71
76.58
68.27

41.60
77.48
68.46

41.75
80.50
67.99

5, 359
153

6,093
170

7,049
184

6,003
149

6,156
169

7,649
200

5,317
140

6,401
185

6,982
210

6,072
168

5,683
155

6,181
170

4,828
139

5,823
168

Sales (Securities and Exchange Commission):
Total on all registered exchanges:
Market value....
mil. $.. 4, 561
139
Shares sold
milllons..
On New York Stock Exchange:
3,945
Market value
mil $
99
Shares sold (cleared or settled)
millions. .
Exclusive of odd-lot and stopped stock sales
80
(N.Y. S.E.; sales effected)
millions..
Shares listed, N.Y. Stock Exchange, end of mo.:
Market value, all listed shares
Ml. $.. 339. 29
7,464
Number of shares listed
__ millions

9

4,574
113

5,161
123

5,943
136

5, 082
111

5 154
123

6 149
145

4 280
102

5 35
137

5 933
156

5 196
125

4 745
114

5 266
125

4 106
100

4 914
120

96

107

122

94

99

117

88

114

124

99

96

103

82

no

107

386. 63
7,906

396. 24
8,010

407. 24
8,029

401. 60
8 042

411.32
8 108

422. 51
8 183

428. 42
8 214

436. 79
8 301

441. 72
8 378

447. 62
8 480

455. 01
8 841

464. 54
8 941

458. 12
8 981

472. 02
9 010

476. 39
9 095

FOREIGN TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES
FOREIGN TRADE
Value*
Exports (mdse.), Incl. reexports, total1_____.mll. $_. 1, 806. 0 1,934.0 1, 823. 5 2, 079. 8 2,104.5 2, 155. 4 2,117.5 2, 091. 5 2, 179. 3 2, 206. 7 2, 256. 6 2, 099. 1 2, 114. 1 1, 969. 8 2, 138. 9
Excl. Dept. of Defense shipments
do... 1, 745. 4 1, 857. 3 1, 765. 5 2, 023. 0 2, 028. 5 2, 092. 3 2, 025. 0 1, 994. 5 2, 127. 2 2, 120. 4 2,204.3 2, 031. 1 2, 039. 3 1,896.7 2, 084. 5
Seasonally adjusted

.

By geographic regions: A
Africa
Asia _ .
Australia and Oceania
Europe

1 979 6 1 946 4 1 944 6 2 049 4 2 037 3 2 028 7 2 077 5 2 046 0 2 052 1 2 004 3 2 111 4 2 084 9 2 971 2

do
do
do
do
do

343 7
39.8
543 5

82 4
398 1
43.6
589 0

79 1
381 2
40.7
544 8

79 3
449 4
44.8
658 8

95 g
92 6
438 0
489 7
fl5! 8 52 7
671 6
678 9

86
449
48
695

...do
do
do

319 4
130.7
167 7

343 2
142.2
159 6

349 1
142.9
131 1

405 9
154.5
149 9

359 2
152. 6
171 9

355 4
147. 1
170 5

By leading countries:
Africa:
United Arab Republic (Egypt Reg.)..-do
Republic of South Africa
do

19.6
18.6

17.5
23.0

16.0
24.8

16.2
24.5

13.6
26.4

do
do
do
do

34.2
55 8
23 7

36.5
67 0
32 3

32.2
60 6
36 9

37.7
72 8
47' 8

do
do
_ do

9.9
22 4
117 9

8.8
°6 9
141 5

10 9
24 1
139 4

do
do
do....

48.9
.1
90.0

56.5
.5
92.0

51 1

do
do
do

64. 1
1.3
89.6

81 8

2
6
0
5

103 9
372 3
58 8
622 3

no 7

no c

439 1
60 9

376 4
68 6

426 2
167.0
161 7

425 5
164.' 6
186 6

417 3
179.4
179 5

21.1
30.5

23.5
28.2

29.6
37.3

40.8
70 2
21 3
58

47.6
67 5
157
6 1

40.6
76 1
20 0
6 0

12 8
30 2
184 6

6 7
29 9
166 0

4 0
29 3
174 6

64 7
2 3
103.0

84 2
3 2
97.6

66 0
3 5
97.8

80 9
1.7
114.5

70 8
8.3
122.9

75 2
29.3
123.9

2
4
6
1

no o

6
1
4
0

406 8
54 0
738 2

99
410
48
692

339 6
149.4
156 2

341 6
149^7
147 3

407 2
161.' 2
161 3

17.7
29.8

13.4
26.1

22.8
29.7

50.0
76 5
25 6

45.4
98 7
45 5

37.6
80 2
25 5
6 2

7.8
35 5
152 7

12 8
29 9
173 9

7 9
29 3
168 8

63 5
.1
98.2

64 1
19
103.9

73 4
72 9
74 4
68 6
1.7
.6
3.6
1.6
96.8
104.3
130.7
125.6
2
' Revised.
v Preliminary.
i Calendar year total.
Less than $50,000.
cf Number of stocks represents number currently used; the change in number does not
affect continuity of the series.
9 Includes data not shown separately.
fRevised series; former series covered fire insurance only.

Northern North America
Southern North America
South America..

Asia; Australia and Oceania:
Australia, including New Guinea
India
_.
Pakistan _ _ _ - . _
Malaysia©
.. .
Indonesia.
Philippines ._
Japan

.
_.

..

Europe:
France
East Germany...
West Germany
Italy
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
United Kingdom




(2)

88.4

95
420
47
702

1
4
7
3

115
450
59
695

coc c

no A
420 Q

76 8

cc^ o

«OQ

365 8
168. 3
166 9

380 3
155.3
175 6

389 ^
174.5
187 8

24.2
33.7

14.8
32.8

20.8
32.6

18.1
29.9

49.7
97 8

49.7
55 1

50.8

57.8

66.8

6 4

6 1

7 5

2 2
31 3
153 4

3 2
32 6
145 4

33
30 4
128 3

146 8

71 4
18
112. 3

65 9
5
116.6

71 3
4 6
111.7

61 5
11
96.3

73 9
55. 3
121.7

74 5
22.2
107.4

61 0
13.8
111.2

67 7

AQ 7

1.8

7.3

107.9

108.0

2.8
105.8

on c

07 a

OQ A

54 5

57

98 fi

59 0

3

97.2

ro 1
Qj O
r 7 Q

I

4 3

4 6

OQ

0

m

o

39 A
1 '-{Q Q

51 3
3
93.6

114.2

cc 9
g

(\i i
12
125.8

{Revisions for various periods prior to Feb. 1963 will be shown later.
^Includes grantaid shipments under the Dept. of Defense Military Assistance Program, as well as economic
aid shipments under other programs.
AExcludes "special category" shipments.
O Country designation established Jan. 1964.

SUKVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-22
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

Monthly
average

November 1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

1964

Nov.

Dec

Jan.

May

Apr.

Mar.

Feb.

June

July 1 Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

FOREIGN TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES—Continued
FOREIGN TRADE— Continued
Value— Continued t
Exports (mdse.), incl. reexports— Continued
By leading countries— Continued
North and South America:
Latin American Republics, total 9
Brazil
Chile
Colombia
Cuba
Mexico
Venezuela

do
do
do
do
do -do
do

-_

Exports of U S merchandise total

do

By economic classes:
Crude materials
do
Crude foodstuffs
-- do
Manufactured foodstuffsandbeverag^s-.-do
Semlmanufacturesd"
-do
Finished manufactures d"
do
By principal commodities:
Agricultural products total 9

do

Animal and vegetable oils and fats*
do._
Cotton , unman ufactured
do
Fruits, vegetables, and preparations — d o _ _ - <
(Trains and preparationsf
_ _
do
Meat and meat preparations*. _
_ do ._
Tobacco and manufactures A -- d o _ _ _
Nonagrl cultural products, total 9

do

319.4

343.2

349 1

405 9

359 1

355 4

OOQ a

041 c

407 1

426 2

425 5

417 3

365 8

380 3

389 2

270.3

262.8

241.1

267.9

286.2

278.5

269.8

261.7

285.3

292.8

314.4

325.1

300.3

297.1

324.4

31.6
35.4
14.2
18.9
1.1
67.1
39.2

15.7
31.4
13.5
20.0
3.0
68.9
42.3

10.3
20.5
12.6
18.4
0)
70.7
41.2

15.2
21.7
13.0
22.6
(i)
78.1
46.5

17
30
15
21

18
29
14
24
(i)
69
49

15
32
13
20

19 5
23 1
12 9
19 8
m
76 6
40 5

17
26
13
20
m
78
48

16
31
12
17
0)
91
47

19
31
16
24
(i)
81
57

2
6
7
5

18
32
14
21

23
26
13
19

24
35
13
19

26
41
18
18

8
4

103 3
55 8

88 4
50 5

2 225 4

2 067 4

9 08S 1

1, 783.6 1, 910. 1

186.2
167.5
113.8

2
9
1
7

o

75 3
48 3

8
3
4
6

0)

4
7

1,801.8 2 0556 2 079 1 2 131 6

1
4
1
4

72 5
43 6

2 QQQ g

3
5
0
6
2
7

465.4

433.7

552.6

574 5

588.1

542 2

525 3

530 8

521 1

528 9

459 1

479 3

26.1
44.8
35.8
171.4
11.8
40.9

26.6
48.9
37.2
191.7
12.3
43.6

32.1
41.9
37.0
162. 3
13.0
64.2

28.9
50.9
50.0
211.2
16.4
73.0

20 7
67 8
40.0
220 9
17.3
60 1

25.4
86.1
37.4
247.7
13.8
55.4

26 6
79 0
32.2
234 l
16 8
38 0

27 8
74 9
33.7
226 3
16 0
37 0

33 1
64 4
33.3
238 2
14 5
30 o

33 3
51 7
28.8
244 0
12 6
30 5

36 1
49 5
34.5
238 4
16 7
33 5

32 9
50 7
37.8
180 3
14 9
41 2

40
91
r
32
171
13

1,364.1

1,444.7 1,368.1

215 5
237 9
29g 3
209 7
135.8
137.3
289 5
326 4
188 5 1,245 3 1

-do

435.1

453.4

411.1

462.7

477.1

491.7

486 8

510.4

542 7

-do
do
do
do
do

13.2
30.3
105.9
44.5
208.1

15.2
35.2
113.4
37.0
216.5

10.6
31.2
108.9
34.6
192.4

11.7
41.1
114.0
38.1
218.0

11.4
36.9
124.2
37.5
228.4

12. 7
39.6
122.5
42.2
236.8

15 8
39.2
125 6
39.1
226 2

20 1
36.5
132 7
42.1
238 4

23
45
123
44
264

do
do

36.8
57.3

41.0
57.8

41.0
55.2

41.1
65.0

39.4
63.2

41.9
62.8

37 7
59 6

35 1
61 5

1,365.8 1,428.5

1,398.5
1,450.4

1,591.3 1,425.1
1,458.8 1,465.3

1,529.9
1,477.7

By geographic regions: O
Africa
Asia
-.
Australia and Oceania _
"Europe
-

do
do

9
5
0
4
2

38 4
70 7

3
5
4
2
Q

81 6
46 6

217 9
252 8
182 1
m£
125.9
116.3
330 9
333 1
210 6 1 208 3 1

190 3
218 2
203 1
172 0
145.2
136.5
324 6
350 4
118 2 1 195 1
419 5

493 8

41 3
16 6
35.8
r
!749 4
I 5
34 6

36 7
24 5
42.7
204 2
13 3
73 0

521 5

575.2

513.7

49
122
39
246

8
6
8
1

22 6
53.7
133 2
46 4
274 8

19
50
119
39
240

41 8
68 2

35 8
71 0

7
2
9
7
3

39 4
68 2

1 446 7 1 337 7 1 592 3 1 562 3 1 457 9 1 595 5
1 421 8 1 445 3 1 522 9 1 542 1 1 548 1 1 505 5

0
5
3
1
0

07 r>

608 8 1 522 1 1 618 0
6
4
8
5

120 8
197.9
50 6
81.7

140 7
212.3
41 6
73.5

517 2

458 3

507 8

90 fi

19 1
41 2
109 8
37 1
218 3

14
46
122
38
24?

111
199
39
82

48
116
45
241

4
9
9
1

A*3

0

en 7
-i c-i 9 A

40 8
60 0

64.8
266.1
41.8
400.8

58.4
267.6
52.9
378.7

74.0
297.8
48.1
466.1

59.5
265.2
31.6
445. 1

71.0
252. 1
43.2
427.6

67.6
283.0
35.7
400 9

71.4
203.7
30.5
394.6

89.8
282 9
38.3
456 1

86.9
276 5
33.4
449 3

83.7
278 3
36.1
411 5

67
317
45
446

4fi1 c

66
339
43
377

do
do
do

305.2
123.1
204.2

319.4
127.4
207.7

301.4
102.4
236.6

354.2
115.7
235.1

312.0
114.2
197.5

351.1
140.9
243.0

307.4
150.4
199.8

301.9
142.2
192.7

337 4
152.0
234.9

341 4
162.2
211.3

337 4
143.4
166.6

381 6
137.0
198 8

373 0
140 0
202 7

363 9
115.8
185 4

do
do

21
21.4

17
21 6

11
17.8

50
18 9

5
17 4

1i
25 8

10
24 1

10
20 3

3 0
21 1

2 o
21 3

2 5
19 9

1.0
19.3

1.9
16.2

.9
16.9

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

24 4
21.3
3.5

26 6
24 5
38

34 2
21.7
3.2

36 8
25 8
4 0

20 7
22 9
3 7

29 0
21 o
3 7

94 8

11.2
26.9
113.2

9.4
29 7
124.8

8.4
32.5
124.9

9 8
36 9
139 8

9 7
18 0
134 7

8 0
29 9
118 0

do
do
do
do
do
do

35.7
3
80 1
37.7
13
83 8

35 8
3
83 6
41 1
1 7
89 9

31.5
2
81.1
34.7
4 5
83.8

45 5
3
1
2
8
0

42 0
2
94 9
46 4
1 2
100 6

37 1
1
92 2
43 5
9
91 6

300.9
305.0
319 1
354 0
311 7
293 6
282 2
287 6
301 3
269 3
17 2
8 9
17 6
13 7
11 0
56 4
45 1
46 8
53 7
62 9
15.9
15 9
15 7
14 6
11 3
22 9
34.9
20 7
31 6
17 5
(i)
(i)
6
o (i)
37 3
49 5
46 4
48 2
46 6
67.2
73.4
81.3
78.163.1
r
2
Revised
v Preliminary.
i Less than $50,000.
Beginning Jan. 1963, excludes
exports of certain fertilizer materials, coal-tar and synthetic resinous products, chemical specialties, etc.: in 1962, such exports totaled $52.6 mil.
JSee similar note on p. S-21; for exports, see also note "V' on p. S-21.
9 Includes data not shown separately.
o"Data for semimanufactures reported as "special category, type 1" are included with
finished
manufactures.
*New series. Data prior to Sept. 1962 may be obtained from Bu.

of Census reports.

350 9
332 9
20 9
67 5
14 0
14 4
(i)
55 6
88.1



do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

92
50
1
106

7
3
3
3
4
2
6

35 9
3
92 0
36 3
1 2
83 5

5
2
6
7

65 8

oox 7

32 5

36 1
55 7

1
1
7
6

2
0
6
9
0
1
6

24 0
32
14 8
15 0
34 9
133 3

18 5
28 1
39
10 6
11 7
19 8
143 5

16 1
25 7
35
12 2
15.2
34 6
121.7

32.2
28.4
3.7
10.9
15.8
31.3
155.1

17 8
19.8
3.0
13.3
15.2
44.1
167.2

-26.8
30.7
3.0
21.0
14.6
36.6
155.8

35 0
g
78 7
33 7
2 o
85 3

39 5
7
106 1
40 3
10
90 8

43 9
5
97 9
41 2
9
94 0

41.5
4
87 8
35 2
13
91 1

42.8
.6
99.7
45.1
2 4
100.7

45.5
.4
102.7
47.7
2 1
101.5

38.4
.9
74.8
48.6
1.9
85.7

19
18
2
9
10
15
100

1
2
5
3
8

1 491 9 1 56? 0
1 592 2 i CE7 r

62.8
246.7
36.6
385.0

27
22
4
14
13
32
130

o

95 4
47 6

1 941 6 2 \\\ 9

-do
do
-do
do

Northern North America
Southern North America
South America
By leading countries: O
Africa:
United Arab Republic (Egypt Reg )
Republic of South Africa
Asia; Australia and Oceania:
Australia including New Guinea
India
Pakistan
Malaysia©
Indonesia
Philippines
Japan
Europe :
France
East Germany
West Germany
Italy
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
United Kingdom
North and South America:
Canada
Latin American Republics total 9
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
Colombia
Cuba _
Mexico
Venezuela

4
0
2
1

219 1
207 6
939 5
233 1
144.8
134.9
333 3
393 4
271 8 1, 295. 2 1

1,503.1 1. 504. 6 1,543.5 1, 548 3 1,537 6 1 620 5 1, 649 1 1, 696. 6 1, 608. 3 1
146.1
165.3
159.7
156. 5
151 6
144.6
149 0
148 4
148 2
175.0
169.9
165.4
187.4
182.6
183.5
172.3
171.1
191.9
50.5
46.0
37.8
44.9
45 6
31 6
30 5
33 9
34 3
64.0
60.6
64.8
81.7
83.4
61.8
68.7
63.1
67.2

Machinery, total§9

General Imports, totalO
Seasonally adjusted©

o

419.5

247 4
227 4
127^7
300 7
187 4 1

115.3
162.1
53.3
56.5

__

o

2
6
1
2

253. 4
1,062.7

222.9
272.7
284.9
281 6
221.4
166.7
232 6
227 6
122.2
132.6
131.9
135. 1
270.0
296.5
297.1
285 0
1,020.1 1,132.3 1,149 9 1,185.1 1

125.5
2 161.9
40.2
57.4

_

8
5
2
1

214.7
189.4
124.8
273.6
1,107.6

115.2
149.3
32.0
50.9

Petroleum and products
Textiles and manufactures

0
1

2 063 Q 2 151 3 2 170 3

Automobiles, parts, and accessories
do
Chemicals and related products!
do
Coal and related fuels
do. _.
Iron and steel prod. (excl. adv. mfs.).__do

Agricultural
Tractors, parts, and accessories
Electrical
_
Metalworklng§
Other Industrial

7
3
6
1

363.1
372.6
381.3
337 2
301 8
337 3
341 3
247.4
280 7
288 6
260 4
314 9
284 5
338 7
6.5
12 3
7 7
9 4
10 8
10 4
9 7
31.9
32 5
36.7
23 6
60 7
53 8
38 0
18.1
19.7
17 6
19 3
20 9
17 3
7 4
18.9
15.8
21 1
17 3
23 2
24 5
22 2
(i)
m
(i)
(i)
(i)
o
o
39.7
54.6
55 9
50 6
67 2
59 1
71 4
76.5
85.7
66.2
87.2
81.8
75.7
89.3
tRevised to include SITC items classified as "cereals and preparations"; not comparable
with data published in the 1963 BUSINESS STATISTICS and in SURVEY issues prior to Nov.
307 2
294 7
11 6
43 6
16 6
14 2
(i)
63 6
85.3

1963.
AManufactures of tobacco are included in the nonagricultural products total.
§ Excludes "special category, type 1" exports.
O For certain recent months, the data by regions and countries exclude imports unidentified by area of origin.
©Country designation established Jan. 1964.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962 | 1963

Monthly
average

S-23
1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Mar.

Feb.

Jan.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

FOREIGN TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES—Continued
FOREIGN TRADE— Continued
Value— Continued J
Imports for consumption, total
mil. $.. 1,354.3 1, 417. 8 1,375.1 1,578.3 1, 427. 8 1,511.6
By economic classes:
278.2 '1261.7
260.2
Crude materials
do
273.3
238.0
284. 5
148.0
143.8
140.2
168.7
Crude foodstuffs
do
153.3
158.7
149.3
166.5
Manufactured foodstuffs and beverages._do
183.1
198.2
163.0
197.4
282.4 r 1312. 7
285.7
326.4
Semimanufactures
-do
300.4
315.0
496.3
533.2
505.8
Finished manufactures
do
611.8
573.0
556.0
By principal commodities:
322.3
334.8
345.4
377.5
319.8
Agricultural products tota!9
do
369.4
Cocoa (cacao) beans Incl shells
do
Coffee
- do
Rubber, crude (Incl. latex and guayule).. do
Sugar (cane or beet)
_
do
Wool and mob air unmanufactured _ do _
NTonagrlcultural products, total 9

do

Furs and manufactures
do _
Iron and steel prod. (excl. adv. mfs.) — -do
Nonferrous ores, metals, etc.:
Bauxite, crude* __ _ _ . _do
Aluminum semlmfs. (Incl. calcined bauxite)*
mil. $..
Copper crude and semlmfs.*
do
Tin Including ore
do

Shipping Weight and
Waterborne trade:
Exports (incl. reexports) :§
Shipping weight
Value
General imports:
Shipping weight
Value
. ._
Airborne trade:
Exports (incl. reexports) :J
Shipping weight
Value
General imports:
Shipping weight
Value

274.3
160. 8
133. 5
343.0
553.4

246.8
161. 5
105. 5
314.1
494. 5

274.1
202.4
150. 7
339.0
601.1

267.8
199.2
142.6
343.1
602.7

270.4
147.4
149.2
311.1
555.7

291. 5
140.4
163.0
340.1
641.8

325.0
145.0
148.8
333.9
662.4

302.1
136.9
143.5
322.7
585.5

300.1
155.8
164.2
314.3
633.5

332.7

295.4

383.1

362.7

329.9

316.1

318.6

316.7

341.0

14:4
87.4
19.4
26.3
19.7

12.5
94.0
13.2
16.5
20.6

15.2
125.7
19.4
37.2
17.4

8.2
131.8
13.3
32.1
18.3

8.1
84.5
20.2
47.8
17.6

10.3
73.2
13.9
38.9
14.1

8.5
84.7
17.1
49.7
16.0

12.8
77.7
18.1
33.9
14.1

9.2
90.8
16.4
50.0
17.1

11.0
82.4
19.0
42.0
17.4

11.3
79.7
16.4
50.9
18.8

9.7
89.3
13.5
59.7
12.7

1,031.9

1,083.1

1,029.6

9.7
47.3

i 10.9
59.4

i 10.1
59.1

7.9
70.4

6.1
65.3

26.3
54.0

i 16.1
60.7

13.6
54.1

15.8
59.7

12.0
62.5

9.1
68.6

8.1
77.5

6.2
74.8

4.7
69.1

10.1

9.5

9.8

8.8

8.2

9.4

9.6

11.2

9.5

12.2

8.8

10.0

12.9

12.3

9.1

14.7
20.8
9.7

16.9
121.6
9.1

20.5
25.4
10.2

13.7
20.7
14.1

21.8
27 5
8.3
35.3
64.2
147.0

9.4
100.9
15.0
53.4
16.7

7.2
88.8
13.6
31.8
11.9

11.1
90.1
14.0
68.8
22.9

1,200.8 1, 108. 0 1, 142. 2

17.8
126.1
6.4

17.0
26.1
9.2

17.9
23.3
8.7

17.7
25.1
8.2

30.1
28.7
57.3
57.9
149. 1 i 132. 3

34.6
66.5
149.0

31.1
58.1
135.9

32.0
68.0
164.9

1,132.2 1,026.8 1,184.2 1,192.7 1,103.9 1, 260. 7 1, 296. 5 1, 174. 1 1, 226. 9

17.1
20.1
9.8

14.8
29.5
7.3

17.6
29.8
10.7

17.6
26.1
7.8

17.8
23.7
7.6

18.9
26.6
7.9

31.7
5fx 8
193. 3

31.1
52.4
154.3

35.4
58.7
159.5

31.9
61.2
156.7

30.4
59.6
137.1

34.9
65.2
144.8

32.3
64.8
165.4

35.2
61.8
152.3

do
do
do _

30.0
58.0
147.1

-- 1957-59=100.
do
do

112
115
102

P120
"123
P102

114
116
101

130
132
102

131
134
102

135
137
101

Pl31
v 135
P103

pl30
pl33
p 103

pl34
pl39
pl03

pl37
pl40
pl02

P140
pl43
Pl02

130
133
102

131
135
103

pl21
pl25
P103

123
117
95

pl27
pl22
"96

123
118
96

141
136
96

127
122
96

132
130
98

pl28
'126
p98

pl!6
pl!4
p98

P136
pl35
p99

pl34
p 134
plOO

Pl25
pl23
p98

137
136
p99

141
139
p99

p 131
p 128
P98

13.4
148.8

Paper base stocks
_
Newsprint
Petroleum and products
Indexes
Exports of U.S. merchandise:
Quantity
Value.
_ _ . __ __
Unit value
Imports for consumption:
Quantity
-Value
Unit value
_

1,464.9 1, 322. 3 1, 567. 3 1, 555. 3 1,433.8 1, 576. 8 1, 615. 2 1, 490. 8 1, 567. 9

do
do
do

1

1

6.1

Value
thous. sh. tons.. 11,215 r13, 084 14, 368 15, 070 14, 796 13, 887 13,167 12, 034 12, 673 13,415 15, 134
..mil. $ 1,165.6 -1,257.2 1,164.3 1,375.6 1, 408. 6 1, 450. 0 1. 348. 6 1, 334. 8 1, 384. 3 1,362.0 1, 489. 1
thous. sh. tons
. . mil. $

17.552 '17.707
' 983. 7 '1,031.9

18, 394
1,049.0

19, 076
1,163.9

17, 066
1,032.0

17, 639 17, 697
1,077.9 1, 036. 8

16, 415
929.9

16, 787 '18, 025 17, 974
1,119.9 '1,120.5 1, 056. 5

thous. sh. tons. _
mil. $

9.1
124.3

10.4
136.5

10.2
126.3

11.5
140.4

10.9
131.5

11.3
111. 9

11.9
150.3

11.9
157.2

12.9
150.9

12.9
153.5

12.9
149.6

12.9
144.8

thous. sh. tons..
mil. $

4.1
59.7

4.7
67.9

4.3
67.9

5.4
81.3

5.3
82.8

5.3
89.0

4.3
70.4

4.0
70.7

4.7
79.4

4.6
76.0

3.9
66.8

5.0
76.9

TRANSPORTATION AND COMMUNICATIONS
TRANSPORTATION
Air Carriers

Scheduled domestic trunk carriers:
Financial operations (qtrly. avg. or total):
653.3
Operating revenues, total?
..mil. $.. 570.7 621.9
566.0 617.1
648.7
Transport, total 9 __ __
do
509.8 557.0
587.3
Passenger
do
37.1
41.0
40.3
Property
do
14.2
14.4
U.S. mall.
do
15.0
551.4
592.8
Operating expenses (Incl. depreciation).. .do
585.5
27.6
1.9
Net Income (after taxes)
do
8.4
Operating results:
Miles flown (revenue)
thous.. 59, 409 63, 828 64, 335 66, 676
45, 296 49, 195 52, 766 57, 797
Express and freight ton-miles flown do
Mail ton-miles
flown
do__ . 13, 575 14 167 13, 043 15, 033
4,639
Passengers originated (revenue)
do
3,990
4,917
4,548
3,119
Passenger-miles flown (revenue)
mil-- 2,667
3,165
3,048
Express Operations
Transportation revenues
_
Express privilege payments

mil. $_.
do

Local Transit Lines
Fares, average cash rate
__ cents
Passengers carried (revenue)
mil
Operating revenues (qtrly. avg. or total)
mil. $

295.9
229.2

2
95.9
2

28. 6

96.3
29.9

20.1
594
350.9

20 5
576
347.5

20.5
£60
330.3

4
634. 4
4
628. 3
4
561.9
4
44. 0
4
4

62, 455
51, 397
13, 376
4,446
2,861

16 7
596.
0
4
1]

65, 758
55 581
19 401
4 732
3,221

20 6
630

20 7
563

20 7
590
366.8

710.9
704.6
637.7
45.2
15 7
622.2
39 1

646 8
640 8
579 4
4
42.0
4
15 5
4
613 7
4
11 0
66, 274
50, 710
14, 547
4,801
3,245

4
4
4

62, 863
50, 212
14 051
4
4, 458
4
2, 949

4
67,
4
54
4
15
4
5
4

481
522
488
008
3 316

4
65,
4
56
4
15
4
5
4

407
472
091
003
3, 287

4
68,
4
59
4
14
4
5
4

022
014
823
030
3, 322

96 8
27 1

105 4
31.3

Motor Carriers (Intercity)
Carriers of property, class I (qtrly. avg. or total):
5
Number of reporting carriers
3954
1, 019
Operating revenues, total
mil. $.. 1,343
51,451
5
Expenses, total
do
1,286
1, 373
Freight carried (revenue)
mil. tons
87
586
' Revised.
p Preliminary.
1 Effective Sept. 1963, data reflect adoption of U.S. Tariff
Schedules and are not entirely comparable with earlier figures; also, beginning Sept. 1963,
certain uranium bearing materials, formerly shown under crude materials, are included with
semimanufactures (monthly averages reflect this change beginning Jan. 1963). Beginning
Jan. 1964, data for furs and mfrs. and petroleum and products reflect further changes in USTS.




4
4
4

20 8
581

20 8
552

20 8
585
341 1

68, 852
58 871
14 345
5 542
3,910

71, 235
60 391
14 337
5 324
3,796

72, 362
63 842
14 178
5*647
4 023

21 3
531

21 3
516

99 9
29 5
21 0
600

21 2
596

21 2
564
362

21 4
560

2
Quarterly average. 3 Number of carriers filing complete reports for 1962. 4 Reflects
substitution of data for one or two intra-Alaskan carriers. 5 For 2d qtr. 1963.
{See similar note on p. S-21.
9 Includes data not shown separately.
*New series.
Data prior to Dec. 1962 may be obtained from Bu. of Census reports.
§Excludes "special
category" shipments and all commodities exported under foreign-aid programs as Department of Defense controlled cargo.
ISee similar note on p. S-21.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-24
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

Monthly
average

November 1964
1964

1963
Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

TRANSPORTATION AND COMMUNICATIONS—Continued
TRANSPORTATION— Continued
Motor Carriers (Intercity)— Continued
Freight carried, qtrly. index of volume, class T and
II (ATA)
average same period, 1957-59=100.. 1 120. 3 1 126. 3
Carriers of passengers, class I (qtrly. avg. or total):
2138
Number of reporting carriers
- 2138
136.4
Operating revenues, total
mil. $__ 131.4
112. 0
116.4
Expenses, total
._
do
57.2
56.6
Passengers carried (revenue)
-mil__

124.0

' 124. 1

128.6

138
165.7
128.8
62.9

138
130 7
114 0
55.3

160
133.5
129.4
115.5

Class I Railroads
Freight carloadlngs (AAR):
Total cars
Coal
Coke
Forest products
Grain and grain products _

' 135. 4

thous
do _..
do
do
do

2,394
439
30
158
231

2,406
461
32
156
234

2,309
464
28
147
201

33,142
'3591
'333
'3195
'3327

32,859
3561
335
3183
3303

1,972
417
29
130
197

2,045
415
31
136
227

3 2, 645
3512
341
3
196
3267

2,105
393
34
154
186

2,202
407
35
151
177

3

2, 913
3542
345
3190
3208

2,403
476
38
154
205

2,114
293
35
147
197

3 2, 926
3578
348
3 198
3243

2,396
461
41
151
201

3 3, 195
3 589
357
3 196
3310

Livestock
__
do
Ore
do
Merchandise 1 c 1
do
Miscellaneous
do
Freight carloadings, seas. adj. Indexes (Fed. R.):f
Total
.
1957-59=100..
Coal
do
Coke
-do.. .
Forest products . do
Grain and grain products
do
Livestock
do__
Ore
do
Merchandise, l.c.l
do
Miscellaneous
do.- .

17
144
97
1,277

14
147
72
1,289

15
205
64
1,185

'332
' ?222

10
55
53
1,081

10
50
51
1, 125

310
375
3
70
3
1, 473

10
66
54
1,207

10
114
53
1,254

3
12
3271
365
3
1,581

7
224
50
1,248

8
223
48
1,163

313

3 1, 662

325
3157
373
31,523

3268
363
3 1, 514

16
211
48
1,267

330
3264
358
31,691

<92
90
81
97
101
67
83
49
94

*93
95
88
96
102
52
84
36
95

91
97
84
95
101
43
87
34
92

93
94
75
98
112
48
81
33
93

92
94
78
96
105
56
104
31
92

94
90
84
97
109
50
91
33
96

97
91
89
99
111
50
89
31
101

97
89
90
106
104
51
93
31
100

94
90
92
103
93
50
88
28
98

95
93
100
99
92
42
123
28
97

96
100
111
102
89
42
104
29
99

94
100
118
98
91
46
85
27
96

95
100
128
102
75
50
87
28
98

93
98
128
97
88
56
84
26
96

96
96
125
99
104
48
90
26
99

'381

Financial operations (qtrly. avg. or total):
Operating revenues, total 9
mil. $__ 2, 360. 1 2,389.9 2, 398. 0
1, 997. 8 2, 036. 5 2, 035. 0
Freight
do
154.8
147.0
Passenger
do
157.1
1,854.3 1,862.9 1.874.1
Operating expenses
do
Tax accruals and rents
do. .. 324.1 325.6 326.8
181.6
201.4
Net railway operating income
do
197.1
143.0
162.9
Net income (after taxes)
do
156.1
Operating results:
Freight carried 1 mile (qtrly.)
bil. ton-miles.. 5 151.6 5 158.9
Revenue per ton-mile (qtrly. avg.)
cents.. 31.349 5 1.310
Passengers carried 1 mile, revenue (qtrly.) ..mil.. 84,976 « 4, 624

158 ?,
1 312
5,225

2, 446. 6
2, 084. 2
138.6
1,893.5
304.4
248.7
225 1

2, 362. 4
2, 033. 8
134.7
1,852.3
327.6
182.5
144 2

2, 481. 4
2, 133. 8
146.3
1, 910. 5
338.0
233. 0
196.4

163.4
1 300
4,315

165.3
1.284
4,110

168.5

95
95
129
99
109
48
96
23
95

Waterway Traffic
Clearances, vessels In foreign trade:
Total U S ports
thous net tons
Foreign vessels
do
United States vessels
do
Panama Canal:
Total
In United States vessels

14, 913
12, 066
2,847

15, 628
12 786
2,842

16,341
13, 486
2,855

16, 531
13, 433
3,098

16, 686
13,618
3,068

15, 454
12, 573
2,881

15, 204
12, 540
2,664

14, 503
12, 054
2,449

14, 960
12,319
2,641

15, 996
12, 963
3,034

17, 734
14, 684
3.050

5,490
855

5, 454
780

5,702
1,000

5,925
968

5, 399
722

5,691
708

5,832
613

6,187
906

6,269
965

5,912
866

6,166
1,022

5,902
1,100

6,062
877

6,604
927

6,227
867

9.35
61
112

9.37
60
109

9.56
63
107

10.24
68
109

9.82
58
101

8.90
47
107

9.09
57
105

9.26
60
109

8.87
59
108

9.86
67
116

9.18
62
119

9.83
64
113

9,10
56
112

9.89
62
107

9.85
65
110

195
191
125
103
76
2,737

218
216
130
110
88
2,779

271
207
173
134
65
3,278

219
186
144
123
56
2,331

174
146
118
103
40
1,104

158
161
112
116
47
661

173
172
112
87
71
686

179
193
102
88
81
790

218
206
123
101
121
1,000

211
214
148
104
147
1,276

226
253
161
151
135
2,267

271
356
172
154
147
' 5, 097

112
8,067

86
7, 890

74

726
mil..
thous. $._ 12, 076

629
10, 477

598
10, 065

845.6
465.4
289.7
495.7
152.3
73.7

844.2
468.0
283.2
489.8
158. 2
72.9

879.0
477.3
309.1
523. 4
156. 1
73.2

856.8
475.2
286.3
500.5
155.4
73.4

881.8
480.0
308.7
539.8
150.1
73.7

881.1
481.7
305.3
520.2
154.9
74.0

862.2
480. 6
286 0
501. 7
163.4
74.2

892.1
485.5
311.2
530. 9
156.0
74.5

898.8
489.4
313.0
532.3
165.9
74.9

903.1
490.0
315.7
525.0
167.4
75.1

912.3
494.6
318.9
531.3
169.2
75.3

917.0
492.5
324.3
569.1
150.2
75.6

915.3
49? 1
3^4 3
529.8
167.3
75.9

582

23, 902
21, 094
1,680

24, 378
20, 700
2,597

25, 452
21,527
2,983

23, 676
20, 603
2,368

25, 550
21, 324
3,663

24, 449
22,213
834

23, 283
21,020
872

25,181
21,715
2,075

24, 876
21,812
1,697

24, 708
22,181
1,085

26, 020
22, 799
1,886

25, 092
23, 304
498

25, 113
22, 170
1,840

do
do
do

3,013
2,542
153

3,065
2,495
219

2,949
2,330
291

3,424
2,560
509

2,859
2,186
370

2,950
2,271
156

3,138
2,403
361

2,814
2,284
98

3,106
2,286
475

3,012
2,403
245

3,030
2,317
328

3,172
2,381
427

3.227
2, 503
341

2,885
2,423
105

do
do
do

4,675
3,676
816

5,077
3,882
982

5,069
3,822
1,015

5, 546
4,028
1,333

5,525
4,158
1,195

5,654
4, 339
1,054

5,901
4,448
1,222

5, 505
4,274
998

5,752
4, 336
1,192

5, 831
4, 251
1,345 i

5,774
4,379
1,167

5,961
4,598
1,152

6,087
4, 768
1,103

5,773
4,609
946

thou5? Ig tons
do

Travel
Hotels :
Average sale per occupied room
dollars..
Rooms occupied
% of total
Restaurant sales Index
same mo. 1951=100
Foreign travel:
U S citizens * Arrivals
Departures
Aliens* Arrivals
Departures
Passports issued and renewed
National parks visits
Pullman Co. (qtrly. avg. or total):
Passenger-miles (revenue)...
Passenger revenues __

thous
do
do
do
do
do

556
9,500

608
10, 457

600
9 288

COMMUNICATIONS
Telephone carriers :
Operating revenues 9
___mil. $_. 792.6
440.0
Station revenues
do..
270.4
Tolls, message
do
468.2
Operating expenses (before taxes)
do
139.6
Net operating income
do
70.8
Phones in service, end of year or mo
mil
Telegraph, cable, and radiotelegraph carriers:
Wire-telegraph:
Operating revenues
thous. $.. 22, 010
20,197
Operating expenses, incl. depreciation
do
Ocean- cable:
Operating revenues
_
Operating expenses, incl. depreciation
Net operating revenues
Radiotelegraph:
Operating revenues
Operating exnenses incl depreciation
Net operating revenues

r
Revised.
1 Annual index.
2 Number of carriers filing complete reports for 1962
and5 1963. 3 Data cover 5 weeks; other periods, 4 weeks. 4 Based on unadjusted data.
Quarterly average.




t Revisions for 1962 are in the Aug. 1963 SURVEY.
9 Includes data not shown separately.

56

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962 | 1963

S-25
1964

1963

Monthly
average

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Mar.

Feb.

Jan.

Dec.

Apr.

May

June

Aug.

July

Sept.

Oct.

CHEMICALS AND ALLIED PRODUCTS
CHEMICALS
Inorganic chemicals, production:
1,357
1,204
1,323
1,258
1,252
1,233
Acetylene
mil. cu.ft.. 1,103 ' 1, 155 r 1 152 r 1 225 r 1 208 r 1 242
1,271
1 154
1 120
Ammonia, synthetic anhydrous (commercial)
thous. sh. tons.. 484.1
589.3
620.2
614.1
659.7
553.8
636.7
650 7
636.8
528 4
607 5
586 9
583 8
548 5
614 8
r
r 93 4
r 79 4
r gl 9
100.6
116 0
Carbon dioxide, liquid, gas, and solid
do
90 2
108 9
112 6
85 3
85 0
82 8
94 9
r QQ 2
76 0
79 0
494.6
483.4
500.4
482 0
Chlorine, gas (100% Ch)
do
480 6
501 1
428 6
454 0
454 4
488 6
482 0
469 0
456 0
466 8
470 9
103.1
104.7
96.6
104.4
100.8
Hydrochloric add (100% HC1)
...do
87 7
100. 0
87.3
104 1
85 5
87 2
94 8
91 2
88s 4
92 8
371.6
375 1
306 5
341.0
355 7
Nitric acid (100% HNOs)
do
349 5
280 8
349 7
420 5
336 4
414 6
402 6
40 ) 9
372 7
402 0
Oxygen (high purity)
mil cu. ft
8 562 10, 705 10 308 10 841 10 779 11 627 12 oil 12 201 13 367 13,107 13 402 12, 538 12,741 13,476 13, 264
973 (^
259 5
248 5
268 6
286 5
266 6
241 7
9R1 7
280 3
PhospJiorlc acid (100% PjOs)
thous sh tons
203 9
284 8
253 3
238 6
253 7
267 9
Sodium carbonate (soda ash), synthetic (58%
394 4
408.9
419 5
431
6
4.1 8 Q
415 3
NajO)
thous sh tons
435 1
390 1
419 1
383 9
375 2
388 0
400 0
381 2
394 5
r
11.2
11.4
10.9
ll,6
11.7
12.3
Sodium bichromate and chromate
do.
10.9
11 4
10 6
8 9
11 5
11 3
10 5
9 3
10 9
508.9
537.0
517.3
503.7
Sodium hvdroxlde (100% NaOH)
do
507.3
534.4
514 3
474.7
453 6
472 4
487 9
497 3
484 2
490 2
497 8
Sodium silicate (soluble silicate glass), anhydrous
ef o
36.4
44.5
49.8
40.5
63 7
52 3
thous sh ton^
46 0
53 1
46 1
45 3
52 6
42 5
41 4
40 9
Sodium sulfates (anhydrous, refined; Glauber's
107.8
102.9
109 2
102 8
108. 1
infi °.
1 OR R
116 1
100 5
salt" crude sal t cake)
thous sh tons
95 4
108 3
99 5
106 1
107 7
103 2
Sulfurlc acid (100% H2SO<)
do
1641 8 1,744.7 1666 2 1 836 7 1 788 4 1 853 1 1 868 4 1 853 7 1 983 5 2, 016. 2 1, 980. 9 1,859.1 1,750.2 1,816.2 1, 846. 7
Organic chemicals, production :cf
Acetic acid (svnthetlc and natural)
Acetic anhydride
Acetvlsalicvlic acid (aspirin)
Creosote oil

mil Ib
do
do
mil gal

DDT
mil Ib
Ethvl acetate (85%)
do
Ethvlene glvcol
do __
Formaldehyde (37% HCHO)
do
Glycerin, refined, all grades:
Production
do.
Stocks end of month
do
Methanol:
Natural
mil. gal__
Svnthetic
-- do
Phthallc anhydride
mil. Ib
ALCOHOL
Ethyl alcohol and spirits:
Production
mil tax gal
Stocks end of month
do
Used for denaturation
do
Taxable withdrawals
do
Denatured alcohol:
Production
mil wine gal
Consumption (withdrawals)
do
Stocks end of month
do
FERTILIZERS
Fxports total 9
thous sh tons
Nitrogenous materials
do
Phosphate materials
do
Potash materials
do

87.5
106.5

96.2
111.6

81.9
116.9

89.4
123.4

'8.4

10.0

82 2
103.5
2 3
7 6

87 4
105.8
2 4
8. 2

72
111
2
9

g
6
3
2

104 6
2 C
86

89 5
106 1
2 6
81

on
121
2
8

Q
0
6
8

92 3
111 8
2 8
8 2

94
101
2
7

0
6
g
1

93
125
2
8

13 9
8 5
119. 5
199 8

14.9

14
8
121
216

3
7
4
4

14
10
132
234

11
7
123
226

9
9
123
220

4
4
4
4

11
8
121
207

12
10
109
203

s
8
1
0

13 3
9 4
138.8
219 5

11.3

13.0

121.0
212 7

129.3
237.7

116.9
225.2

12.1
11. 9
155.3
229.5

154.1
207.8

10.5
147.4
' 236. 5

156.3
235.1

20 8
32 7

24 8
23 g

26 3
25 4

28 5
27 6

28 5
26 5

23.7
27 7

28.0
31.5

22.9
32.0

26.5
32.3

26.2
31.2

.l
28 0
35.6

.1

1

J

1

29.3
39.5

28 7
41 4

31 4
45 3

28 5
40 9

9.2

52 4
151 4
42.4
5 3

57
171
44
5

7
5
4
3

26 8
15 9

fi1 7

181 7
40 7
58

QC A

2
0
2
3

on 9
Ifi 1

73
180
47
7

4
3
1
4

22 6
20 5

30 0

99 9

29 1
22 3

co 7

82.9
109.2
2 7

9.1

7.4

88 5
115.2

2.1

10.6

8.0

2.5
9.8

2.1

10.7

1.9

8.7

11.0

5.5

2.2

7.3

1

1

.1

.1

.1

.1

.1

.1

.1

29 6
37 4

29 9
36 7

30.3
44.9

33.9
49.2

34.4
49.9

31.1
48.5

32.8
44.8

32.2
'41.1

31.9
50.0

8
9
9
4

54 0
189.3
46.7

53 3
184.9
45.3

50 3
183.4
44.8

51 8
187.0
45. 7

55 1
190.0
47.0

5.0

4.7

24.7
25.3

25.4
24.8

1

30 8
39 5

4
8
8
0

4
4
7
4

fin
179
49
4

^
5
5
9

183 0
44 0
4 7

5.5

5.6

24 5
23 8
33

26 6
26 4
3 2

23 7
23 1
3 7

23 Q
24 7

25 1
24.8

23.8
23.5

2.9

3.1

3.4

24.2
24.4

701

a Qo

fi99

fifiS

64
517
88

^94

66

39
534
59

704
68
495
94

584
55
468
33

684
63
529
50

827
47
660
60

779
39
592
75

948
63
691
105

936
101
659
108

5
3
5
5

169 8
43 9
58

177 3
45 5
4 3

25 6
25 6
2 8

23 6
24 5
2 0

re -I

53
188
43
5

5.7

r

22 9
23 0

23 9
24.0

3.9

3.0

22 0
22 0
2 8

602
67
448
71

625
55
487
59

696
43
557
81

R7n
81

66

28
458
100

do
do
do
do
do ._

166
18
20
39
36

205
21
20
73
34

207
19
21
111
14

944
21

27
98
31

188
27
11
52
35

9nn
20
11
65
39

255
20
14
117
32

253
16
29
93
30

292
17
36
126
22

376
19
43
150
63

173
17
11
65
22

180
11
7
34
50

124
14
4
42
18

224
21
7
117
23

161
20
12
104
25

Potash deliveries (KjO)
do
Superphosphate and other phosphatlc fertilizers
(100%P80S):
Production
thous sh tons
Stocks end of month
do

197

227

161

9 CQ

162

189

374

233

369

424

254

66

151

355

189

235
425

269
419

247
441

9Q1

282
462

9Q4

3fl4

490

452

327
443

336
383

337
249

307
249

272
349

247
408

269
422

268
400

Imports total semimanufactures* 9
Ammonium nitrate
_
Ammonium sulf ate
Potassium chloride
Sodium nitrate
- -

•

487

83

44fi

3.6

2.9

3.4

r
r

MISCELLANEOUS PRODUCTS
Explosives (industrial), shipments, quarterly:
1306
Black blasting powder
. thous. Ib
ITlgh explosives.
-_ d o _ _ !277,199
Paints, varnish, and lacquer, factory shipments:
152.7
Total shipments
mil $
Trade products
_
do
89.8
62.9
Industrial
finishes
do
Sulfur, native (Frasch) and recovered:
M90
Production
thous. Ig. tons
4,832
Stocks (producers') end of month
do
PLASTICS AND RESIN MATERIALS
Production:
Cellulose plastic materials
mil. lb__
13.2
Thermosetting resins:
3
Alkyd resins
do
45.7
Coumarone-indene and petroleum polymer
3
resins _ _
_
mil. Ib
29.0
3
Polyester resins
do
17. 7
3
Phenolic and other tar acid resins
do
57. 5
3
Urea and melamine resins __
do
40. 7
Thermoplastic resins:
Styrene-type plastic materials (polystyrene)
mil. lb._ 3 106. 2
Vinyl resins (resin content basis)
do
3 130. 5
Polyethylene
do
168.0

1

1
284
423
301,665 321 379

2

157 5
93 8
63 7

160 3
97 1
63 2

3
486
4 875

4 844

2
2

473

171 1

100 2
70 9

491

4 740

138 9
77 0
61 9

484
4 763

495
4 760

334, 018

262, 470
138 8
75 5
63 3

500
4 780

142 5
80.6
61 9

499

4 786

165 2
97.1
68 1

499
4,720

186.0
112.2
73.8

513

188.5
115.0
73.5

531

4,686

4,676

197.8
119.5
78.3

505
4,614

345, 873
183 1
115.6
67.5

515

4 501

181 3
111.5
69 8

533
4 483

12 7

12.8

14.0

13.8

12.1

11.6

13 0

15 2

13.9

12.4

13.7

11.3

12 1

46 5

43 3

47.2

40 5

37 7

44 4

44 0

48 5

49 0

48 0

49 8

45 5

49 2

25
21
61
42

8
3
0
2

25.5
21.2
62 8
42 2

30.2
23.9
69 6
48. 5

24.9
21.2
62 0
41 5

25 9
20.4
61 7
38 0

26 0
22.7
66 3
42 8

25
23
64
39

27
25
72
43

6
4
6
1

29 8
27.2
71 5
45 9

26.2
27.0
67 3
43 4

27.7
26.7
65 5
43.1

27
23
53
37

25
25
70
44

124.3
149.3
188.2

130.1
1 56. 5
183.3

1 36. 5
168.3
202.4

133.2
160.5
200.0

127.8
153.0
210.1

132.3
150 5
210.8

136. 6
158 3
2C8. 7

146.3
173 3
210 1

144.7
174.4
217.8

149.7
176.7
226.6

147.5
170.9
215.9

129.2
156 8
216.8

r
2
Revised. > Quarterly average.
Beginning Jan. 1963, the estimated totals are based
on a new and larger sample and reflect improved estimating methods, which affect comparability with data for earlier periods; Cct.-Dec.
1962 estimated totals on the new basis appear
3
on p. S-25 of the Feb. 1964 SURVEY.
Based on annual total containing revisions not
distributed by months.




117 7
61 0
56 7

289

195

141

323
322 968

0
9
0
6

5
3
8
4

176.4
104.2
72.2

510
4 445

3
8
4
1

144.8
177 9
221.0

c?Data are reported on the basis of 100% content of the specified material unless otherwise
indicated.
9 Includes data not shown separately.
*New series. Data exclude some materials (chiefly crudes) shown in the former series.
Monthly data prior to Jan. 1963 may be obtained from Bu. of Census reports.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-26
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

Monthly
average

November 1964
1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

ELECTRIC POWER AND GAS
ELECTRIC POWER
Production (utility and Industrial), total O
mil. kw.-hr_Flectric utilities, total
do
"B v fuels
do
By waterpower
-do
Privately and municipally owned utll
Other producers (publicly owned)
Industrial establishments, total
Bv fuels
Bv waterpower
-a

a1es to ultimate customers total (T5I5I)
Commercial and Industrial:
Small light and power
Large light and power

78, 624
71,026
57, 003
14, 024

83, 991
76, 167
62, 379
13, 788

82 892
75, 156
63 144
12 012

84, 845
76. 712
64 491
12 222

82 437
74, 474
61 769
12 705

90 302
82, 260
67 653
14 607

90 642
82, 328
67 834
14 495

84, 613
76, 701
62 906
13 795

87, 987
79, 595
63 652
15, 942

84, 534
76, 392
60 092
16 301

87, 226
78, 894
63 031
15 863

90, 585
82, 294
68, 341
13, 953

95, 724
87, 606
73, 343
14, 263

94, 949
86, 647
72, 763
13, 884

89. 465
81, 376
68. 319
13,057

do
do

57, 725
13, 301

62. 095
14, 073

61 769
13 387

63 1?1
13 531

60 837
13 637

66 459
15 802

67 024
15 304

62 143
14 558

64 596
14 999

62 204
14 188

64 155
14 739

67, 960
14 334

72, 645
14 961

71, 588
15, 059

67, 340
14 036

do
do
do

7,597
7, 313
284

7,824
7,555
270

7 735
7, 533
202

8 133
7 P17
215

7 963
7 722
241

8 042
7,770
272

8 313
8 019
294

7 912
7,621
291

8 392
8, 075
317

8 142
7 807
335

8 332
8, 027
305

8,292
8, 045
246

8,118
7,892
226

8,302
8,084
218

8,089
7,872
217

do

64, 674

69, 234

72 079

69 516

68 309

71 364

75 196

72 724

72 692

71 549

71 065

72 775

75, 827

78, 514

12, 008 '113,876 M5,714 '14 2S4 '13 665 '13,708
31, 160 '132,367 r 33,172 '33 701 '32 893 '32 978

14 165
32 993

14,061
32 330

14,121
33 330

14 034
33 643

14,327
34 459

15,551
34 675

17, 194
33, 749

17, 781
34, 829

439
24 932
780
1 769
118

436
23 295
711
1,774
118

409
22 301
693
1,707
130

384
20 98°
641
1 721
143

368
19 431
613
1,712
156

366
19 639
589
1,780
174

359
21, 972
599
1,779
174

357
22 966
638
1,774
169

__do
do

393
do
18. 868
do
612
do
do . 1, 529
104
do

Railways and railroads
Residential or domestic
Street and highwav lighting
Other public authorities
Interdepartmental

389
20,141
646
1,683
133

348
20 356
631
1,706
152

373
18 553
'691
1 776
138

378
18 793
735
1 71Q
126

'451
21 630
773
1,716
108

Revenue from sales to ultimate customers (Edison
Electric Institute)
mil.$_. 1, 085. 4 1, 141. 4 1,187.8 1 136 2 1 119 0 1, 161 7 1 217 2 1 184 5 1, 169. 0 1 153 0 1, 145 9 1,178.5 1, 236. 5 1,272.4

GAS
Manufactured and mixed gas (quarterly ):c?t
Customers end of quarter, total 9
thous_.
Residential
_
do _.
Industrial and commercial
do
Sales to consumers, total?-Residentlal
Industrial and commercial

1,922
1,800
122

1,540
1,439
99

1,209
1,125
83

1,172
1,089
82

1,197
1,112
84

1,162
1,081
80

530
370
157

495
336
155

213
98
114

418
269
146

667
480
184

369
217
150

67.3
51.3
15.7

59.0
44.3
14.4

25 8
16.3
9.5

46 2
33.4
12.7

75 3
57.0
17.9

42.4
29.4
12.8

32, 674
thous
do _. 30, 014
do
2,624

33, 940
31, 207
2,695

33, 940
31,277
2,626

34 996
32, 150
2,807

35 104
32, 201
2,866

34, 999
32, 163
2,797

mil. therms-- 25, 045
do
8,466
do .- 15,321

26. 412
8.828
16, 279

19, 550
2,996
15, 304

25, 947
8 168
16 457

37. 972
17 093
19 082

26, 699
7,851
17,378

1,620.6
886.2
689.0

1,006.6
404.0
563.0

1,601 7
852.7
702 6

2, 533 0
1, T63 0
907 2

1, 579. 9
819.6
712.3

mil. therms..
do
do

Revenue from sales to consumers, total 9
Residential
Industrial and commercial..
Natural gas (quarterly): eft
Customers, end of quarter, total 9
Residential
Industrial and commercial
Sales to consumers, tota!9
Residential
Industrial and commercial

_

mil $
do _.
do __

Revenue from sales to consumers, total 9. mil. $
Residential
do
Industrial and commercial..
do. _

1,541.3
847.7
651 0

FOOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS; TOBACCO
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
Beer:
Production
_
.mil. bbl_.
Taxable withdrawals
do
Stocks, end of month
do
Distilled spirits (total):
Production
mil. tax gal..
Consumptton, apparent, for beverage purposes
mil. wine gal. .
Taxable withdrawals
mil. tax gal-Stocks, end of month..
do
Imports..
mh. proof gal
Whisky:
Production
mil. tax gal-Taxable withdrawals.
do
Stocks, end of month
do
Imports
mil. proof gal--

8.07
7.60
10.46

8.39
7 82
10 76

7.42
7 37
10 72

6.85
6 73
9 85

7.63
6 74
10 08

7.50
6 4°
10 68

8.95
7 80
11 30

9.63
8 49
11 82

9.28
8 73
11 77

10.31
9 48
11 93

11.54
10 92
11 77

9.88
9 40
11 56

12.90

12.50

9.42

15.99

13.39

14.18

13.89

13.51

14.06

14.51

13.38

12.79

8.65

9.13

21.58
10.34
876. 90
3 82

19.46
11.11
869. 81
3 94

24.45
14.57
867. 44
5 71

25. 89
11.36
865. 87
5 37

30.92
8.56
870. 00
4 87

18.49
9.34
871. 77
3 03

18.43
9.53
873 19
3 07

21.84
10.51
874. 44
3 62

21.08
11.46
874. 54
3 84

22.27
10.91
874. 27
3 71

22.03
10.98
873. 92
4 16

20.94
9.51
871. 904
3 7

20.72
10.62
866. 18
3 58

4 69

9.41
7.18
859. 13
3.18

8.74
7.08
852. 54
3.35

5.80
8 02
846 88
3.38

10.13
10 85
843 02
5.04

8.49
8 38
840 03
4.83

9.99
5 91
842 40
4.19

10.38
6 46
844 01
1.57

10.27
6 73
854 14
1.77

10.36
7 05
846 10
3.23

10.95
7 50
846 91
3.42

9.44
7 05
846 76
ll48

8.46
6 56
846 81
3.71

5.03
5 72
844 27
2.85

5.41
6 68
839 97
3.07

4 00

10.88
8 OK

8.15

5.87

6.35
400

6.27

7.24
5. 18

7.85

7.38

7.27

6.35
4. 33

6.69

45
54
3.07

37
57
2.86

44
59
2.65

43
34
2.71
.06

48
27
2.88
. 06

63
34
3.14
. 08

53
33
3.31
.08

C.O

36
3.30
.09

27
28
3.46
.07

42
35
3.49
.07

.09

108 68
15.56
246. 45
1.92

21 47
14.07
249. 05
1.47

4 yg
13.71
229. 08
1.18

2 73
13.57
213. 89
.79

2 97
13.76
201. 61
1.57

3 40
15.96
185. 83
1.10

2 19
13.80
175. 68
.90

1 84
12.86
164. 18
1.16

1 Q9
13.25
150. 88
1.21

QC

10.42
139. 42
1.02

3 12
12.27
130. 04
1.09

.91

202.64

70.11

18.48

5.10

8.38

6.15

1.79

1.51

.86

1.40

9.84

31.27

39.39

118.07

' Revised.
1 Beginning Jan. 1963, data are not directly comparable with those for earlier
periods. Latest revised data for Jan-Jul. 1963 are as shown in the Oct 1964 SURVEY- those
for Aug. 1963 (mil. kw.-hr.): Small light and rower, 16,271; large, 33 239
O Revisions for Jan.-Dec. 1962 appear on p. 24 of the Mar. 1964 SURVEY




7.31
7 05
9 67

21.14
10.27
882. 72
3 60

Rectified spirits and wines, production, total
mil. proof gal-7.24
7.20
7.74
Whisky _
do
5 33
5 19
5 RS
Wines and distilling materials:
Effervescent wines:
Production
mil. wine gal.37
40
34
Taxable withdrawals
do
.32
.35
39
Stocks, end of month
do
2.79
3.00
3.21
Imports
do
no
no
no
still wines:
Production
_
do
15.78
16 86
45 43
Taxable withdrawals
__-do
12.52
13.11
12.52
Stocks, end of month... __
do
178. 86 ' 185. 03 155.87
Imports
do
1.11
1.08
1.07
Distilling materials produced at wineries. __ do'

7.93
7 95
10 19

00

43
3.49
. 09

d*The averages shown for gas are quarterly averages.
{Revised data for 1st and 2d qtrs. of 1962 appear in the Sept. 1963 SURVEY; those for 1st and
2d qtrs. of 1963 will be shown later.
9 Includes data not shown separately.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964
1962

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1963

1963

Monthly
average

S-27

Sept.

Oct.

1964

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Sept.

Aug.

Oct.

FOOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS; TOBACCO—Continued
DAIRY PRODUCTS
Butter, creamery:
Production (factory) t
Stocks, cold storage, end of month
Price wholesale 92-score (N Y )
Cheese:
Production (factory) totalj
American whole milkj

128.1
363.4
.594

- ..mil. lb_
do...
$ per Ib
mil. Ib
do

Stocks, cold storage, end of month, total
American whole in ilk

do...
do_

Price, wholesale, American, single daisies (Chicago)
$ per Ib
Condensed and evaporated milk:
Production, case goods :|
Condensed (sweetened)
_mil. Ib
Evaporated (unsweetened)
do
Stocks, manufacturers', case goods, end of mo.:
Condensed (sweetened)
mil. Ib
Evaporated (unsweetened)
do
Exports:
Condensed (sweetened)
do
Evaporated (unsweetened)
do
Price, manufacturers' average selling:
Evaporated (unsweetened)
$ per case
Fluid milk:
Production on farms.
mil. lb_
TTtili/ation in mfd dairy productsd"
do
Price, wholesale, TT.S. average
$ per 100 lb_
Dry milk:
Production:!

Off farms
Exports including malt§
Prices, wholesale (Minneapolis):
No 2 malting
No 3 straight

do
do__.
do
do

--$ per bu
do

Corn:
Production (crop estimate grain only) mil bu
Orlndings, wet process
. do

91.8
284.5
.596

91.9
241.3
.593

111.6
207.0
.593

128.8
187.1
.587

123.5
191.2
.587

139.4
191.0
.586

142.7
195. 7
.586

153.5
2U3. 5
.587

142.9
234.9
.587

110.7
243.7
.591

95.8
221.2
.604

86.4
' 180. 9
.623

132.1 ' 135. 9 ' 124. 9
91.1 '93.2 '84.0

122.5
81.6

115. 7
73.7

124. 5
78.3

125.9
82.4

124.0
81.4

145.8
96.5

151.8
106.5

176.4
128.3

175. 3
128.1

151.0
108.7

140.8
97.7

128.9
86.7

463.4
420.4
6.5

385.0
344.9
6.9

407.9
363.9
5.1

378.2
336.9
7.5

303.3
323.7
9.7

340.7
301.6
8.4

318.1
279.2
6.6

301.6
263.7
4.6

301.7
264.0
8.5

323.1
284.0
6.4

352.2
309.7
7.0

381.8
339.2
5.4

398.6
353.1
3.6

388.6
341.1
4.6

' 363. 5
'318.6
6.9

345.5
302.6

.400

.426

.428

.432

.432

.432

.430

.430

.422

.420

.420

.421

.428

.431

.446

.451

6.1
160.7

6.6
158.1

6.9
140.3

3.9
129.7

4.0
122.2

7.0
133.9

6.0
140.3

5.6
141.5

6.7
150.0

10.7
160.8

10.0
208. 5

7.2
202.0

8.3
184.0

8.8
174.0

6.8
151.0

5.0
178.4

6.6
162.9

6.2
231.8

5.7
199.8

6.5
150.8

5.8
131.7

5.9
96.8

6.1
82.6

7.3
69.7

9.1
82.6

10.0
147.6

9.6
208.2

9.4
249.7

9.9
286.3

9.6
231.1

4.0
5.5

5.0
5.2

5.9
10.0

7.9
3.3

.3
3.8

7.0
2.9

3.3
2.5

3.0
3.1

3.4
2.4

5.2
3.0

8.6
2.7

5.4
3.0

5.4
3.3

6.8
3.1

3.9
5.3

85.5
328.7
.603

6.11

6.01

6.00

6.00

5.99

6.00

6,00

5.98

5.98

5.96

5.94

5.93

5.93

5.93

6.00

10, 502
5,216
4.10

10, 399
5,099
4.10

9, 558
4,183
4.29

9, 557
4,148
4.43

9,205
3,900
4.48

9.706
4,399
4.42

10, 066
4,922
4.34

9.842
4,917
4.25

11,007
5,655
4.12

11,346
5,904
3.94

12. 330
6,613
3.82

11, 790
6, 528
3.78

10, 824
5,620
3.94

10, 177
5,012
4.10

9,626
4,370
4.28

6.6
185.5

7.6
174.7

7.6
119.4

7.1
121.4

6.7
128.2

6.3
158.3

7.6
176.9

6.6
181.0

7.3
206.7

7.8
217.7

7.4
250.2

6.6
235.6

6.8
181.5

7.5
148.1

8.0
121.7

6.3
123.4

5.7
95.0

4.8
82.1

5.0
63.0

5.3
64.3

5.3
81.5

6.1
80.9

5.8
86.1

6.6
97.6

7.5
104.6

7.1
130.6

6.4
128.6

6.2
127.3

5.9
114.4

6.0
94.7

1.1
25.5

2.5
44.6

2.6
39.2

2.0
41.9

1.6
53.6

2.9
38.0

2.1
27.4

.8
37.9

.8
88.6

1.1
61.0

1.3
119.4

.6
107.1

2.4
93.5

.9
65.5

6.1
65.1

.148

.144

.144

.144

.144

.146

.146

.146

.146

.146

.146

.146

.143

.146

.148

96.9

103.4

92.7

115.6

125.6

130.7

123.8

112.5

123.4

126.6

129.8

96.8

91.8

99.7

115.4

i 436. 4
284. 8
160. 8
3124.0
8.3

i 399. 9
3 284. 0
3 165. 0
3119.0
4.8

426.0
262.6
163.4
5.5

4.8

7.7

329 5
199 1
130 4
5.8

5.5

6.7

231.0
1°9. 2
101.8
2.9

5.0

1.26
1.20

1.19
1.11

1.18
1.09

1.22
1.14

1.21
1.11

1.18
1.09

1.18
1.10

1.16
1.09

1.18
1.10

1.22
1.14

i 3, 637 14,082
15.4
14.3

15.3

16.8

16.7

14.4

15.9

15.9

17.4

16.5

33.5

55.7

4 353
3,217
1 136
54.7

46.8

33.5

3,264
2,254
1,010
33.5

42.4

1.18
1.19

1.15
1.16

1.19
1.19

1.22
1.20

1.19
1.18

1.21
1.21

1.24
1.24

Nonfat drv milk rhum an food)
do
Stocks, manufacturers', end of month:
T)rv whole milk
do.
Nonfat drv milk (human food)
do
Exports:
Drv whole milk
do.
Nonfat drv milk (human food)
do
Price, manufacturers' average selling, nonfat dry
milk (human food)
$ perlb
GRAIN AND GRAIN PRODUCTS
Exports (barley, corn, oats, rye, wheat) .. .mil. bu.
Barley:
Production (crop estimate)
Stocks (domestic), end of quarter, total

118.3
328.4
.590

3
8

mil bu
do
do
do

Exports, including oatmeal
do
Price, wholesale, No. 2, white (Chicago) f
$perbu..

i 1, 020
3628
3553
374

1981
3621
3545
876

773

946
833
113

388. 5

12.6

2.0

3.4

401.0
252.0
149.0
6.0

1.23
1.16

1.19
1.11

1.18
1.08

1.16
1.06

1.23
1.17

1.26
1.19

17.2

17.6

15.2

15.7

15.9

2 3, 541
16.6

35.4

' 2, 342
1,479
'863
28.0

32.8

42.9

1.510
4
654
4
855
39.5

1.26
1.24

1.22
1.21

1.25
1.23

1.26
1.25

1.28
1.27

4

1.21
1.22

2893

' 44316
252
*63

884
763
120

2.5

.9

.8

.6

.2

.2

.2

.2

.1

.3

.7

.9

.6

1.0

1.1

.73

.71

.71

.72

.74

.75

.71

.68

.68

.66

.66

.65

.68

.71

61
45

271
62

81
46

70
84

206
89

138
187

141
82

163
184

103
109

66
42

62
55

68
42

44
53

170.1
122
85

4.48

132. 7
59.7
73. 0
7.7

4
r 4

517
446
72

688
85

.71

272.2

132

75

192

200

168

232

143

170

105

69

74

56

54

28

438
270

1,679
332

1,113
357

377
264

295
329

329
379

192
386

123
555

148
494

71
428

58
355

135
306

717
395

1,348
553

957
220
.093

1,340
87
.087

1,235
197
.088

1,710
203
.088

1, 592
357
.088

1,447
314
.088

1,197
419
.088

931
356
.088

746
400
.088

531
265
.088

372
237
.088

296
122
.088

559
79
.088

1,122
160
.083

14 8
1.42

1.48

1.38

10.8
1.34

1.32

1.29

1.19

1.20

30 1
1.27

Rye:
Production (crop estimate)
mil. bu_. M0.8 129.4
Stocks (domestic), end of quarter, total
do
319.9
315.0
23.1
Price, wholesale, No. 2 (Minneapolis).. _$ per bu..
1.22
1.30
1.42
1.45
1.44
T
Revised.
v Preliminary. 2
1
3 q.uarterly average.
Crop estimate for the year.
Nov. 1 estimate of 1964 croiX
4
Old crop only; new crop not reported until beginiling of nc?w crop :fear (Jul y for barley,
oats, rvp, and wheat: Oct. for corn).
tRevisions are available upon request as follows: J an. 1961- June 1962 and Jan.-May 1963
for cheese and nonfat dry milk: Jan.-June 1962 and Jan.-May 1963 for b utter an d condensed,
evaporated, and dry whole milk.




4

.71

Rice:
Production (crop estimate)
mil. bags9... > 66.0
California mills:
Receipts, domestic, rough
mil. lb_.
126
79
Shipments from mills, milled rice
do
Stocks, rough and cleaned (cleaned basis), end
of month
mil Ib
97
Southern States mills (Ark., La., Tenn., Tex.):
364
Receipts, rough, from producers.
mil. lb._
255
Shipments from mills, milled rice...
do
Stocks, domestic, rough and cleaned (cleaned
866
basis), end of month
..mil. lb__
193
Exports..
do
.094
Price, wholesale, Nato, No. 2 (N.O.)
$ perlb..

9,652

2

Stocks (domestic), end of quarter, total
mil. bu. 3 2, 929 3 2, 705 ' 4 1,346
4
31,807 3 1, 779
On farms
do
514
31,122
3926 r 4 831
Off farms
do
35.5
36.6
Exports, including meal and
flour
do
27.8
Prices, wholesale:
1.24
1.11
No 3, yellow (Chicago)
$ per bu
1.35
1.20
1.08
Weighted avg., 6 markets, all grades
do
1.26
Oars:
Production (crop estimate)
Stocks (domestic), end of quarter total
On farms
Off farms

142.1

4

5.3

1.28

234.4

1.25
cf Revised series; data reject inclusion of creamed cottage cheese and frozen products
(formerly excluded). Revisions for 1946 and 1952-58 (former series) and 1958-62 (revised
series) appear on p. 24 of the Mar. 196 i SURVEY.
§ Excludes a small amount of p^arl barley,
t Revised series (for No. 2; formerly, for No. 3).
9 Bags of 100 Ib.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-28

1962 | 1963

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

Monthly
average

November 1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

1964
Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

FOOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS; TOBACCO—Continued
GRAIN AND GRAIN PRODUCTS-Con.
Wheat:
Production (crop estimate), total
Winter wheat
Distribution (quarterly total)

mil. bu__ 1 1, 094
1273
1821
3 316

--do
-do

Stocks (domestic), end of quarter, total
On farms
Off farms

do
do
do

Exports total Including

do

flour

31,713
3259

i 1, 138
1233
1905
3

2337

392

329

410

1.3 563
252

1,941
409
1,533

1,613
309
1,304

1,205
153
1 052

3 1, 453

31,311

49.2
43.0

59.7
53.3

Prices, wholesale:
No 1, dark northern spring (Minneapolis)
2.42
$ perbu..
2.48
2.20
2.19
No.2,hd.anddk.hd.winter(K:ans. City) .do
2.33
2.41
Weighted avg 6 markets all grades _ _ d o
Wheat flour:
Production :
Flonr
thous. sacks (100 lb.)_. 21, 839 21, 991
92.6
92.4
Operations percent of capacity
- 407
406
Offal
'
thous. sh. tons..
Orlndlngs of wheat
thous. bu__ 49, 613 49, 976
Stocks held bv mills, end of quarter
3
3
4, 710
thous. sacks (100 lb.)__ 4, 584
2,686 2,808
Exports
do
PHces, wholesale:
Spring, standard patent (Minneapolis)
$per!001b_. 5.909 5.639
Winter, hard, 95% patent (Kans. Olty).--do_... 5.621 5.365

2 1, 286
2267
21,019

r

305

381

'4901
* 75
r
* 826

1,806
500
1,306

58. 1
52.2

75. 5
70.4

61.0
55.1

68 9
60.0

s 70.5
66.0

71 5
65 6

86 6
81 5

78.0
70.7

79.5
72.1

60.0
54.8

56.3
52.8

52.3
44.6

66.5
60.4

2.36
2.09
2.29

2.43
2.20
2.37

2.39
2.21
2.34

2.37
2.23
2.31

2.37
2.24
2.31

2.32
2.23
2.27

2.25
2.17
2.19

2.34
2.26
2.26

2.35
2.13
2.26

2.38
1.53
1.58

1.70
1.55
1.59

1.74
1.58
1.69

1.80
1.63
1.72

24, 649 22, 220
98.0
101.6
412
459
56, 105 50, 558

21,39P
91.8
393
48, 599

23. 519
97.5
433
53, 494

21 218
96.8
390
47, 872

21, 956
90.0
406
49, 646

22. 241
91.2
411
50, 226

21,961
94.3
409
49, 897

27, 057
111.0
507
61,557

14, 953
58.7
283
34, 215

20, 818
89.6
390
47, 324

23, 305
99.3
435
52, 968

3,289

4,840
2,620

21, 409
97.9
400
48, 798
4. 516
2,570

2,232

2,550

4,823
3,878

1,912

2,527

5,843
2,183

3,127

3,191

5,354
2,249

1,540

5. 550
5.283

5. 725
5.467

5.738
5.450

5. 538
5.233

5.538
5.250

5 563
5.300

5.313
5. 150

5. 600
5.400

5.478
5.250

5.783
5.333

5.983 ' 5. 765v 5. 673
5.643 ' 5. 510P 5. 488

1.84
1.66
1.75

LIVESTOCK
Cattle and calves:
Slaughter (federally Inspected) :
Calves
thous. animals..
Cattle
do
Receipts (salable) at 27 oubllc markets
do
Shipments, feeder, to 8 corn-belt States
do
Prices, wholesale:
Beef steers (Chicago)
SperlOOlb _
Steers stocker and feeder (Kansas Clty)._do
Calves, vealers (Natl. Stockyards, IlU.--do
Slaughter (federally inspected). ...thous. animals..
Receipts (salable) at 27 public markets. _do _ .
Wholesale, average, all grades (Chicago)
SperlOOlb..
TTog-corn price ratio (bu. of corn equal In value
tolOOlb live hog)
Sheep and lambs:
Slaughter (federally Inspected). ..thous. animals..
Receipts (salable) at 27 public markets.- do
Shipments feeder, to 8 corn-belt States
do __.
Prices, wholesale:
Lambs average (Chicago)
$ per 100 Ib
Lambs,' feeder, good and choice (Omaha) .do

8

415
1,695
1,225
595

378
1,805
1,173
551

395
1,829
1, 287
717

462
2,092
1,592
1,281

385
1,793
1.283
1,133

400
1,808
1, 205
578

412
2,013
1,189
525

342
1,710
969
319

400
1.878
1,141
384

379
2.045
1,139
355

321
2,070
1,082
322

385
338
2,207 2,162
1,257 01,201
359
260

27.20
24.53
29.75

23.79
22.95
30.00

23.80
22.71
28.50

23.97
22.38
27. 50

23.38
21.53
30. 50

22.16
20.06
30.50

22.38
21.17
31.50

21.18
21.57
34.00

21.38
21.42
31.50

21.03
20.91
26.50

20.29
19.24
27.50

21.37
18 92
23.50

6,648
1,650

5, 965
1,646

5,868
1,573

6, 775
1,846

6,380
1,726

6,695
1,874

6,956
1,828

5,898
1,511

6, 4?0
1,635

6,481
1,681

5,476
1,460

5,038
1,443

16.44

15.03

15.53

15.29

14.39

13.76

14.22

14.37

14.22

13.89

14.46

16.4

13.6

12.8

14.1

13.9

12.7

13.2

13.2

12.7

12.3

12.3

1,224
524
224

1,163
444
200

1,236
601
428

1,441
640
457

1,112
419
213

1,105
406
122

1,296
394
146

980
294
143

1.035
304
133

1, 052
319
171

19.45
16. 57

18.69
8 17. 83

18.75
17.47

18.25
17.10

18.88
17.00

19.38
(7)

19.50
O

21.12
(7)

22.25
(7)

2,151

2,292

2,245

2,582

2,366

2,450

2,662

2,252

481
42
109

592
45
122

523
47
144

541
58
132

623
62
112

653
49
121

729
60
119

773
56
73

453
2,199
1, 301
861

1,619

23.15
18.81
23.00

24.94 25.82
19.79
19.30
22.50 p 25. 02

24.88
19.33

4,928
1,405

4,841
1,294

5,630
1,506

1,860

15.22

15.88

16.21

16.40

15.13

12.8

14.2

13.9

'13.8

13.7

986
289
215

1,056
337
154

1.118
0
343
179

1,020
385
314

1,141
511
433

551

22.25
(7)

24.00
(7)

23.75
0

23.38
(7)

23.50
(7)

22.50
(7)

20.50
20.31

2,447

2,575

2,406

2,404

2,332

2,221

2,405

810
53
101

872
47
89

873
63
76

833
56
126

731
49
75

628
48
106

'532
50
79

a

384
2,125
1,228
588

MEATS AND LARD
Total meats:
Production (carcass weight, leaf lard In), Inspected
slaughter
--. - mil. Ib
Stocks (excluding lard), cold storage, end of
month
-.- __ mil. Ib
Exports (meat and meat preparations) t
do
Imports (meat and meat preparations^
do

583

Beef and veal:
1, 046. 6 1,137.4 1, 136. 8 1,291.2 1,117.8 1, 137. 9 1, 292. 8 1,119.3 1,220.2 1.314.8 1,319.6 1, 384. 8 1, 336. 5 1,278.0 1.323.3
Production, Inspected slaughter
do
217.2
163.5
Stocks, cold storage, end of month
-_do__
228.2 246.1
279. 5 287. 6 297.5
282.1 284.5
276.3 285.7 300.4 296.3 300.9 r 253. 2 ~~260.~2~
2.3
2.3
2.9
Exports
do
3.2
2.1
2.8
3.5
2.4
3.9
5.7
5.0
2.4
3.1
2.5
3.8
92.0
79.0
Imports
-_
-do
89.8
122.0 105. 7
90.6
51.9
89.3
66.4
71.4
99.6
99.9
58.1
53.1
66.3
Price, wholesale, beef, fresh, steer carcasses, choice
.417
.464
(600-700 Ibs.) (New York)
$ per Ib
.404
.417
.391
.426
.381
.379
.398
.372
.430
.378
.408
.384
.424
.419
Lamb and mutton:
57.9
55.6
Production, Inspected slaughter
mil. Ib
57.4
52.5
67.3
53.2
49.6
53.6
63.9
52.5
48.2
52.4
48.3
46.2
51.0
19.5
14.3
Stocks, cold storage, end of month
do
17.2
18.0
17.8
18.6
18.4
18.3
16.3
18.3
16.4
18.2
17.3
16.1 '15.3
14.2
Pork (In eluding lard), production, Inspected slaughter
mil. lb_- 1,046.5 1, 099. 0 1,050.6 1, 223. 4 1, 195. 7 1,259.2 1,305.6 1, 082. 8 1,174.7 1, 206. 5 1, 038. 1 970.9 944.4 896.9 1, 029. 2
Pork (excluding lard):
Production, Inspected slaughter
do
806.0 856.6 823.7 959.3 939.2 987.4 1.017.1 854.4 914.5 940.9
798.4
743.6
694.7 809.7
733.6
279.2 210.4 208 9 250.2 276.7 332.8 382.3 411.2 473.6 468.8 412.9
235.9
Stocks, cold storage, end of month
_. do
321.4
229.1 ' 184. 0 223. 2
5.3
11.5
Exports
.
do
9.7
14.4
15.1
16.5
22.9
18.5
10.9
13.0
5.5
13.5
12.9
5.9
8.6
17.6
17.0
Imports
_
-__-__
do
19.1
14.8
16.2
18.6
16.7
14.8
16.3
19.7
18.0
17.0
15.9
17.9
17.8
Prices, wholesale:
8
.491
.464
Hams, smoked, composite._.$ perlb..
.465
.463
.472
.480
.457
.458
.452
.435
.423
.448
.475
P. 465
.453
.475
.443
Fresh loins, 8-12 Ib. average (New York).do
.461
.427
.417
.478
.401
.438
.413
.395
.409
.503
.513
.503
.461
.478
Lard:
Production, inspected slaughter
mil. lb._ 175.3 176.4
165.1
191.3
187.1
198.4
209.4 173.0
189.1
193.0
175.7
165.7
155.5
159. 3
147.8
Stocks, dry and cold storage, end of mo
do
98.9
123.1
81.2
75.2
92.4
119.4
105. 7 124.9
113. 6
125.2
116.3
96.3
98.1 '89.1
68.2
Exports
..
do
35.2
44.8
35.2
53.2
47.6
32.7
62.7
52.3
51.6
72.8
51.9
46.4
91.1
46.3
45.8
Price, wholesale, refined (Chicago)
$per lb._
.125
.122
.123
.131
.143
.125
.131
.128
.126
.130
.131
.130
p. 135
.131
.130
T
Revised.
* Preliminary.
* Monthly average based on 11 months (Feb.-Dec.).
1
Crop
2 Nov. 1 estimate )fc 1964cr 3p.
. estimate for the- year.
.
r. 33CQuarterly average.
I Revised effective Jan. 1961 in accordance with the Standard International Trade Classin l v new
now crroin
ranr>r«-£»H u
n t i l Karri
«4 Old
Old nrrm
crop n
only;
grain nnt
not reported
until
beginning of new crop-year (July for wheat).
fication (SITC) grouping of items; this grouping excludes lard (included in former export
8
Beginning Jan. 1964, flour included in total is converted to grain equivalent on basis of
series) and sausage casings (formerly included) but includes meat extracts, etc. (formerly
2.33
bu. of wheat to 100 Ib. of flour (2.3 bu. formerly used).
excluded). Data for Jan. 1961-Aug. 1962 are available upon request. ° Beginning July
6
7
Average based on months for which quotations are available.
No quotation.
1964, data are for 26 public markets.




SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

Monthly
average

S-29
1964

1963
Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

FOOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS; TOBACCO— Continued
POULTRY AND EGGS
Poultry:
Slaughter (commercial production)
mil. lb__
Stocks, cold storage (frozen), end of month, total
mil.lbTurkeys
do
Price, in Georgia producing area, live broilers
$ per lb_.
Eggs:
Production on farms
mil casesO__
Stocks, cold storage, end of month:
Shell
•_
thous. casesO..
Frozen
__mil. lb__
Price, wholesale, extras, large (delivered; Chicago)
$ per doz._

578

604

735

833

688

636

552

459

494

541

569

611

635

699

735

306
199

295
184

363
251

490
361

426
288

364
217

359
215

320
188

273
151

241
123

219
100

211
89

227
102

275
149

'366
'233

490
345

.144

.138

.130

.134

.138

J28

.139

.141

.140

.135

.130

.135

.145

.140

.145

.140

14.5

U4.6

13.6

14.3

14.2

14.7

14.8

14.4

16.0

15.7

16.0

15.0

14.9

14.5

14.0

14.6

186
82

132
73

154
95

137
80

111
68

67
55

78
40

36
46

81
62

171
86

201
106

184
114

119
108

'155
'98

161
84

.334

.343

.395

.375

.376

.372

.387~

.320

.326

.290

.276

.293

.326

.381

.362

23.8
.208

23.5
.253

19.3
.256

19.3
.276

13.8
.255

21.0
.261

26.7
.263

23.9
.233

29.4
.236

16.8
.220

17.6
.228

22.2
.224

18.4
.235

26.8
.228

19.7
.234

23,922
5, 704

4,008
5,074

2,041
758

1,986
772

2,167
908

2,486
949

2,181
1,026

2,143
982

1,977
718

1,970
591

2,476
1,006

2,460
843

1,597
302

1,344
399

1,552
441

1,428
368

1,660
525

.344
105

.345
110

.335
154

.353
148

.380
133

.380
119

.480
129

.465
120

.505
109

.500
104

.490
89

.485
86

.475
77

'473
101

.455
161

.482

180

206

236

243

249

244

220

178

163

156

162

177

200

216

'219

211

1,424

'929

308

'108

175

25

130

625

1,345

1,835

1,370

1,380

780

255

125

273
550
166

314
540
159

146
230
98

750
424
150

938
241
94

939
124
56

595
1,213
78

305
224
108

197
371
228

120
348
223

66
399
216

45
723
244

79
628
224

120
783
190

529
158

821
813
1,599

836
832
1,675

960
958
1,023

968
967
1,273

639
637
1,920

952
950
2,487

642
641
2,579

583
582
2,581

701
700
2,533

732
731
2,341

765
764
2,185

919
918
1,866

976
974
1,493

978
977
1, 234

*>973

259

342

154

209

1,127

352

585

785

571

367

407

396

231

231

171

359
102
25

359
91
14

383
101
342

351
90
19

214
9
19

423
94
14

103
68
2

92
11
2

226
89
1

205
42
3

340
127
1

293
77
5

367
170
11

271
101
6

4?9
183
7

.065

.081

.073

.092

.095

.084

.095

.082

.074

.068

.066

.063

.062

.062

.750
.127

.771
.122

.769
.125

.774
.118

.737
.112

.722
.105

.696
.102

.668
.092

137
44

MISCELLANEOUS FOOD PRODUCTS
Cocoa (cacao) beans:
Imports (incl shells)
thous Ig. tons
Price, wholesale, Accra (New York)
$ per lb..
Coffee (green) :
Inventories (roasters', importers', dealers'), end
of quarter
thous bagscf
Roastlngs (green weight), quarterly total. _ .do
From Brazil
do
Price, wholesale, Santos, No. 4 (New York)
$perlb__
Confectionery manufacturers' sales
mil. $
Fish:
Stocks, cold storage, end of month.
mil. lb_.
Sugar:
Cuban stocks, raw, end of month
thous. Spanish tons..
United States:
Deliveries and supply (raw basis) :§
Production and receipts:
Production
thous sh tons
Entries from off-shore, total 9
do
Hawaii and Puerto Rico
do
Deliveries total 9
do
For domestic consumption
do
Stocks, raw and refined, end of month. do
Exports, raw and refined
sh. tons
Imports:
"Raw sugar, total 9
thous. sh. tons..
From Republic of the Philippines
do
Refined sugar, total
do
Prices (New York) :
Raw, wholesale
_
._.$ perlb..
Refined:
Retail (incl. N.E. New Jersey)__$ per 5 lb._
Wholesale (excl. excise tax)
$ perlb_.
Tea, imports

» 3, 355
2 5, 669

2

.073

4,006
5,041

4,216
5,016

4,366
6,645

4 726
6 306

1,695

r

.569
.089

.688
.111

.681
.099

.675
.114

.092

.092

p. 088

thous. lb_. 10, 808

10, 503

11,011

13, 439

10, 571

8,851

10, 823

10, 627

12,377

13, 982

11, 552

10, 409

10, 392

8,533

10, 897

224.0

211.1

214.5

258.1

228.8

203.0

207.1

209.8

213.0

216.3

221.4

233.8

182.2

228.9

243.1

173.5

132.3

103.7

103.4

104.2

119.3

114.2

113.4

113.9

116.5

122.1

131.1

117.2

99.9

99.6

211.0

191.0

183. 9

187.5

177.0

183.2

175.6

199.9

211.4

201.0

207.4

235.1

238.8

296.1

271.9

245.0

248.7

210.2

(4)

160.0

145. 1

137.5

124.7

119.5

126.2

129.0

120.7

104.7

116.9

105.4

143.8

145.4

148.6

161.3

147.9

163.1

181.4

159.4

159.8

150.2

138.4

134.3

136.5

142.5

162.1

39.0

45.8

40.8

44.1

40.8

36.4

42.7

46.7

52.0

48.6

50.6

47.2

44.4

44.8

40.2

.256

.238

.238

.238

.238

.238

.238

.238

.238

.238

.238

.238

.238

.238

p. 238

Baking or frying fats (Incl. shortening):
Production
mil. lb_.
Stocks (producers' and warehouse), end of month
mll.lb..
Salad or cooking oils:
Production
__
do
Stocks (producers' and warehouse), end of month
mil. lb__
Margarine:
Production
do
Stocks (producers' and warehouse), end of month
mll.lb..
Price, wholesale (colored; mfr. to wholesaler or
large retailer; delivered)
$ per lb_.

.235

.063

FATS, OILS, AND RELATED PRODUCTS
Animal and fish fats: A
Tallow, edible:
Production (quantities rendered)
mil. lb_. 35.8
41.4
41.3
39.7
42.5
42.8
46.3
38.5
41.9
49.6
45.9
44.6
41.9
43.3
37.2
30.7
30.2
Consumption in end products
do
33.6
35.9
36.5
37.7
37.2
28.8
37.3
39.2
42.0
40.4
43.6
34.9
36.8
Stocks (factory and warehouse), end of month
25.7
41.3
33.9
35.7
29.8
36.4
29.0
mil. lb_35.6
37.4
38.7
38.5
37.8
35.5 '29.9
24.6
Tallow and grease (except wool), inedible:
317.2
287.8
Production (quantities rendered)
_do
363.3
304.5 350.3 327.3
336.4
319.9
335.3
366.0
351.3
361.0
347.4
332.2
322.3
150.6
Consumption in end products
do
173.2
150.7
145.6
167.0
140.1
141.8 s 183. 6
161.8
173.8
178.3
193.0
159.9
184.0
191.4
Stocks (factory and warehouse), end of month
384.7
385.9
333.6
372.8
421.5
353.0
387.3
386.2
395.9
331.1 331.9
395.9
305.3 281.9
314.7
Fish and marine mammal oils:
ProductionJ
do
21.3
15.3
19.8
.2
14.2
10.0
.7
6.1
.3
3.5
40.2
29.4
31.8 ••26.1
18.6
Consumption in end products.
do
8. 2
7.4
7.0
8.1
6.5
6.9
7.2
6.5
6.9
7.6
6.8
7.0
6.2
7.4
7.2
Stocks (factory and warehouse), end of month
7
mil.lb- 144.0 « 166. 5
181.5
110.5
159.0
197. 1 7 168. 4 7 129. 8
99.4
95.5
113.2
124.6 * 139. 6 ' 145. 6 146.7
' Revised. » Preliminary. 1 Beginning Jan. 1963, includ ">s data fc)r Alaska and Htiwaii.
OC ases of 30 dozen,
cfBags of 132.2" 61b
' Quarterly average.
3 Effective Sept. 1963, includes
snaall amounts of refined £ ugar,
9 In eludes d ata not silown sep arately; f ee also n ote"§".
§ Morithlydat a re fleet*3umula5
tinctured, colored, or adulterated.
4 N O t available.
B eginning Jan. 196-\, data ar e not
tive re visions f or prior \)eriods.
comparable with those for earlier periods; consumption for feed noAN based on rend erers'
AF(}r data o n lard, se e p. S-28
shipments instead of feed mill reports.
« Beginning March 1963, inc ludes Ge neral Ser vices
JRe visions fc r Jan.-Jiine 1962 appear iri the Sept. 1963 SiJRVEY.
Administration stocks no longer required for the strategic stockpi le.
7 i Deludes a significant amount described as "contaminated."




SUKVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-30
1962

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descrintive notes are shown i n the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1963

Monthly
average

November 1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

1964
Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

FOOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS; TOBACCO—Continued
FATS, OILS, AND RELATED
PRODUCTS— Continued
Vegetable oils and related products:
Coconut oil:
Production:
Crude
mil.lb..
Refined
-do
Consumption In end products
do
Stocks, crude and refined (factory and warehouse) end of month
mil. lb__
Imports
.
do
Corroil:
Production:
Crude
do
Refined
do
Consumption In end products^
do
Stocks, crude and refined (factory and warehouse) end of month J
.
mll.lb.Cottonseed cake and meal:
Production
thous. sh. tons__
Stocks (fit oil mills) end of month
do
Cottonseed oil:
Production:
Crude
mll.lb..
Reflned
do
Consumption In end products
_-do
Stocks, crude and refined (factory and warehouse) end of month
mil Ib
Exnorts (crude and refined)*
do
Price wholesale (drums* N Y )
$ perlb
Linseed oil:
Production crude (raw)
mil Ib
Consumption In end products
.
_ do
Stocks, crude and refined (factory and warehouse) end of month
mil Ib
Price wholesale (Minneapolis)
$ perlb
Soybean cake and meal:
Production
thous sh tons
Stocks (at oil mills) end of month §
do
Soybean oil:
Production:
Crude
mil Ib
Refined
do
Consumption In end products
do
Stocks, crude and refined (factory and warehouse) end of montht
mil Ib
Evnorts (crude and refined)*
do
Price wholesale (refined • N Y )
$ per Ib
TOBACCO
Leaf:
Production (crop estimate)
mil. Ib
Stocks, dealers' and manufacturers' end of quarter, total
_ _
mil Ib
Exports, Incl scrap and stems
thous Ib
Imports incl scrap and stems
do
Manufactured:
Production (smoking, chewing, snuff)
do
Consumption (withdrawals):
Cigarettes (small):
Tax-exempt
millions..
Taxable
do
Cigars (large), taxable
do _
Manufactured tobacco, taxable
thous Ib
Exports cigarettes
millions

135.8
44.3
57.5

29.0
46.2
60 4

31.3
45.3
60.7

33.5
47.1
67 8

39 4
44 5
57 0

29 8
41 5
59 3

30 0
41 2
58 0

30 0
41 6
58 7

(2)

41.1
61 9

18.6
48.4
66 7

20.0
41.9
65.9

25.2
38.0
58.7

32.6
46.2
61.1

29.3
43.2
69.7

27.5
39.8
66.2

243.4
22.1

227.4
31.0

225.0
35.3

219.5
39.4

209 3
7 8

195 9

o

193 4
61 1

196 5
41 6

185.5
46.1

166.0
34.8

158.2
27.8

154.7
36.4

166.3
35.4

178.5
68.8

159.1

30.4
29.3
26.8

32.5
30.3
27 5

31.9
31.5
29.5

34.7
30.0
31 6

34 6
32 2
28 0

30 9
34 2
32 2

32 7
30 1
33 3

34 6
28 6
34 5

37.2
34.7
33 0

36 6
30.0
31 7

35.9
27.7
30.9

37.0
34.3
33.0

33.0
32.9
34.3

33.9
38.5
35.2

31.5
29.7
31.2

49.1

58.2

63.1

62.9

67 4

64 8

62 4

60 5

60.3

63.9

62.6

63.8

62.2

59.7

61.9

223.2
118.6

225. 3
172 9

224.1
159.8

346.3
169 8

353 7
195 6

304 8
188 0

326 5
207 5

292 8
241 4

259. 1
259.9

212.9
295 7

165.1
325.6

116.7
305.0

87.2
250.2

82.5
171.5

181.9
138.8

161.5
132.4
108.8

158.2
131 1
95 6

156.7
98 9
92.7

241.3
166 1
107.2

249 4
174 2
98 9

212 3
171 9
101 7

231 4
158 2
95 2

207 4
137 1
102 9

185.8
146 7
107.5

154 7
151 9
103 8

119.2
137. 2
99.2

86.6
117.2
111.9

60.3
78.9
105.4

55.9
72.2
111.8

127.2
86.7
119.5

419.6
30.9
.167

598 4
30 4

153

487.5
21.5
.151

554.7
25 2
. 154

637 4
31 0

685 6
40 8

739 8
53 3

803 7
48 7

141

801.6
76.3
.145

810 2
38.4
. 149

769.2
54.0
.152

701.6
43.1
°.132

611.0
21.2
.133

498.4
75.3
'. 131

417.8
43.7
P. 130

31.8
31.5

33 3
32 0

37.4
32.6

41.1
31 8

34 9
28 2

32 1
26 4

35 3
28 0

33 6
31 0

33.5
32.5

31 5
35.1

39.3
34.6

40.8
36.4

33.7
35.2

38.2
32.2

42 1
30.3

111 8
.142

116 7

92 2
.123

103 9
.127

109 4

111 8

124 4

127

129

133

132 0

133

132 9
.133

131 6
.133

137 6
.133

139.4
.133

125.9
.133

124.6
.133

125. 1
P. 133

867.8
86.5

900 1
127 3

736.9
145.1

944.4
147.7

918 7
165 1

912 0
159 5

842 0
152 4

807 3
169 4

790.7
157.2

819 0
139.9

855. 2
167.6

830.8
124.1

893.8
121.4

885.1
119.8

852.3
100.7

407.4
338.9
340 7

421 1
334 1
318 3

345 9
340.0
320 5

442 1
361.5
348 9

426 2
331 6
317 3

425 4
329 2
316 1

388 6
351 2
336 6

376 2
328 3
330 9

368 9
36° 7
353 3

3^5 6
352 1
344 8

398 7
355. 6
342 3

386.2
400.5
366.1

412.0
340.5
341.7

413.6
*• 435. 6
425.8

398.8
458.4
431 2

865 2
92 1

919.8
142.7
.133

898 9
42.1

987 9
57.3

127

122

991.4
69.2
.122

922.3
126.0
.121

873.3
62.7
.123

814.9
99.5
".102

759.4
127.1
.109

r

141

1 022 4 1 006 4
70.2
74 7

666. 5
132.1
.110

577.8
124.8
v. 120

36 901
12 438

36 307
22 822

5,314
23 529
12 876

29, 667
14, 687

31 306
14 147

4,906
44, 084
15, 735

32, 793
14, 860

28,522
15,012

5,024
69. 311
16, 521

803.9
101.1
.133
4

8

133

(*)

99.6
.133

161

128

146

143

123

9.3

2, 315 <2,337

«2,206

c 4, 694
39, 073
13 951

64,931
42, 124
13, 985

4, 754
64, 827
11 905

76 548
15 802

59 291
14 737

5, 251
56, 370
12 553

14,066

13,959

14, 759

16, 604

13 017

11,947

15 068

16, 150

16, 937

16, 701

14, 647

15, 350

13, 146 -14.513

3,422
41 205

3,424
42,466
547
13,708
1,968

3,173
42 399
555
14, 382
1, 656

3,740
46 740

3,561

3,360
36 684

3,344
40 980

3,234
29 168

3, 216
37 854

3,144
43 686

3,126
41 714

3,644
45 154

3,877
42, 584

3,708
44 420

1 964

14 863
1 843

15, 550
1 702

16 214
2 107

16, 028
1,862

14, 231
1 890

14, 757
2,046

13, 187
2,148

13, 909
1,990

2,827

530

13, 770
2 007

652

15, 838
2 124

41 272
648
12 858
2 047

407
12,440

594

622

682

670

731

699

693

719

LEATHER AND PRODUCTS
HIDES AND SKINS
Exports:
Value, total 9
___
thous. $__ 6,909
Calf and kip skins
thous. skins
171
Cattle hides
thous. hides..
593
Imports:
Value, total 9
thous. $.. 6,539
Sheep and lamb skins
thous. pieces.. 2,290
Goat and kid skins
do.
1,198
Prices, wholesale (f.o.b. shipping point):
Calfskins, packer, heavy, 9^/15 Ib
__$ per lb_. p . 623
Hides, steer, heavy, native, over 53 Ib
do
p . 152

6,215
155
664

5,861
136
661

7,124
190
919

7,256
206
843

5,711
203
659

6, 525
255
787

6,779
233
904

6,385
245
778

213
882

8,620
239
1,072

8,252
151
987

184
972

8,032
104
1,051

7,810
162
945

5,253
2,192
1,231

4,948
M.923
1,211

4,320
1,249
1,250

3,905
781
1,000

5,223
4,212
1,361 s 1, 031
1,150
1,360

7,122
3,254
1,113

8, 4?6
4,370
1,099

8,111
3, 380
1,323

8,519
3,615
1,650

8,242
2,732
1,134

8,369
3,354
1,157

5,631
1,891
850

8,077
3,527

.300
.103

.275
.110

.300
.110

p. 450
p. 119

LEATHER
Production :
Calf and whole kip
_
thous. skins
466
403
532
453
1,804
Cattle hide and side kip...thous. hides and kips._ 1,877
1,774
2,039
1,793
Goat and kid
thous. skins
1,184
1,182
1,064
1.258
1, 137
Sheep a n d l a m b
do
2,864
2,527
2,833
3,128
2,906
Exports:
Glove and garment leather
thous. sq. ft
4,252
3,502
4,640
4, 763
5,493
Upperand lining leather
do
3,423
3,019
2,955
3,984
4,436
Prices, wholesale:
Sole, bends, light, f.o.b. tannery
$ perlb.. p . 711 p. 678
.657
.657
.657
Upper, chrome calf, B and C grades, f.o.b. tannery
$ per sq. ft..! 1.326 p 1.151
1.133
1.097 1.103
1
'Revised.
p Preliminary.
.._ based on reported annual total.
Averaere
2 xot available.
s5 Average based on months for which data are available.
* Crop estimate for the
year.
Nov. 1 estimate of the 1964 crop.
« Quarterly average.
' Effective Sept
1P63, data reflect minor changes in coverage to conform with "Tariff Schedules of the United
States."
s Effective Jan. 1964, data exclude items presently reported in Ibs. instead of
pieces.
{Revisions for 1962 appear in the Sept. 1963 SURVEY.




.325
.090

.325
.083

.325
.078

.325
.083

.400
.113

.438

.430
.104

.430
.115

.450
.124

471
1,798
1,212
2,693

386
1,844
1,325
2,552

414
1,790
1,047
2,727

484
1,835
1,059
2,731

525
1,993
1,171
2,813

601
1,993
1,132
3,018

611
1,957
1,134
2,736

495
1,693
1,015
1,917

542
1,991
790
2,865

4,863
4,968

5,273
4,393

4, 522
4,051

4,950
4,486

4, 293
3, 809

4,562
3,627

3,443
3,762

2,555
2,602

3,266
3,050

.657

.650

.650

.647

.657

.657

.657

.657

2,834
3,241
p. 657

1.137
1.137
1.143
1.133
1.137
1.138 • 1.180 1.187 • 1.170 p 1.196
*New series. Data prior to Sept. 1962 may be obtained from Bureau of Census reports.
§ Monthly averages for 1951-56 (corrected) appear in the Aug. 1964 SURVEY.
9 Includes data for items not shown separately.
a
Beginning June 1904, data are not comparable with those for earlier pe r iods because of
changes in specifications or reporters (for leather). May 1964 prices on new basis: Cottonseed oil, $0.132; soybean oil, $0.103: leather, $1.180.

SUEVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962 | 1963

Monthly
average

S-31
1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

LEATHER AND PRODUCTS—Continued
LEATHER MANUFACTURES
Shoe1? and slippers:
Production, total t
__thous. pairs. _ 49,803
Shoes, sandals, and play shoes, except athletic
thous. pairs _. 42,033
6 603
Slippers for housewear
do
583
Athletic
do
584
Other footwear
_
do
Exports
___ ..do
Prices, wholesale, f.o.b. factory:
Men's and boys' oxfords, dress, elk or side
upper Goodyear welt
1957-59=100
Women's oxfords, elk stde upper, Goodyear
welt
--1957-59=100-.
Women's pumps low-medium quality do

49,284

50,132

53 809

44 671

45 258

51,556

50 033

52 314

49 205

47,685

47, 526 '47,436

53, 075

42, 157
5 918

40, 486
8 087

42 784
9 212

35 992
7 357

46 689
3 882

44 634
4 614

1,073

1,313

390
395

42 217
5 969

443
576

354
726

40, 544 '40,630
r
5 834
5 903
'256
290
'716
789

44, 074

397
588

46 250
5 107

40 325
6 280

438
884

39 932
4 1C9

174

145

162

141

150

502
707

486

500

412
805

439
518

7,887
281
833

163

177

170

190

205

208

132

115

156

210

105.6

105 1

105 1

105 1

105 1

105 1

105 1

105 1

105 1

105 1

105 1

105 1

105 1

105 1

105 1

107.8
111.2

106. 5
110.7

106.5
111 1

106.5
111 3

106 5
110 6

106.5
110 9

106 5
111 2

106 5
110 6

106 5
110 6

106 5
110 8

106.5
110 9

106.5
110 9

106.5
110.9

106.5
110.8

106.5
111.0

2,999
482

3,205
510
2,695

LUMBER AND PRODUCTS
LUMBER— ALL TYPES
National Lumber Manufacturers Association :d*O
Production total
mil. bd. ft_.
Hard woods
do
Softwoods
do

2,764
530
2,234

2,882
581

3 115

3,244
617

2 798

2 559

2 701

2 817

3 054

2 953

3 041

609

3,108

2 506

2 627

524

493

3,052
541

2,301

2 198

2 058

2 200

2 293

2 561

2,517

2 488

2 502

2,511

2 554

2, 866

2 903

3 054

2 707

2 579

2 686

2 945

3 082

3 129

3 041

3 121

3 170

3 067

547

537

2 341

2 462

2 128

2 063

2 172

2 397

2 535

2 592

2 517

2 586

2 631

2 484

6,454

6 493
1,964
4 529

6 555
1 987
4 568

6 541
1 971
4 570

6 594
1 957
4 637

6 472
1 930
4 542

6 461
1 871
4 590

6 386
1 810
4 576

6 310
1 747
4 563

6 226
1 752
4 474

6 156
1,754
4 402

6 210
1 722
4 488

6,343

457

84
469

82
381

84
364

70
281

68
391

97
455

72
475

90
445

77
576

95
556

82
478

80
470

705
558

735
520

788
491

692
470

713
442

600

501

501

465

539

554

3,066
537
2,529

Shipments total
Hard woods
Softwoods

do
do
do

2,777
525
2,252

Stocks (gross) mill, end of month, total
Hardwoods
Softwoods

do do
do

6,346

6,504

1,529
4 817

4,662

63
408

1445

680
496

679
538

719
491

800
520

649
528

665
535

842
671

738
721

694
637

731
594

665
673
991

671
676
969

700
677
925

745
772
878

666
641
923

638
659
903

761
706
984

708
688

771
778
997

713
712

752
742

1 004

1,056

1 048

1,045

1 002

1,010

1,020

Exports, total sawmill products
do
26
Sawed timber
do
10
Boards, planks, scantlings, etc
do
17
Prices, wholesale:
Dimension, construction, dried, 1" x 4", R. L.
$ per M bd. ft_. 78.65
Floorlng, C and better, F. G., 1" x 4", R. L.
$ per M bd. ft__ 122. 52
Southern pine:
Orders new
_ .
" mil bd ft
478
Orders unfilled, end of month.. _
do.
255

31
12
19

26
10
16

34
15
20

37
14
23

37
18
19

28
11
17

27
12
15

38
14
24

27
10
17

41
18
23

29
g
20

39
13
26

29
12
17

24
7
17

Exports total sawmill products
Imports total sawmill products
SOFTWOODScfO
Douglas fir:
Orders, new _
Orders unfilled end of month

, _

do
do

mil. bd. ft_.
do

Production
Shipments
Stocks (gross), mill, end of month

do
do
do

Production
do
Shipments
_
do
Stocks (gross), mill and concentration yards, end
of month
mil bd ft
Exports, total sawmill products
M bd. ft__
Sawed timber
__
do
Boards, planks, scantlings, etc
do
Prices, wholesale, (Indexes):
Boards, No. 2 and better, 1" x 6", R. L.
1957-59=100-.
Flooring, B and better, F. G., 1" x 4", S. L.
1957-59 = 100-.
Western pine:
Orders, new
mil. bd. ft_.
Orders, unfilled, end of month
do
Production
_
do
Shipments.
do
Stocks (CTOSS), mill, end of month
do
Price, wholesale, Ponderosa, boards, No. 3, 1" x
12", R. L. (6' and over)
$ per M bd. ft

564
2,303
1,842

73

562

1,914
4 540
1

77

592

579

516

514

548

798
773

524

756
741

535

770
773

539

744
817

583

1,693

4,650

79.92

79.86

77.96

77 73

77 96

78 20

81 43

82 01

83 10

82 99

82.03

134. 22

136. 72

137. 67

139 77

141 38

142 46

150 02

152 42

151 90

153 45

153 45

491
280

486
269

562
279

483
264

379
256

447
259

466
270

528
289

557
306

536
294

550
284

540
267

508
260

514
253

478
475

484
488

503
496

545
552

484
498

411
387

475
444

476
455

520
509

534
540

517
548

525
560

534
557

500
515

515
521

1,366

1,380
6,414

1 334
4,681

1 327

1 313
8 210
1 225
6 985

1 337

1 368

1 389
6 391

1 400
10 643
1 Oil
q £32

1 394

7*955

8,694
788

1 363
10 050

8'400
823

1 305

1 290
9 496
1 691
7 805

1 284
8 033

6,325

1,571

4,754

832
5,583

397
4,284

7,676
833
6,843

1 300
6 655

6,603
747

902

5 856

5 489

7 906

9 203

1 328
9 692
1 521
8 171

847

81 51

' 81. 52P 81.36

155 52 ' 155. 52 p 155. 52

7 577

800

7 233

93.1

92.5

94.0

92.8

93 0

92 8

92.7

92 8

92 6

92 7

93 2

92 7

92.9

92 3

92.4

94.6

95.2

96.0

95.6

95.6

95.6

95.6

95.4

95.4

95.4

95.4

95.1

95.1

95 1

95.0

800
416

849
383

866
347

1,002

730
352

759
347

891
503

937
501

876
496

894
484

837
437

914
459

947
485

894
453

921
430

927
920

1 m A.

1 098

1

1 722

384

789
797

841
839

111

749

1, 656

1,683

851
906

893

1,657

977
875

992
837

1,679

1 693

1 678

1 625

1 492

1 541

1 485

1 494

1 476

1 483

67.43

67.42

70. 56

65.96

64 62

63 50

63 07

63 67

66 45

68 05

69 92

69 01

67 16

762

JRA

682
735

806
939

930
881

oox

875
893

T CC

QOft
^7]
CO

947

p 63 76

HARDWOOD FLOORING
Flooring :
Maple, beech, and birch:
Orders, new
mil. bd. ft__
Orders, unfilled, end of month
do
Production
do
Shipments...
do
Stocks (gross), mill, end of month ... do
Oak:
Orders, new
do
Orders, unfilled, end of month
do
Production.
do
Shipments
do
Stocks (gross), mill, end of month
do

3.1

2.9

10.5

10.8

2.7
2.9
7.9

65.7
42.8
65.0
65.9
75.2

2.8
2.7
6.5

68.3
45.2
69.3
69.1
43.6

2.0

3.2

2.1

10.0

10.6

2 4

2 6

10.4
2 5
2 4

2.8

3.3

5.8

6.6

6.6

64 9
44.9
69 4
68 6
38.7

72 8
40.4
79 9
77 5
39.7

55 1
34.7
68 3
64 7
41.2

' Revised.
v Preliminary.
1 Beginning* Sept. 1963, data exclude small amounts
formerly included.
tRevisions by months for 1961-Sept. 1962 are shown in Bu. of Census report M31A(62)-13




2.2

2.6

10.5
2 6
19

10.8
2 6
2 2

7.1

7.6

51 0
36.9
62 8
56 4
46.6

75 7
44.7
72 7
64 4
55.0

3.0

3.1

11.6
2 2
19

12.4
2 3
2 4

12.5
3 0
2 7

7.9

7.8

7.9

12.5
2 7
2 6

84 2
63.6
65 2
65 2
55.0

74 7
68.6
71 2
73 2
52.5

69 4
62.3
73 2
72 3
53.4

2.8

2.6

2.5

2.5

12.2
2 9
34

11.1
14
2 4

10.9
2 1
2 3

7.9

7.3

11.3
2 4
3 6

6.0

4.8

4.4

58 1
54.1

62 5
48.5
72 1
70 4
53.1

74 5
50.4

7C 9

67 0
48.8

2.8

70 *}

68 1
54.4

3.1

79 1

72 6
52.6

53.3
fiQ fl
70 0

50. 1

70 9

72 4
47.9

(^Revisions by months for 1961-Oct. 1962 for production, shipments, and orders will be
shown later; those for 1951-62 for stocks appear on p. 28 of the Jan. 1964 SURVEY.
©Beginning Jan. 1961, data for Alaska included in pertinent items.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-32
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

November 1964

1963

Monthly
average

Sept.

Oct.

1964

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

METALS AND MANUFACTURES
IRON AND STEEL
Exports:
Steel mill products
thous sh tons
Scrap
do
Pig iron*
do

168
426
13

182
530
6

162
640
1

212
552
8

207
428
5

230
564
6

226
580
4

212
557
3

235
744
0)

218
708
14

256
770
34

300
679
39

333
718
27

330
709
2

259
677
22

Imports:
Steel mill products 1
Scrap 1
Pig iron*

342
22
42

454
19
55

471
13
89

549
15
111

516
16
80

402
29
51

481
27
29

428
26
36

474
23
21

495
16
29

544
17
78

604
31
99

582
17
90

525
24
95

493
24
48

5,494
3,387
2,107
5,513
8,844

6,168
3, 715
2,453
6,218
7,977

5,494
3,363
2,131
5,573
8,013

6,186
3,670
2, 516
6.197
8,002

5,898
3,513
2,385
5,971
7,962

5,873
3,535
2,337
5,944
7,937

6,363
3,876
2,487
6. 530
7,778

6,366
3,841
2,524
6,560
7,599

6,813
4,263
2,550
7,162
7,302

7,069
4.445
2.624
7,340
7,030

28.12
29.00

26.78
27.00

26.89
26.00

27.22
26.00

27.02
25.00

27.24
26.00

28.94
29.00

28.63
29.00

28.85
31.00

30.36
32.00

30.62
33.50

31.91
34.50

33.22
36.00

6,050
5,859
2,786

6,060
6,156
2,791

8,573
9,718
3,369

7,318
9,141
4,064

3,876
5,997
2.980

3,543
1,846
1.940

4,067
1,406
1,693

4,088
1,446
1,667

4,167
1,598
2,017

5,731
4,150
2,403

8,918
7,867
3,451

9,448
8,302
4,752

9,199
11,059
5,070

9,238
10, 969
5,C62

8,932
4,052
2,710
8,033 8,458
9,113
341
428
255
80, 030 ' 77, 314 73, 141
9,237 ' 10, 923 13, 224
65, 450 61,044 54, 644
5,273
5,343
5,347

3,225
8,867
211
69, 936
15, 866
49, 002
5,068

3,491
9,764
195
65, 816
18, 380
4?, 7°9
4,707

7, 323
9,801
347
64, 486
19, 947
40, 250
4,289

13, 432
10, 558
621
68, 164
20, 999
43,124
4,041

14, 029
10, 019
719
73, 291
22, 145
47, 134
4,012

15, 077
10, 002
934
76, 496
20,283
52, 209
4,004

14. 497
10, 363
852
78, 788
18, 552
56. 343
3,893

- -

do
do
do

Iron and Steel Scrap
Production and receipts, total
thous. sh. tons..
Home scrap produced
do
Purchased scrap received (net)
do
Consumption total
do
Stock^ consumers' end of mo
do
Prices,' steel scrap, No. 1 heavy melting:
Composite (5 markets)
$ per Ig ton
Pittsburgh district
do
Ore
Iron ore (operations in all U.S. districts):
Mine production
thous. Ig tons
Shipments from mines
do
Imports
__ do
TT.S. and foreign ores and ore agglomerates:
Receipts at iron and steel plants
do
Consumption at iron and steel plants
do
Exports
_
do ..
Stocks total end of mo
do
At mines
do
At furnace yards
do
At IT S docks
do

8,121 8,458
8,041 8,669
491
568
75, 737 r 73, 776
14, 657 ' 15, 028
55, 289 53, 376
5,787 5,372

12, 535 12. 386
8,010
7,516
711
715
' 78, 448 '81,170
M3.169 '11,367
60,174 64, 550
5,105
5, 253

' 37. 05 ^34.89
38.00 P36.00

4,717
13. 676
10, 270
945
59, 758
3,857

79

84

135

67

88

46

71

54

62

105

53

110

80

64

5,477
5,550

5,993
6,057

5,174
5,224

5, 525
5,603

5,565
5,587

5,897
5, 949

6,291
6,415

6,199
6,306

6,910
7,030

6,973
7.058

7,435

7,076

7,006

7,158

3,178

2,814

2,811

2,813

2,827

2,806

2.730

2,654

2,569

2,493

65.46
65.50
66.00

62.87
63.00
63.50

62.75
63.00
63.50

62.75
63.00
63.50

62.75
63.00
63.50

62.75
63.00
63.50

62.75
63. 00
63.50

62.75
63. 00
63.50

62. 75
63.00
63.50

62.75
63.00
63. 50

62.75
63.00
63.50

62.75
63. 00
63.50

62.75
63 00
63.50

62.75
62.75
63.00 T> 63 00
63.50 * 63. 50

680
963
527

783
1,064
591

805
1, 037
598

758
1,194
673

692
1,049
575

719
1,014
534

806
1.068
' 542

759
1,095
^565

816
1,229
687

837
1,264
699

859
1,227
678

834
1,245
697

891
1,116
635

902
1,191
731

73
72
42

81
78
44

82
74
42

78
87
50

80
78
42

88
79
42

91
84
49

91
'82
44

94
88
48

93
93
52

92
95
54

95
89
49

101
71
44

112
80
48

8,194
101.2

9,105
112.5

7,858
98.4

8,483
102.8

8,488
106.3

8,753
106.1

9, 515
115.3

9,474
122.8

10,485
127.1

10, 549
132.1

11, 048
133.9

10, 173
127.4

10, 095
122.4

183
119
93

219
125
100

219
121
97

225
135
107

255
126
101

262
133
107

312
145
117

333
141
114

345
157
129

331
162
132

323
154
126

322
162
130

321
139
112

317
137
108

308
113
86

306
116
88

298
115
91

306
123
95

311
111
84

312
114
88

320
139
111

322
121
93

328
138
107

334
137
107

331
131
101

340
136
104

356
'112
83

362
115
90

5,879
231
395
522
86

6,296
263
443
603
92

5,455
212
417
587
90

5,927
266
464
614
70

5,617
285
428
608
74

5.540
252
420
588
92

6,475
281
422
614
109

6,239
311
405
613
120

7,124
394
468
679
141

7,359
333
509
737
143

7,271
344
543
699
129

7, 065
385
503
679
129

6,869
334
526
688
105

6,993
352
524
669
89

7,344
361
554
726
96

972
916
948
848
909
Bars and tool steel, total
do
631
597
490
580
584
Bars: Hot rolled (incl. light shapes)
do
199
224
260
258
Reinforcing
__ do
220
112
110
90
103
97
Cold
finished
do
592
587
569
605
Pipe and tubing
do
468
262
259
244
221
263
Wire and wire products
..do
505
488
352
405
404
Tin mill products
_
do
2,373 2,587 2,084 2,293 2 272
Sheets and strip (incl. electrical), total... do
646
735
571
"'672
655
Sheets: Hot rolled
do
1,126 1,209
1,019
Cold rolled
do
898
1,044
Steel mill products, inventories, end of mo.:f
10.0
10.9
9.5
Consumers (manufacturers only). ..mil. sh. tons.. 10.3
10.0
4.4
4.8
Receipts during month
do
4.0
4.5
4.3
4.4
4.7
4.7
5.4
Consumption during month
do. _
4.8
3.4
3.4
Warehouses (service centers)
do
3.5
3.5
3.5
Producing mills:
7.2
7.4
7.4
In process (ingots, semifinished, etc.)
do _.
7.3
7.4
6.9
Finished (sheets, plates, bars, pipe, etc.).do
7.1
6.8
6.7
6.9
Steel (carbon), finished, composite price. _.$ per lb.. .0698 .0705 .0704 .0714 .0715
•• Revised.
* Preliminary.
» Less than 500 toias.
*New series. Monthly data back to 1953 are available,
T Beginning Sept. 1963, imports statistics reflect adoptio n of the U.S. Tai•iff Schecluies;
these data may not be strictly comparable with fig ures shown for p rior mon ths.



853
579
167
99
442
192
323
2,378
6*5
1,149

977
680
169
120
504
221
563
2,786
833
1,316

916
621
172
114
545
226
494
2,608
111
1,211

1,095
702
262
123
665
276
545
2,860
878
1, 320

1,140
722
283
126
759
299
556
2,884
843
1,327

1,145
734
281
122
721
299
553
2,838
834
1,311

1,113
686
295
124
752
297
544
2,663
750
1,208

1,066
641
312
106
778
246
576
2,550
743
1,142

1,109
686
301
114
741
260
538
2,712
788
1,208

1,142
709
304
121
733
273
476
2,984
879
1,341

9.3
4.6
4.8
3.5

9.4
5.2
5.1
3.4

9.4
4.8
4.8
3.5

9.4
5.3
5.3
3.4

9.3
5.3
5.4
3.6

9.2
5.1
5.2
3.6

9.2
5.2
5.2
3.6

9.5
4.7
4.4
3.7

9.5
4.8
4.8
'3.8

*9. 5
P 5. 4
*5.4
"3.7

7.8
7.2
.0715

7.8
7.2
.0715

8.0
7.3
.0715

8.0
7.6
.0715

7.9
7.6
.0715

8.4
7.6
.0715

8.3
7.7
. 0715

8.6
7.5
.0715

8.8
7.6
.0715

*8.6
p 7. 8
.0715

Manganese (mn. content), general importst__do
Pig Iron and Iron Products

Pig iron:
Production (excluding production of ferroalloys)
thous. sh. tons..
Consumption
do
Stocks (consumers' and suppliers'), end of mo.
thous. sh. tons..
Prices :
Composite
$ per Ig. ton_.
Basic (furnace)
do
Foundry No 2, Northern
do
Castings, gray iron:
Orders, unfilled, for sale, end of mo.
thous. sh. tons..
Shipments, total
do
Eor sale
do
Castings, malleable iron:
Orders, unfilled, for sale, end of mo.
thous. sh. tons..
Shipments, total
do
For sale
.do
Steel, Grade, Semifinished, and Finished
Steel ingots and steel for castings:
Production
thous. sh. tons..
Index
1957-59=100..
Steel castings:
Orders, unfilled, for sale, end of mo.
thous. sh. tons..
Shipments, total
__ do
For sale, total _ _
do
Steel forgings (for sale) :
Orders, unfilled, end of mo
_ do
Shipments total
do
Drop and upset. _
do
Steel products, net shipments:
Total fall grades)
do
Semifinished products
do
Structural shapes (heavy), steel piling. _ .do
Plates
__
do
Rails and accessories.
do

7,142

62.75

10. 503 '10.656 P 11, 547
140.0
127.3
133.5

. 0715
tEflf ective wi th the 0 ct. 1963 S URVEY, (iata for s ;eel consiimers (m anufacti irers onlj0 reflect
recalci ilated es timates IDased on the use Df quant ty cover age facto rs (deriv ed from the 1958
Censu s of Marmfacture s); previ Dusiy pu )lished c at a wer 3 based cm cost c overage factors .
Revis ons back to Oct. 1961 app ear in th e Oct. 19 63 SURVI:Y.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1964

1963

1963

Monthly
average

S-33

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

METALS AND MANUFACTURES— Continued
IRON AND STEEL— Continued
Steel, Manufactured Products
Fabricated structural steel:
Orders, new (net)
Shipments
Backlog, end of year or mo

thous. sh. tons..
do
do

Barrels and drums, steel, heavy types (for sale):
Orders unfilled end of mo
thous
Shipments
do
Cans (tinplate), shipments (metal consumed),
total for sale and own useO
thous. sh. tons__

302
322
2,624

336
341
2,322

289
371
2,297

322
411
2,260

262
324
2,238

440
321
2,322

358
310
2,306

247
304
2,270

384
355
2,313

387
360
2,276

368
377
2,261

478
412
2,300

347
379
2,490

379
374
2,497

1,404
1,947

1,273
1,922

1,281
1,956

1,233
1,994

1,107
1,702

1,119
1,603

1,184
1.858

1,202
1,812

1,389
1,955

1,379
2,108

1,334
1,960

1,273
2,110

1,360
' 2. 146

1,248
2,179

408
362
2,599

405

382

459

426

301

289

342

293

340

383

381

432

467

520

176.5
138.4

192.7
142.0

197.4
66.0

205.1
71.0

201.1
63.0

209.1
73.0

212.0
68.0

200.2
67.0

214.2
72.0

208.3
74.0

214.6
68.0

203.7
60.0

216.1
55.0

217.2
51.0

211.3

25.6
4.9
12.6

34.7
3.4
13.8

38.2
3.5
13.0

34.5
4.0
13.2

36.9
4.1
12.6

36.1
3.9
11.9

34.3

28.8

36.5

35.2

35.6

36.8

16.8

13.0

15.9

20.0

20.4

17.2

40.4
5.4
14.6

26.7
3.4
18.9

44.3
3.5
19.1

153.1
. 2388

105.6
.2262

93.8
.2250

96.9
.2298

110.7
.2300

99.0
.2300

108.0
.2300

107.8
.2300

106.0
.2343

93.3
.2350

99.5
.2350

87.0
.2383

92.0
.2400

104.3
.240U

109.9
.2400

472. 5
317.6
142.6
77.2

628. 2
355.4
166.8
79.4

528.2
346.8
161.3
77.0

587. 4
423. 7
210.0
85.0

492.6
324.7
144.4
79.8

523.9
328.9
145.0
79.3

546.3
36^.3
170.9
90.7

532.7
357. 1
170.1
84.2

647.7
433.8
225.3
88.5

613.7
417.4
193.9
90.1

600.5
401.7
194.3
85.7

640.7
415.6
199.6
87.2

102.4
134.3
101.2
33.1
22.7

101.1
133.0
101.6
31.4
24.0

99.3
129.0
95.1
33.9
24.9

109.9
138.0
103.5
34.5
25.8

106.3
131.8
103.7
28.1
23.3

108. 5
141.3
106.3
35.0
23.7

107.3
140.4
103.4
37.0
24.1

107.4
147.1
109.8
37.3
22.4

112.3
145. 0
109.6
35.4
29.4

111.9
144.9
113.3
31.6
27.0

115.4
147.9
111. 7
36.2
27.0

113.8
153.4
116.1
37.3
28.5

73.5
125. 2
94.2
31.1
27.4

' 77.7
110.8
78.1
32.7
27.2

93.8
110.4
83.0
27.4
27.1

40.1
8.2

45.1
9.9

70.8
13.3

51.7
12.2

33.0
11.8

54.0
7.4

45.9
8.9

35.4
11.3

60.0
10.3

42.1
10.9

50.6
10.7

48.0
11.4

47.9
12.5

45.5
12.6

51.1
14.1

32.1
28.0
134. 2

30.0
26.0
146.2

29.5
25.3
142.0

29.5
25.6
163.7

30.0
26.4
147.5

39.7
33.9
140.7

34.3
29.5
150.7

31.4
26.6
152.0

33.2
25.4
162.2

33.6
28.2
163.8

33.4
25.9
163.9

33 8
33.9
33.4
24.8
16.4
22.7
25.7
25.1
178 5 * 114. 4 » 150. 4 v 152. 1

do
do
$ per lb__

177.5
102.0
.3060

175.4
96.0
.3060

173.8
103.0
.3060

154.7
80.1
.3060

150.3
75.9
.3060

145.3
82.8
.3060

135.0
80.9
.3060

140.4
90.9
.3060

140.7
88.8
.3112

135.9
88.2
.3160

132.9
86.4
.3160

125.6
90.2
.3160

' 163. 2 » 157. 1 * 144.6
»116 0 " 108. 1 v 90.2
.3160
.3160
. 3223

Copper-base mill and foundry products, shipments
(quarterly avg. or total):
Copper mill (brass mill) products
mil. lb__
Copper wire mill products©
do
Brass and bronze foundry products
do

589
409
229

616
428
239

578
398
234

732
521
281

699
485
258

Lead:
Production:
Mine, recoverable leadt
thous. sh. tons..
Secondary, recovered from scrap©
do

19.7
37.0

21.1
Ml.l

22.5
40.5

25.2
47.0

23.0
43.7

23.9
37.4

24.8
39.9

22.7
39.6

24.3
42.6

24.0
42.3

23.3
45.9

23.8
42.3

'23.1
41.0

' 22.9

* 22.0

33.4
92.5

31.3
96.9

31.5
94.6

32.1
111.1

38.1
101.7

33.1
99.4

32.4
105.4

37.7
93.7

31.2
92.1

26.0
97.4

26.4
96.7

32.1
100.6

27.6
91.5

23.2

23.3

91.0

110.2

105.3

111.1

112.2

110.2

109.5

117.4

111.5

109.2

97.7

94.1

94.0

96.5

92.9

142.5
93.5

'56.7

72.0
108.5

64.2
111. 5

56.9
115.5

47.3
111.2

45.2
111.4

45.6
118.6

40.6
120.3

30.1
117.7

29.0
127.5

30.9
132.7
.1301

.1400
505
2,045

NONFERROUS METALS AND PRODUCTS
Aluminum :
Production, primary (dom. and foreign ores)
thous. sh. tons..
Estimated recovery from scrap
do
Imports (general):
Metal and alloys, crude
do
Plates, sheets, etc
do
Exports, metal and alloys, crude.
do
Sfocks, primary fat reduction plants), end of mo.
thous. sh. tons..
Price primary Ingot, 99.5% mln
$ per Ib
Aluminum shipments:
Tnerot and mill products (net) A
Mill products, total
Plate and sheet (excl foil)
Castings

mil Ib
do
do
do

Copper:
Production:
Mine, recoverable coppert
thous. sh. tons..
Refinerv, primary
do
From domestic ores
do
From foreign ores
_
do
Socondarv recovered as refined
do
Imports (general):
Refined, unrefined, scrap©!
do
Refined
__ __
_
do
Exports:
Refined scrap, brass and bronze ingots do _.
Refined
do
Consumption, refined (by mills, etc.)
do
Storks, refined, end of mo., total
Fabricators'
Price, bars, electrolytic (N.Y.)

Imports (general), ore©, metal!
Consumption, totalt-

do._—
do

Stocks, end of year or mo.:
Producers', ore, base bullion,
(ABMS)
Refiners' (primary), refined
(lead content)

and In process©
thous. sh. tonsand antimonial
thous. sh. tons..

623
454
249

692
467
259

' 563. 0
543.7
' 396. 7 374.6
172.2
' 176. 1
76.9
'70.0

all smelters
thous. sh. tons..
$perlb__

119.9

80. 4
109.4

'46.0
.0963

'66.4
.1114

57.0
.1163

57.3
.1194

55. 7
.1215

62.7
. 1250

67.2
.1298

71.9
.1300

72.8
.1300

70.8
.1300

67.4
.1300

65.1
.1300

66.5
.1300

Tin:
Imports (for consumption) :
Ore©.
Ig. tons..
Bars pigs, etc.
do
Estimated recovery from scrap, total©
do
As metal
do
Consumption, pig, total
do
Primary
_____
do

447
3,422
1,750
250
6,590
4,550

(2)
3,596
1,861
255
6,525
4,601

259
2,327
1,760
235
6,030
4,145

627
3,546
1,925
240
6,705
4,455

989
3,080
1,990
290
5,490
3,630

265
3,109
1, 765
270
5, 960
4,010

1,249
3.227
1,770
190
6, 580
4,710

1,705
2,378
2,020
260
6.750
4,790

738
3,146
2, 025
255
7,165
5, 085

2,046
2,227
1,985
260
7,285
5,190

313
2.272
2,050
235
7,265
5,235

301
2,530
2,130
260
7,31^
5,130

498
2,P68
1,695
260
6,430
4,805

451
4,194

do
36
do
21,730
$ p e r l b _ _ 1. 1461

135
25,610
1. 1664

265
32, 000
1.1611

170
30, 980
1. 1997

102
30, 245
1. 2704

165
29, 364
1.3020

207
27, 185
1. 3402

297
25, 245
1.4012

964
21,810
1. 3482

1,079
20. 120
1.3351

343
19, 600
1. 3485

290
160
18, 560 -18,480
1. 5060 1.5965

311
22, 635
1.6167

1. 8538

Scrap (lead-base, purchased),
Price, common grade (N.Y.)

Exports, incl. reexports (metal)..
Stocks, pig (Industrial), end of mo§
Price, pig, Straits (N.Y.), prompt

Zinc :
Mine production, recoverable zinct
thous. sh. tons..
Imports (general):
Ores©!
do
Metal (slab, blocks)!
do
Consumption (recoverable zinc content):
do
Ores©.Scrap, all types..
do

r




.3361

.1450

6,885
162

42.1

44.1

41.4

47.1

45.3

46.1

48.8

44.9

48.6

46.5

46.6

46.8

47.4

'49.2

46.6

39.0
11.8

31.1
12.1

27.0
19.4

26.9
11.0

29.8
15.2

33.0
14.7

23.6
11.4

32 2

iole

28.5
10.5

27.6
9.7

35.9
9.1

33.5
8.9

29.1
7.9

28.9
9.6

24.6
9.3

8.2
16.7

8.7
17.0

8.2
16.1

8.7
16.6

7.7
16.1

7.7
15.9

7.4
16.4

8.0
16.5

8.9
16.9

7.2
16.9

8.9
17.1

8.5
17.1

8.7
16.2

8.0
16.7

l
' Revised.
* Preliminary.
Recoverable aluminum content.
Monthly data are
2
expressed in metallic content (incl. alloying constituents).
See note "©" for this pigc.
O Reflects new factors to derive tonnage equivalent (1963, 23.5 base boxes per ton of steel;
1962, 23.2 boxes); revisions back to 1961 are available.
ABeginning Jan. 1962, net shipments of ingot derived by new method to include imports
not previously included; revisions back to Jan. 1961 are available. {Revisions for 1962 are in

.2400

2. 0461

the Sept. 1963 SURVEY: those for 1st half 1963 are available upon request.
© Basic metal content (for tin ore, Sept. 1963 through Apr. 1964 data are in terms of gross
weight).
!See similar note, bottom p. S-32.
cf Consumers' and secondary smelters' stocks of lead in refinery shapes and in copperbase scrap.
§Effective Sept. 1962, includes surplus tin held by GSA (i.e., tin to be offered
for sale and tin for which bids to purchase were rejected by GSA).

S-34

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

Monthly
average

November 1964

1963

Sept.

1964
!

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept. ! Oct.
i

METALS AND MANUFACTURES— Continued
NONFERROUS METALS AND PROD.— Con.
Zinc— Continued
Slab zinc:
Production (primary smelter), from domestic
and foreign ores
thous sh tons
Secondarv (redistilled) production
do
Consumption, fabricators'
do
Exports
do
Stocks, end of year or mo.:
Producers' at smelter (AZI)A
-do
Consumers'
do
Price, prime Western (St. Louis)
Sperlb..
HEATING EQUIPMENT, EXC. ELECTRIC
Radiators and con vectors, shipments:
Cast iron
.
mil. sq. ft. radiation..
Non ferrous*
do
Oil burners:
Shipments
_thous_.
Stocks end of year or mo
do
Stoves and ranges, domestic cooking:
Shipments, total (excl. liquid-fuel types)-— do
Gasd*
_.do

73.3
4.9
86.0
3.0

74.4

72.5

78.1

92.1

90.6

2.8

2.0

99.3

144.7
80.0
.1162

47.9
92. 1
.1200

55.4
90.1
. 1250

1.0

10
9 2

39.8
49.9

76.0
4.8
91.7
.4

76.8
4.9
86.9
2.4

86.0
5.2
95.2
1.7

83.7
4.7
100.0
2.6

84.8
5.3
98.3
3.6

80.9
5.2
99.5
2.7

80.7

94.7

1.9

83.8
4.8
88.5
1. 3

78.9

88. 5

100.9

2.6

4.1

53.9
88. 1
.1250

50.2
87.0
.1250

55. 1
92.1
.1294

48.2
92. 1
.1300

43.6
92.5
.1300

46.0
93.9
.1300

43.5
89.4
.1332

38.0
85 6
.1350

30.4
87.2
.1400

25.7
'89.5
.1350

29.5
84.2
.1400

30.6

33.9

.1350

.1399

1.4
12.4

1.4
13 9

1 l
9 8

1.0
8 0

.9
8.1

.9
8.2

1.1
7.4

.8
7.0

.5
81

7
9 9

.7
9 0

9
10 5

48 8
42 2

75.7
51.8

72 4
49 5

55 9
43 9

32 8
42 2

42.3
44.1

41.7
44.2

40 2
47 9

36.6
49.8

38 5
54 5

48 1
59 5

166.7
163.6

176. 0
173 1

198.9
194.9

207.3

173.7
170 7

162.2
160 2

158.1
156.0

167.7
165.7

200.0

202 5

197.4

195.4
193.5

173.1
171.1

157. 0
Stoves, domestic heating, shipments, total .do
94.1
Gas
do
Warm-air furnaces (forced-air and gravity air-flow),
108.9
shipments^ total thous. .
87.1
Gas
.do
217.7
Water heaters, gas, shipments
do

161 9
101 5

239.1
146.3

258 2
170 4

183 6
132 0

120 5
81 6

91.0
54.3

70.8
38.7

112.9
77.5

89.6
53.4

117 8
95 3
200 3

168.8
130.6
179.7

170 4
134 5
223 1

132 4
106 5
176.8

97 6
81 6
191.2

95.8
79.2

95.9
79.4
237,1

99.3
82.9
244. 9

99.7
84.3

141 0
i 15 7

39.9
14.6

131.9

122.3

184.8

127.1

129.6

235.8

251.8

272 9

242.6

244.1

8 2
11
3 4

9.6
.7
2.7

7 6

8 5

4 6

4 3

61
1.0
30

5.8
.8
2.4

9.7
1.0
5.7

10 5
13
6 8

7.4
1.2
3.8

7.4
1.0
3.7

128.7

128.1

135.7

136.6

156.2

146.5

153. 3

170.8

158.1

547
581

563
490

602
611

523
598

590
630

491
484

515
609

548
578

581
510

2,434

2,661

2,941

2,738

2,830

2,543

2,518

2, 862

56.55
45.40
54.75
42.85
5.4

66.85

59.10

77.40

80.15

74.50
60.45

77.70

54.05

61.40

22.35

32.35
29.95

MACHINERY AND APPARATUS
Fans, blowers, and unit heaters, qtrly. totals:
Fans and blowers, new orders
_mil. $_. U0.2
U6.2
Unit-heater group new orders
do
Foundry equipment (new), new orders, net
mo avg. shipments, 1957-59=1 00. . 111.4
Furnaces (industrial) and ovens, etc., new orders
7.0
(domestic) netf
mil. $
1.2
Electric processing
do
2.8
Fuel-fired (exc for hot rolling steel) _ _ do
Material handling equipment (Industrial) :
Orders (new), Index, seas, adj
1957-59=100-- 112.6
Industrlal trucks (electric), shipments:
500
Hand (motorized)
number. _
471
Rlder-tvpe
do
Industrial trucks and tractors (Internal combustion
engines), shipments
number. . 2,232
Machine tools:
Metal cutting tools:
Orders, new (net), total
T)omestlc
Shipments total
Domestic
Estimated backlog
Metal forming tools:
Orders, new (net), total
Domestic
Shipments total
Domestic
Estimated backlog
_ _

5.0

.mil. $..
do
do
do .
..months

44.80
36.70
47.85
35.15
4.2

59.50

mil. $_.
do
- - do
..
do
months..

14.60
11.65
12.40
0.30
4.6

18.10
15. 90
15.30
12.80

47. 50

49.90
41.10

5.2

4.7

Other machinery and equip., qtrly. shipments:
Construction machinery (selected types),
J
J
total 9
mil $ ' 260. 7 ' 312. 3
164.2 r l178.5
Tractors tracklaying total
do
i 19.7
23 0
Tractors wheel (con off-highwav)
do
Tractor shovel loaders (Integral units only),
158.9 i 73 6
wheel and trackliylng types
rnil $
Tractors, wheel (excl. garden and contractors'
i 130. 1 1150 9
Farm machines and equipment (selected types),
i
197. 7 !213. 7
excl tractors©
mil $
ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT
2 653
2 Kin
Household olectrlcal appliances:
1 9Q ft

Refrigerators and home freezers, output 1
1QK7 SQ inn
W

h

1

(f\'

H

n~"t>

m

n

OflQ

O

r\

Driers (gas and electric), sales (domestic and
116 4

5.4

17.60
14.70
12.10

4.6

6.0
2.4

79.3

5.3

248.3

42.0
18 2

.9

53. 35

42. 95
5. 7

16.35
13.00

5.4

.9

60.60

64.15

41.75

69.00
56.30

5.6

5.6

6.2

15.95
15.20
14.05
11.30

21.20
19.80
14.30
12.50
5.8

48.80
47.40

5.6

309.2

50. 35

39.85

15.00
12.40
7.6

51. 25
39.10
6.3

20.30
18.85
19. 15
16.15
7.7

78.6
18.3

189.7
187 2

' 162. 1
159 6

196.3
193 5

100.6
60.8

171 0
122 6

r 205 4
r
142 8

222 4
158 4

96.1
80.4
198.9

111 6
93. 1
215.0

r 120 4
100 7
213 2

140 6
111 8
213 0

221.4

176.0

138 2

157. 8

7 5
1.2
3 2

9 2

3 6

10 8
10
68

11 1
12
5 3

127.4

127.8

156.9

150 6

581
523

653
636

581
519

473
585

555
632

3,032

2,961

3,109

3,003

2 730

3,127

91.55

85.00

100.10
83.35
73.80
62.25

78.10
66 50

73.80

81.60
66 00
70.35
55.30
7 0

237.7

49 3
18 0

79.55
64.85
52.35

70.10

70.75
57.50

6.4

6.7

6.6

24.10
19.35
16.90
15.40
8.0

45. 80

32.55
30.35

43.30

19.80
18.25
8.9

18.20
16.50
9.3

6.6

63.10

56.95

21.40
19.85
10.8

119.6
37.2

71.8

73.6

86.2

109.0

159.0

189.1

200.1

199.7

150.9

277.6

266.6

3 673

3 174

0 fiOO

155 8

165 8

167 9

159 4

174. 4.

127 8
353 9
329 1

149 1
423 0
403 7

127 8
416 4
367 4

129 0
389 6

1 98 f>

Q

2 70 c

133 0

200 3

197 1

180 3

153 2

OOC

349 7

1 653

1 3Q4

165 8

m

131 3
324 7
302 5

150 3
365 0
330 0

i rn o

142 8

135 8

1 01 1

3 146
144 4

i



60.00

51.70
6 7

27.90
25.45
18 80
16 30
11.1

r 62 65
r
60 90
r
51 20
6 8

25.85
' 14 90 20.70
r 17 35
15 40
r
12.60
14 10
r
11.6
10 8
r 15. 80

2

35 2

2 32 7

r 2 44 5

2 27 5

r

1 591

1 816

2 269

2, 631

2,980

153 4

1 fi^ 7

143 6

151.7

171.6

151 5
383 8
299 2

150 9
337 8
300 8

i fc% n
335 2

128 5
294 9
351 6

102 3
389 9
384 7

158.3
435. 1
462.0

90 2

71 6

90 5

126 1

172.0

248.4

1 602
157 4

•3 A C

0

Radio sets, productlon§__ _. _ _
do
1 596 8 1,523.5 32008. 2 1872. 7 1,799.8 H.772. 0 1,413.3 1,367.9 31 R3q 1 1,337.4 1,410.7 31,770.9
751.5 3 877. 9
Television sets (Incl. combination), prod.§ do
731. 1
712.7
584.2 3 835. 5
539.3 594.2 3 779. 4 630.1 621.4 < 690. 0
Electron tubes and semiconductors, factory sales ©
52.1
56.9
52.4
52.6
51.4
53.9
73.6
81.5
71.7
73.0
82.5
75.9
mil. $..
154
167
Insulating materials sales ^ndex
1947 49 loo
146
154
163
165
148
154
144
160
151
154
Motors and generators:
i 149
154
159
New orders Index qtrly
do
186
i 151
154
New orders (gross) :
14 4
12 4
13 5
14 9
17 9
Polyphase induction motors 1 200 hp mil $
15 2
12 1
12 4
12 4
12 7
13 3
13 7
2 i
2 6
2 8
2 8
3 5
D C motors and generators 1-200 hp
do
3 4
3 6
2 5
2 3
2 9
2 2
26
'Revised.
'Quarterly average.
2 For month shown.
3 Data cover 5 weeks;
other months, 4 weeks.
< Data cover 6 weeks.
9 Includes data not shown separately.
AProducers' stocks, elsewhere, end of Oct. 1964, 18,700 tons.
*Now series. Shipments (from The Institute of Boiler and Radiator Manufacturers)
represent the following approximate percentages of total industry shipments: Convectors,
90 to 95%; radiators and baseboards, 80 to 85%.
cf Includes data for built-in ?as fired oven-broiler units; shipments of cooking tops, not
included in figures above, totaled 29,800 units in Aug. 1964.


9

469.6

79.6
27.3

100.6

3 186

r
42
r

62 0
50 5

344.7

284.7

80.2
27.2

63.80
48.45

5.4

4.4

8
54 4

41 6
13 2

49.65
52.35

4.9

1,055.5 1,633.4 32,193.8 1.716.9
957. 4
517.4
705.8 31,052.7
44.1
136

'54.1
160

14 8

14 9
2.8

2.6

60.2
167

fAs reported by the Industrial Heating Equip. Assoc. for member companies, including
orders (not shown separately) for indust. ovens, atmosphere generating and combustion
equip., and mi-eel, items. Monthly data back to 1958 are available.
O Re visions for
1962 appear in the June 1961 SURVEY.
1 Revisions for 1961 are available.
tRevisions for 1962-03 appear on p. 3-34 of the Apr. 1964 SURVEY.
§ Radio production comprises table, portable battery, auto, and clock models; beginning
Jan. 1964, data for television sets include color sets.
©See similar note, p. S-35.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1964

1963

1963

Monthly
average

S-35

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

- 1, 240
128

1,275

PETROLEUM, COAL, AND PRODUCTS
COAL
Anthracite:
Production
_
thous. sh. tons.. 1,408
156
Exports
do
Prices'
Retail, stove, composite
$ per sh. ton-- 28.63
13.050
Wholesale, chestnut, f.o.b. mine
do

1,522
279

1,574
407

1,822
345

1,615
319

1,535
309

1,527
248

1, 311
149

1, 155
86

1,427
84

1,665
151

1,789
171

1,127
158

29.39
13.361

29.79
13.510

30.00
13.510

30.54
14. 420

30.95
14.420

31.35
14. 490

31.40
14. 490

31.40
14. 490

31.40
13.195

30.69
13.195

30.30
13. 195

13. 699

Bituminous:
Production

1,245
142

13. 699 "13.699

thous. sh. tons.

35,178

38,244

40,320

44,876

38,820

39,070

40, 430

34, 790

36, 790

37, 490

38, 270

40, 940 - 31, 830 -42, 390

42, 480

Industrial consumption and retail deliveries,
total 9
thous sh tons
Electric power utilities
do
Mfg and mining Industries, total
do
Coke plants (oven and beehive)
do

32,314
15, 903
14,006
6,188

34, 102
17, 420
14, 664
- 6, 458

31,596
16, 566
13, 405
r
5, 905

33,816
17,593
14, 614
6,372

34, 383
17, 783
14,610
6,236

40,219
TI 727
16,349
6,590

39, 768
20 3--Q
16.411
6, 789

36, 755
18, 732
15,525
'6, 540

36, 439
18,465
16, 097
7,014

33, 054
16. 666
15, 302
7,044

32, 702
16, 757
15, 324
7,537

33,218
17, 997
14, 568
7,350

33, 768 -34,611
18, 794 18, 685
14,241 -14,772
7,451 - 7, 305

34, 466
18,013
14, 860
7,308

2,349

1,962

1,536

1,511

1,905

3,118

2,968

2, 496

1,872

1,030

518

562

1,066

1,501

67,960
46, 665
20, 845
9,044

65, 692
46, 139
19. 103
7,373

69, 388
49, 138
19, 712
7,290

72, 708
51,722
20, 423
7,912

73, 383
52, 383
20, 391
8,054

70 083
49,314
20, 270
8,014

66. 536
46 422
19, 659
7,780

64, 430
44, 961
19, 121
7,900

63, 041
43,717
19. 070
8,299

65, 043
45, 045
19, 743
8,411

68, 619
47, 886
20, 420
8,841

70, 700
49, 331
21,012
9,375

65, 616 ' 67,682
46, 921 48, 443
18, 306 - 18,823
7,467 - 7, 976

71,903
51, 279
20, 196
8,654

449

450

538

563

609

499

455

348

254

255

313

357

389

416

428

3,201
Exports
_
_
do
5,266
3,923
Prices:
Retail, composite
$ per sh. ton.. 17.30
17.46
17.46
Wholesale:
U.918 2 4. 748
Screenings, Indust. use, f.o.b. mine
do
4.752
i 7. 443 27.014
Domestic, large sizes, f.o.b. mine
do
7.061
COKE
Production:
Beehive
.
_ _ thous. sh. tons
68
79
81
Oven (bvproduct)
do
4,258
4,157
4,442
Petroleum coke§
do
1,312
1,344
1,350
Stocks, end of month:
Oven-coke plants, total
do
3,899 - 2, 993 - 2. 777
At furnace plants
do
2,796 - 2, 294 - 2, 166
At merchant plants
_
do
1,103
-611
699
Petroleum coke
do..
1.053
1,171
1,200
Exports
do
33
33
38
PETROLEUM AND PRODUCTS

5,029

4,500

3,536

3,152

3,065

3,028

3,523

4, 551

4,617

4,038

5,250

4,263

Retail deliveries to other consumers

do

Stocks, Industrial and retail dealers', end of
month, total 9 thous sh tons
Electric power utilities
do
Mfg. and mining Industries, total
do
Oven-coke plants. _
do
Retail dealers

_

Crude petroleum:
Oil wells completed.
Price at wells (Okla. -Kansas)
Runs to stills
Refinery operating ratio

do

number
$ per bbl
mil. bbl
% of capacity--

All oils, supply, demand, and stocks:!
New supply, total
mil. bbl_.
Production:
Crude petroleum
do
Natural-gas liquids, benzol, etc
do
Imports:
Crude petroleum...
do
Refined products
do
Change in stocks, all oils (decrease,—)
do

1,781
2.97
255.8
84

3

1,691
2.93
264.2
87

1,725
2.93
260.2
87

655

17.69

17.73

17.83

17.89

17. 89

17.89

17.76

17.31

17.23

4.745
7.231

4.748
7.257

4.748
7.257

4 726
7.276

4.731
7.221

4.731
7.026

4.807
6. 524

4.832
6.482

4.840
6.513

4.832
6.657

- 4. 829 v 4. 810
- 6. 800 p 6. 977

83
4.391
1,367

78
4,289
1,355

82
4,540
1,457

82
4,661
1,440

78
4,485
1,343

87
4,821
1,457

87
4,855
1,366

90
5,192
1,409

79
5, 037
1,436

70
5,164
1,501

89
- 5, 138
1, 415

102
5. 138

2,888
2,304
584
1,195
23

2,899
2,379
520
1,381
41

2,881
2,394
486
1,297
19

2,831
2,380
451
1,284
19

2,672
2,253
418
1,313
23

2,567
2,141
426
1,329
27

2,421
2,008
413
1,359
25

2,337
1,909
429
1,379
83

2,281
1,862
419
1,393
40

2,353
1,876
477
1,417
61

- 2, 358
- 1, 878
-480
1,379
59

2,363
1,915
448

1,633
2.92
266.9
86

1,480
2.92
261.0
87

1,768
2.92
269.3
87

1, 567
2.92
273.3
88

1,628
2.92
256. 8
89

1,564
2.92
269.9
87

1,566
2.92
258.4
84

1,542
2.92
267.6
84

1,730
2.92
268.0
87

1,819
2.92
281.7
88

1,892
2.92
281.0
88

36

"2.92

317.4

327.6

316.8

331. 8

322.5

336.7

363.1

326.0

345.7

335.4

334.3

321.9

340.2

336.6

223.0
31.1

229.4
33.4

225.2
32.8

233.6
34.1

226.3
34.3

232.8
35.6

238.1
36.4

224. 5
34.1

240.6
36.0

233.1
34.0

235.8
34.4

228.3
32.9

233.7
34.5

232.6
34.9

34.3
29.1
1.0

34.4
30.4
.1

34.9
23.9
11.0

31.4
32.7
11.7

34.2
27.6
2.9

30.3
38.0
-54.9

39.6
49.0
-22.8

32.2
35.2
-9.9

36.9
32.2
6.4

33.1
35.2
8.8

36.0
28.2
24.7

34.4
26.3
1.1

43.8
28.1
12.9

40.7
28.3
16.6

do

316.4

327.5

305.8

320.1

319.6

391.6

385.8

335.9

339.4

326.6

309.7

320.8

327.3

320.0

do
do
do
do

.1
5.0
311.3
132.1
13.7

.1
6.2
321.
2
4
136. 2
'14.4

.1
7.0
298.7
134.0
13.3

.2
6.0
313.8
142.0
12.5

.1
6.5
313.0
132.9
15.4

.2
6.3
385.1
134.7
21.9

.1
6.7
379. 0
130. 5
21.2

.1
4.8
331.0
121.8
17.7

.2
6.0
333.1
135. 5
15.2

.1
6.4
320. 1
140.6
12.6

.2
5.7
303.8
144.9
11.1

.2
6.4
314.2
153.5
10.3

.1
6.7
320.5
156.7
12.3

.1
6.0
313.9
150.1
12.8

Distillate fuel oil
Residual fuel oil
Jet fuel..

do
do
do

61.0
45.5
9.4

*62. 3
<45.1
9.7

50.5
35.6
10.2

49.5
41.8
10.9

61.5
43.8
9.1

102.2
60.4
8.8

96.1
66.4
9.7

81.5
53.4
8.4

73.4
49.7
9.5

59.6
48.2
10.3

46.8
37.5
10.4

43.8
35.7
11.9

41.2
38.2
10.3

41.4
37.7
10.7

Lubricants
Asphalt...
Liquefied gases

do
do
do

3.6
9.5
21.3

3.6
9.8
<19.5

3.4
14.6
16.1

4.3
14.2
17.6

3.3
6.9
20.9

2.9
4.1
29.5

4.0
3.3
27.8

3.4
3.3
22.2

3.8
4.3
19.9

4.4
7.1
16.9

3.6
11.9
15.8

4.3
15.5
15.7

4.0
16.7
17.6

3.7
16.7
18.6

do
do
do
do "

820.6
248.1
35.2
537.3

* 831. 1
246.9
33.8
< 550. 4

875.9
248.3
43.1
584.6

887.6
245.5
43.8
598.3

890. 5
244.4
42. 1
604.0

835.6
237.4
33.7
564.5

812.8
241.0
28.4
543. 3

80^.9
240.1
27.4
535.4

809.2
246.9
29.9
532.5

818.0
253.9
34.1
530.0

842.7
257.3
38.9
546.5

843.9
251.2
42.5
550.1

856.7
246.3
45.0
565.3

873.3
237.9
46.6
588.7

Refined petroleum products :t
Gasoline (incl. aviation):
Production

do

Stocks, end of month

do

131.9
.5
188.6

U35.7
.6
* 192. 8

135.7
.7
181.3

138.2
.8
178.3

135.6
.7
181.3

144.1
.9
190.9

142.4
.6
203.2

133.0
.4
215.1

140.1
.8
220.4

133.9
.4
214.7

140.1
.5
210.9

140.5
.7
198.5

149.7
1.0
191.4

149.4
.8
190.9

.113

.109

.115

.110

.090

.105

.105

.100

.100

.095

.105

.103

.105

.093

p. 099

.204

.201

.200

.197

.201

.204

.196

.199

.199

.195

.196

.207

.201

.198

.201

Demand, total
Exports:
Crude petroleum..
Domestic demand, total 9
Gasoline
Kerosene

Stocks, end of month, total
Crude petroleum
Natural-gas liquids
Refined products. _

Prices (excl. aviation)
Wholesale, ref. (Okla., group 3)
$ per gal
Retail (regular grade, excl. taxes), 55 cities
(1st of following mo.)
$ per gal..

-RfiVlSfid.
P PrpHrnlnarxr
Monthly average based on'Apr.-Dec. data.
2 Data beginning Jan. 1963 not entirely comparable with those for earlier periods
3 Beginning Jan. 1963, data exclude condensate wells formerly included
< See note 1 for p. S-36.

1




45, 535

-*

.200

9 Includes data not shown separately.
§ Includes nonmarketable catalyst coke.
fRevised data for months of 1962 appear on p. 28 of the June 1964 SURVEY.
NOTE FOR E L E C T R O N TUBES, p. S-34-0 Beginning Jan. 1964, excludes sales
of receiving tubes; 1963 sales of such tubes averaged $22,800,000 per month.

STJKVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-36
1962

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

| 1963

Monthly
average

November 1964

1963
Sept.

Oct.

1964
Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

May

Apr.

June

Aug.

July

Sept.

Oct.

PETROLEUM, COAL, AND PRODUCTS—Continued
PETROLEUM AND PRODUCTS— Continued
Refined petroleum products}:— Continued
Aviation gasoline:
m
Production
"- bbl._
Exports
do
Stocks, end of month
do
Kerosene:
Production
do
Stocks end of month
do
Priced wholesale, bulk "lots (N.Y. Harbor)
$ per gal. .
Distillate fuel oil:
Production
mil. bbl-_
Imports
do
Exports
do
Stocks end of month
__do
Price, wholesale (N.Y. Harbor, No. 2 fuel)
$ per gal..
Residual fuel oil:

10.2
.4
10.5

10.4
.4
10.7

9.5
.5
9.6

10.0

5
9.3

5
8.8

U3.8
31.7

12.2
36 0

14 9
39 1

14 8
39 1

16 2
34 1

.104

.102

.096

.096

.099

. 104

60.0
1.0
.7
133. 4

163.8
.8
1.2
1

63.2

63 9

65 8

177 2

11
191 4

62 9
10
13
192 6

156 7

13.1
30.6

1

135. 8

7
1.4

9

9 8

10.8

6
9.4

g
4

10 0

10 0

10 6

10.2

10.5

11.7

11.6

10 8

10 3

10.3

.4
9.9

10.8

9 7
17 3
30 9

90 c

14 7

14 3
28 5

12 5
29 1

11. 7
30 5

11 6
32 8

12 7
34 4

13 4
36 0

4

.104
67
1
1
128

5
6
2
5

2

g

2

5
9.2

6
9.0

6
8.9

104

.099

.096

.094

.093

.093

.093

62 8
11

61 7

60.8

61.1
10

64.2

3

6
4

62 0

4

g
6

57 6

110 5

99 2

97 8

112 2

130 3

153 6

175 0

g
3

7
.3

p. 093

9
2

.092

.092

.086

.086

.089

.094

094

094

.089

.086

.084

.083

.083

.083

".083

24.6
22.0
1.1
46.6
1.58

i 23.1
22.9

21 o
23 2
10
54 4
1 55

22 5
20 7
18
52 2
1 55

25 0
31 6
1 3
47 5
1 55

25 8
39 7
16
45 4
1 80

22 7
29 2
10
43 3
1 65

22 3
24 7
1 7
39 1
1 50

9

12
28 0
2 0
38 5
1 35

20 8
19.8

148.6
1.57

21 5
15.7
1 7
52 6
1 55

40 5
1 35

19 5
17.7
19
40 4
1 35

21 6
20.5
15
43 0
1 35

21 1
19 5
15
44 6
1 35

p 1 35

8.6
8.7

8.3
9.4

8.5
9.3

7.8

8.3

7 9
90

9 1
9 9

89
9 2

9.5
9.3

10.0

8 9

7 8
8 5

9.9

8 6

7 8
8 5

86

9.5

10.4
10 7

5.1
1.5
12.8

5.3
1.5

5.4

13.7

16
13 8

5 4
15
13 4

5 3
14
14 0

50
18
14 3

59
12
14 3

4 g
14
14 3

5 2
14
14 4

5 3
2 0
13 3

54
13
13 8

52
16
13 1

16
12 9

.261

.270

.270

.270

. 270

270

270

270

270

270

.270

.270

.270

.270

9.1
16.3

9.3

11 3
10 4

8 2
11 9

6 2
14 4

4 4
15 8

5 6
18 1

7 3
21 3

80
22 3

11 2
22. 0

12 7
20 2

13 6
17.8

13 7
15 4

Imports
-do
Exports
do
Stocks end of month
do
Price wholesale (Okla , No. 6)
fperbbl..
Jet fuel' (military grade only):
m
Production
-"- bbL.
Stocks end of month
do
Lubricants:
Production
do
Exports
__do
Stocks end of month
do. _
Price, 'wholesale, bright stock (midcontinent,
fob Tulsa)
$per gal-Asphalt:
Production
mil. bbl_.
Stocks end of month
do
Liquefied petroleum gases:
Production
-do
Transfers from gasoline plants
do
Stocks (at Plants, terminals, underground, and
at refineries) end of mo
mil. bbl-.

16.7

12 4
12 8

6.4
14.9

14.7
14.9

4.4

4.2

12 1

13 5

4. 2
16 5

50
93 3

5 0
22 1

4 7
17 1

5 2
15 0

4 8
12 3

5.2

5.1

11 5

11 4

12 8

14 0

33.6

130.2

41.2

41.8

39 4

30 3

24 3

22 9

25 4

29 4

34.9

39 5

42 3

43 9

Asphalt and tar products, shipments^
Asnhalt roofing total
thous. squares. .
Roll roofin? and cap sheet
do
Shingles all types
do

5,367
1,913
3,454

5,372
2,009
3,363

6,419
2, 450
3,969

7 114
2,764
4,350

4 604
1,810
2,794

3 103
1,214
1 888

3 134
1,213
1 920

4 521
1,610
2 911

4 705
1,777
2 928

5 719
2,042

6 921
2.389
4 532

7 586
2,545
5 041

7 870
2,819
5,052

7,212
2,725
4,487

7 387
2, 805
4 582

67
77
82

66
70
82

81
93
83

102
102
98

85
56
74

52
37
60

43
31
67

60
36
88

48
44
78

50
57
74

49
65
82

55
75
95

65
74
99

64
68
97

76
75
90

Asphalt siding
Insulated siding
Saturated felts

.

do
do
thous. sh.tons..

--

1.3

1.4

5.4

5.1

54
17
12 9
p. 270

4.9

PULP, PAPER, AND PAPER PRODUCTS
PULPWOOD AND WASTE PAPER
Pulp wood:
Receipts
Consumption
Stocks, end of month
Waste paper:
Consumption
_
Storks end of month

thous. cords (128 cu. ft.) ..
__do
do
_

thous. sh. tons..
__ __do

WOODPULP
Production;
Total, all grades
thous. sh. tons
Dissolving and special alpha
do
Sulfate
do
Sulfite
..do
Qroundwood
Defibrated or exploded.
Soda, semichem., screenings, etc
Stocks, end of month:
Total, all mills _
Pulp mills
Paper and board mills
Nonpaper mills
Exports, all grades, total
Dissolving and special alpha..
All other
.
Imports, all grades, total
Dissolving and special alpha
All other

3,668 r' 3, 835
3,673
3, 870
5,124
5,225

756
498
2,326
106
1,368
214

r
r

3,945
3,754
5,118

4.335
4 102
5 353

3 821
3 975
5 116

3 495
3 626
4 976

4 030
4 055
4 93(5

4 175
3 906
4 qgj

4 157
4 126
4 987

3 843
4 119
4 690

3,992
4 213
4 428

4 120
3 952
4 47g

4.186
3 898
4 660

4,254
4 151
4 620

'796
501

737
494

797
506

710
465

668
514

741
490

748
477

799
470

821
476

803
468

795
467

686
485

827
476

2, 510
114
1, 495
224

2 390
106
1,416
211

2 631
124
1 555
242

2 ^93
120
1 9551
30

2 283
97
1 357
229

2 605
138
1 528
231

2 5^0
125
1 509
224

2 667
127
1 608
242

2 706
106
1 634
94fi

2 821
129
1 729
241

2 608
132
1 543
293

2 509
107
1 545
211

2 769
1^4
1 688
234

289
136
2 '252

280
124
253

310
125
274

308
194
261

280
106
215

327
124
257

304
127
241

320
129
241

330
190
260

335
131
256

324
127
260

300
123
222

3 713
263
372
78

706
243
381
82

707
246
384
77

731
264
394
73

717
235
408
75

739
266
396
78

745
266
399
80

759
271
403
84

771
286
394
90

769
278
389
95

759
273
392
93

337
128
258
777
293
394
90

142
49
93

132
43
on

120
49
70

139
55

143
55

127
40
87

141
62
79

143
36
107

134
55
79

236
22
214

235
22
213

224
21
203

265
23
242

256
23
933

227
23
204

256
22
235

261

do _.
do
do

283
104
261

2r

do
do
do
do

878
297
509
72

3

do
do
do

99
40
59

118
44
75

128
55
73

116
41
76

106
38

do
do
do

232
23
210

231
22
210

220
16
204

258
23
235

225
19
206

occ

387
Qd

138
Aft

00

00

228
26
909

225
18
208

99

239

PAPER AND PAPER PRODUCTS
Paper and board:
Production (Bu. of the Census):
All grades, total, seas, adj — thous. sh. tons-All grades, total, unadjusted
do
'r 3, 129 r 3, 269 '3,215 ' 3, 559 ' 3, 348 '3,017
3, 445 ' 3, 291 ' 3, 573
3,276
3,477
3,515
3, 553
3. 395
Paj er
do
1 378 r i 438 ' 1 384' 1 553' 1 485 ' 1 384 1 535 1 448 1 515 1 ^47 1 524
1 484 r 1 4.1 4 ' 1 519
Paperboard
do
' 1, 457 r 1, 522 '1,512 '1,651 r 1,554 ' 1,371
1,632
1,533
1 615 ' 1,552 ' 1, 709
1 662
1,563
1,648
Wet-mnchine board
do
' 12
'12
'
13
'12
11
11
' 12
' 11
12
12
11
12
'9
' 10
Construction paper and board
do
'282
'297
343
'307 1
'251
'297
284
286
318
333
334
331
317 1
333
'Revised.
r> Preliminary.
i Beginning Jan. 1963, data for the indicated items exclude
fRevised monthly data for 1962 for petroleum products appear on p. 28 of the June 1964
certain oils which have been reclassified as petrochemical feedstocks
SURVEY; revisions for 1962 and 1963 for asphalt and tar products appear on p. 32 of the Apr. 1964
3
Effective Jan. 1963, "screenings, etc." included with "denbrated or exploded."
SURVEY.
8
Effective Jan. 1863, excludes stocks of "own pulp" at paper and board mills.




SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962 | 1963

S-37
1964

1963

Monthly
average

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

PULP, PAPER, AND PAPER PRODUCTS—Continued
PAPER AND PAPER PRODUCTS-Con.
Paper and board— Continued
New orders (American Paper and Pulp Assoc.) :
All grades, paper and board
thous. sh. tons..
Wholesale price indexes:
Printing paper.
.
_. 1957-59 =100__
Boole paper A grade
do
Paperboard 2
do
Building paper and board
do
Selected types of paper (APPA) : t
Fine paper:
Orders, new...
thous. sh. tons..
Orders unfilled end of month
do

3,131

3,268

3,308

3,523

3,193

2,913

3,458

3,298

3,499

3,565

3,525

' 3, 481

3,384

101.4
107.6
93.1
97.2

101.4
107.4
94.7
96.2

101.4
107.4
94.1
97.6

101.4
107.4
96.6
96.9

101.4
107.4
96.6
95.1

101.4
107.4
96.5
95.2

101.4
107.4c
96. 95.2

101.4
107.4
96.5
95.0

101.4
109.0
96.5
93.7

101.4
109.9
96.5
93.5

101. 4
109.9
96.5
94.4

101.4
109.9
96.5
94.4

101.4
109.9
96.5
94.2

101.4
109.9
96.4
93.9

166
88

174
99

171
103

192
108

173
100

157
90

185
85

184
93

184
83

197
92

190
88

'187
89

'185
'97

187
95

do
do _

170
168

177
174

177
170

190
190

1*0
179

169
153

187
183

183
187

191
188

195
191

191
190

'189
'196

'169
176

190
190

do
do

412
370

454
394

472
410

484
394

443
378

414
375

499
383

449
368

497
397

483
391

487
401

'482
398

466
'412

483
409

do
do

409
409

445
445

439
439

478
478

457
456

426
425

481
481

446
446

467
467

475
475

478
478

'473
'473

'444
'444

483
483

do
do

346
154

355
164

366
182

383
185

364
180

329
154

370
160

360
167

372
161

365
145

349
139

'342
143

'356
'160

392
173

do
do

350
343

353
350

340
356

373
366

377
370

339
341

370
369

362
354

369
373

373
372

361
354

'341
'336

'335
'339

380
374

do
do
do

£58
557
249

553
552
268

551
580
235

630
638
227

613
611
229

535
578
186

564
533
217

549
491
275

566
540
301

625
664
261

610
594
277

610
652
240

617
620
237

637
634
239

605
628
215

do
do
do

179
180
39

185
184
37

164
172
36

194
193
37

190
189
38

180
184
34

198
189
43

174
186
32

190
193
29

192
197
24

201
192
32

194
192
34

174
182
27

200
194
33

181
188
26

Consumption by publishers o"
do
Stocks at and In transit to publishers, end of
month cf
thous sh tons

465

465

490

529

524

522

455

452

518

528

550

496

453

472

491

586

588

606

588

559

545

569

572

550

541

511

529

562

591

608

Imports
do
Price, rolls, contract, f.o.b. mill, freight allowed
or delivered
.. .
Spersh. ton

456

451

455

522

463

536

444

409

473

475

470

513

515

492

506

134. 40

134. 40

134. 40

134. 40

134. 40

134. 40

134. 40

134. 40

134.40

134. 40

134. 40

134. 40

134. 40

1357
518
1358
87

363
611
355
86

385
622
387
92

357
545
373
90

316
494
325
75

363
537
349
88

387
538
386
91

381
532
384
92

387
519
386
90

399
565
391
90

395
587
390
90

361
624
351
81

10,711

10, 848

12, 482

10,649

9,870

10. 833

10,460

11,039

11,520

11,399

11,284

126.1

129.6

141.7

119.8

130.8

124.4

114.7

123.3

127.2

121.0

131.5

40.68
64 74
28 79
.259

39.36
69 08
44 07
.254

41.37
67 14
31 24
.251

Production
Shipments
Printing paper:
Orders new
Orders unfilled end of month
Production
Shipments
Coarse paper:
Orders new
Orders unfilled end of month
Production
Shipments
Newsprint:
Canada:
Production
Shipments from mills
Stocks at mills end of month
United States:
Production
Shipments from mills
Stocks at mills end of month

Paperboard (National Paperboard Assoc.): §
1340
Orders, new (weekly avg.)
thous. sh. tons..
461
Orders, unfilled, end of month
.
do
i 343
Production, total (weekly avg. ).
do_ ..
85
Percent of activity (based on 6.5-day week)
Paper products:
Shipping containers, corrugated and solid fiber,
10, 182
shipments©
mil sq ft surf area
Folding paper boxes, shipments, Index of physical
124.1
volume
1947-49=100.

101.4
109.9
96.4
94.3

134. 40 P134. 40
400
610
403
93

385
606
388
89

410
627
404
94

11, 198

11, 697

12, 232

13, 219

119.7

v 125. 5

35.09
75 39
40 51
.246

41.10
82 85
39 04
.245

44.22
81 16
37.20
.250

.261

RUBBER AND RUBBER PRODUCTS
RUBBER
Natural rubber:
Consumption
thous. Ig. tons._
Stocks, end of month
do_.
Im ports, Incl. latex and guayule..do
Price, wholesale, smoked sheets (N.Y.)---$ perlb_.
Synthetic rubber:
Production
Consumption _ .
Stocks, end of month
Exports
Reclaimed rubber:
Production
Consumption
Stocks, end of month

.

p . 285

38.10
72.70
31. 63
p. 263

36.31
68.88
26.24
.230

42.59
64.30
30.58
.255

35.29
61.32
27.09
.258

35.75
60 58
28 61
.240

___thous. Ig. tons__ 131.20
104.66
do
257. 15
do
do
25 31

134. 04
108. 90
281 05
23 60

124. 59
105. 70
292. 20
21 33

129. 86
127 89
275 28
22 51

134. 81
109 26
275 28
22 90

141.05
107 54
283 01
24 86

do
do
do

23 38
21 95
29.77

23 45
21 97
30 30

22 42
21 65
31.35

26 00
25 06
30.88

21 25
°0 65
29 78

22 17
20 15
31 19

25 11
22 99
31 47

21 75
20 75
30 51

24 03
22 59
30 37

thous.. 11, 156

11, 594

10, 540

_

38.56
68.47

35.13

39.59
62 44
38 78
.235
143
120
279
24

59
74
51
00

36.66
64 34
26 30
.236
140
111
283
28

18
12
20
80

39.80
64 97
41 75
.256
146
116
285
27

27
69
88
05

146
121
28C
27

22
85
19
85

150 31
118 49
2^3 17
94 fifi

24 50
24 20
30 42

oo in

23 96

29 76

146
123
293
24

94 137 99 r 144 63
71 104 16 l!9 44
02 '300 31 '298 15
25 60
98
26 52

25 22
22 30
30 92

20 21
19 02
32 35

20 56
90 Q^

30 25

144
128
287
30

81
98
58
45

23 00
22 48
31 07

TIRES AND TUBES
Pneumatic casings:
Production.

_

13, 469

11, 502

11,496

12, 681

11,835

12, 563

13, 331

13, 214

14, 041

11, 509

13, 234

14, 355

Shipments, total
Original equipment
Replacement equipment
Export

do. .
do
do
do

11, 055
3,495
7 430
130

11, 551
3,919
7 503
129

r

l 1,249 14 021
' 3, 574 5 163
'7 559
8 700
117
158

10 746
4 366
6 263
117

10 491
4 470
5 888
134

12 640
4 337
8 194
110

10 406
4 067
6 209
130

11 996
4 402
7 478
116

14 117
4 854
9 130
133

13 576
4 542
8 Q07

14 517
4 652
9 718
14 6

12 398
2 810
9 423
164

11 378
2 340
8 oc7

14 090
4 121
9 729
241

Stocks, end of month.. . _
Exports (Bu. of Census)

do
do

27 086
89

29 978
82

r

27 821
78

27 469
86

28 272
82

29 407
73

29 544
77

31 090
85

01 fiKO

<J1 flQI

on CAA

9Q Qfift

78

92

106

105

160

148

201

do
do
do
do

3, 403
3 442
8,913
81

3,305
3 398
9,462
76

2 860
r
3 191
'9 181
82

3 408
3 506
9 155
85

2 827
2 958
9 088
77

3 138
2 799
9 529
75

3 914
5 415
8 201
55

3 673
3 613
8 424
72

3 837

3 956
3 0QO
9 587
78

3 KQt
3 117
10 172
64

3 fiQQ
3 4.7^
10 471
73

3 010
3' °.7O
10 13*1
87

3 oaA

3 400

10 195
86

10 439
96

Inner tubes:
Production
Shipments
Stocks, end of month
Exports (Bu. of Census)

' Revised.
» Preliminary.
i Weekly .average for year.
9 Re visions for 1961 are available upon request.
{Monthly averages for 1962 for new orders, production, and shipments reflect revisions
to adjusted annual totals; revisions by months not available.
d*As reported by publishers accounting for about 74.5 percent of total newsprint con-




0

OQ1

9 020
51

IOC

171

09 AQK

sumption in 1962 and 74 percent in 1963 and 1964.
§ Revised to reflect weekly averages for new orders and production, and percent activity
on basis of 6.5 days per week; comparable data prior to 1962 will be shown later.
O Re visions
by months for 1962-Feb. 1963 will be shown later.

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-38
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

Monthly
average

November 196<
1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

STONE, CLAY, AND GLASS PRODUCTS
PORTLAND CEMENT
Production finished cement
Percent of capacity
Shipment'' finished cement
Stocks, end of month:
Finished
Clinker

thous bbl
thous bbl
do
do

28 027
75
27 893

29 441
74
29 354

34 682
88
36 547

36 624
90
41 352

30 377
77
26 317

23 993
59
16 9*8

18 931
46
17 425

19 729
51
17 597

24 697
61
22 722

29, 493
75
29, 178

34 417
84
35 511

36, 185
92
38, 750

37, 220
91
40, 678

37,700
92
39, 496

35, 834
90
38, 008

36, 720
24, 160

38,029
23, 081

33 236
17,400

28 485
13, 631

32 491
13, 820

39 556
16 793

41 047
21 741

43, 181
25, 610

45, 152
29, 242

45,462
30, 667

44, 425
29, 580

41, 894 '38,467
27,065 24, 249

36. 671
20,628

34, 631
18, 322

576 1
35.2
142.8

617 1
32 0
145.6

684 3
30 9
171 1

776 7
34 1
186 4

620 4
26 2
135 1

431 1
23 4
94 8

494 i
27 l
93 4

446 5
25 1
101 3

590.8
29,6
137.5

679 3
31 7
151 8

739 6
32 6
166 1

33.6

29.7

29 7

35 7

29 2

25 8

22 8

21 9

26.4

27.8

21.1

22.2

22 8

25 3

21 5

19.1

21 2

20,8

24.8

25.5

104.9

106.1

105.8

105.8

105.9

106.1

106.1

107.1

107.1

107.3

71, 497
31,612
39, 885

78, 274
35, 370
42, 904

80 857
38 766
42 091

CLAY CONSTRUCTION PRODUCTS
Shipments:
Brick, unglazed (common and face)
mil standard brick
Structural tile except facing
thous sh tons
Sewer pipe and fittings vitrified
do
Facing tile (hollow), glazed and unglazed
roil brick equivalent
Floor and wall tile and accessories, glared and ungla/ed
mil sq ft
Price index, brick (common) , f.o.b. plant or N.Y.
dock
1957-59=100.-

771.6
32.8
184.5

765 9
31.3
189.8

25 2

30.2

32.6

23.9

25.5

25.3

107.3

107.1

106.7

' 106. 9 107.2

GLASS AND GLASS PRODUCTS
Flat glass, mfrs.' shipments (qtrly. average or total)
thous $
Sheet (window) fflass shipments
do
Plate and other flat glass shipments
do
Glass containers:

'r 79, 622
34, 089
'45,533

78, 211
32, 610
45, 601

89, 298
41 314
47 984

82, 793
39, 898
42, 895

14, 655

15, 166

14 803

15 677

14 271

12 712

14 424

14 704

15,877

16, 391

16 776

17, 652

17,004

17, 958

15, 295

14,319

14, 730

14, 805

15, 497

13,283

13, 382

13 714

13, 397

15, 377

16. 514

15, 283

16, 967

16, 301

17, 447

16, 896

1,582

1,602

2,765

1,838

1,186

1,204

1 331

1,294

1,508

1,642

1,367

1,455

2,105

2,652

3,027

4,110

4,100

4 124

4 633

3 847

3 848

4 181

4 034

4,134

3,911

4 040

4,355

4,096

4,656

4,751

do
do
do

1,187
2,184
1,269

1,350
2,453
1,295

858
1,971
1,337

921
2,157
1,643

959
2,101
1,323

1,382
2,286
1,226

845
2 054
1 286

987
2,137
1,293

1,422
2, 683
1,413

1,700
3,542
1,392

2,105
2,822
1,379

2,359
3,543
1,425

2,027
3,669
1,094

1,324
3,318
1,357

1,101
2,622
1,525

do
do
do

3,066
786
134

3,061
742
127

2,933
679
138

3,401
765
139

3,095
648
124

2,704
584
148

3 263
639
115

2,956
602
94

3,364
751
102

3,490
699
138

2,890
590
90

3,089
637
104

2,647
553
110

3,369
639
132

3,117
60S
148

do

22, 921

25, 533

25, 151

25,564

26,315

25, 540

26,067

25, 893

26, 136

25,633

26, 948

27, 294

27, 570

27, 672

25, 648

Crude gypsum, qtrly, avg. or total:
Imports
thous sh tons
Production
do

1,355
2.492

1,372
2,561

1 566
2 902

1 375
2 425

1, 397
2,377

1,280
2,733

Calcined production qtrly avg or total

2,205

2,295

2 518

2 226

2,209

2,437

1 012
67

1 035
70

1 263
70

947
69

822
73

1,200
75

256
257

259
250

284
289

232
240

237
217

269
254

396 2
387 3
437 0
1, 657. 9 1 777 4 1,994 8
58 9
62 0
69 0

365 0
1 730 1
60 9

365. 7
1, 721. 1
51.6

391.8
1, 905. 7
73.8

Shipments domestic total
do
General-use food:
Narrow-neck food
do
Wide-mouth food (incl. packers' tumblers,
Beverage
"p PPJ- bottl es
Liquor and wine

_

Medicinal and toilet
Chemical household and industrial
Dairy products
Stocks, end of month
GYPSUM AND PRODUCTS

do

Gypsum products sold or used, qtrly. avg, or total:
Tin calcined uses
thous sh tons
Industrial uses
do
Building uses:
Plasters:
Base-coat
do
All other (Incl Keene's cement)
do
Lath
Wall board
All other§

~

mil so ft
~
do
do

TEXTILE PRODUCTS
WOVEN FABRICS
Woven fabrics (gray goods), weaving mills: ©
Cloth woven, total
mil linear yd
Cotton
do
Stocks, end of year or mo total cf
do
Cotton d*
do
Orders (unfilled), end of year or mo., total 1_ do
Cotton 5 do

975.5
760.2
1, 488. 0
1, 192. 5
2, 472. 3
1,848.9

981.9
756.9
1, 509. 3
1, 176. 7
2, 491. 5
1, 800. 8

214,864

215, 283

214,867
726

2

939.8
719.1
1, 505. 0
1,164.0
2, 546. 1
1, 848. 8

1 1,179.7
1915.3
1
1,475.7
11,149.9
12,827.9
12,023.4

957.0
736.3
1,494.5
1, 168. 0
2. 968. 9
2, 127. 1

887. 1
724.8
741.3 733.0 i 898. 5 729.1
729.4 i 725. 8
684.2 i 893. 8
1, 564. 0
1, 235. 6 il,157.1 1,131.4 1, 116. 5 U,081.4 1,087.1 1,071.8 11,066.1 1,076.0
2, 892. 8
2, 084. 8 11,882.5 1, 797. 4 1, 682. 2 11,555.8 1,624.8 1, 700. 2 1 1, 909. 8 2, 064. 6

COTTON
Cotton (exclusive of linters) :
Production:
GinningsA
thous running bales
Crop estimate , equivalent 500-lb. bales
thous. bales..
Consumption O
do
Stocks in the United States, end of mo., total O
thous. bales _ _
Domestic cotton, total O
do
On farms and in transit
do
Public storage and compresses O
do
Consuming establishments
do
Foreign cotton, total O
do
T
3

14, 696
14, 593
3,371
9,564
1,658
103

4,789 ••10,062

12, 820 314,070 US, 117

1,011

3,682

663

J829

678

605

1814

683

673

1831

687

683

1741

712

702

17,796
17,669
3,548
12, 762
1.359
128

24,405
24,258
11,590
11, 688
981
147

23,328
23,175
6,916
15, 209
1,050
153

22,068
21,920
4,163
16, 510
1,245
149

20,861
20,710
2,045
17, 260
1,405
151

19,462
19,323
1,168
16, 557
1,598
139

18,225
18,095
885
15, 539
1,672
130

17,079
16,961
581
14, 664
1,716
118

15,866
15,760
577
13, 582
1,601
106

14,816
14,721
520
12, 750
1,451
95

13,813
13,733
528
11,933
1,272
80

12, 383
12.311
270
10, 916
1,125
72

26. 344
26,209
14, 264
11, 058
887
135

25, 974
25, 840
12, 646
12,341
853
134

Revised.
i Data cover
5 weeks; other months, 4 weeks.
2 Total crop for year.
4
Ginnings to Dec. 13.
Ginnings to Jan. 16. 5 Nov. 1 estimate of 1964 crop.
§ Comprises sheathing, formboard, and laminated board.
©Effective Jan. 1964, the manmade fabrics classifications were revised and the survey
expanded to include drapery fabrics; silk and chiefly silk mixtures were omitted from the
canvass. Because of apparent reporting problems in the synthetics, data for total fabrics are
being withheld; Aug. 1964 figures for wool apparel fabrics (mil. yd.): Woven, 19.1; stocks, 25.1.




152

15, 327
700

9,073
515,444

d"Stocks are those owned by weaving mills and those billed and held for others, except
that sticks exclude denims stocks billed and held for others, and all bedsheeting stocks.
^Excludes orders for wool apparel fabrics and bedsheeting.
ATotal ginnings to end of
month indicated, except as noted. O Revisions for Aug. 1962-June 1963 are available; for
stocks, monthly averages also reflect cotton released bv GS A from the cotton stockDile (beginning July 1962).

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

November 1964

Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962

1963

Monthly
average

S-39
1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Jan.

Dec.

Feb.

Apr. i

Mar.

May

July

June

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

TEXTILE PRODUCTS—Continued
COTTON— Continued
Cotton (exclusive of linters)— Continued
Exports
---thous. bales-.
Imports
__-_ do. _
Prioe^ (farm), American upland
cents per Ib
Prices, middling 1", avg., 15 markets
do
Cotton Hnters:
Consumption©
Production! _ .
Stocks end of mof

thous. bales
__-do_
do

COTTON MANUFACTURES
Spindle activity (cotton system splndles):O
Active spindle^ last working day total thous
Consuming 100 percent cotton
do
Spindle hours operated all fibers total
mil
Average per working day
do
Consuming 100 percent cotton
do
Cotton yarn, natural stock, on cones or tubes:
Prices, f.o.b. mill:
20/2 carded weaving
$ per Ib
36/2 combed, knitting
do
Cotton cloth:
Cotton broadwoven goods over 12" In width:
Production ritrly avg or totalO mil lin yd
Orders, unfilled, end of mo., as compared with
aver weekly production
Wo weeks' prod
Inventories, end of mo., as compared with avg.
weeklv production
No weeks' prod
Ratio of stocks to unfilled orders (at cotton
mills) end of mo seasonally adjusted
Mill marcrinsl
_ cents per Ib
Prices, wholesale:
Denim mill
finished
cents per yd
Print cloth, 39 inch, 68 x 72
do
Sheeting class B 40-inch 48 x 44 48
do
M ANMADE FIBERS AND MANUFACTURES
Fiber production, qtrly. avg. or totalO
mil Ib
Filament yarn (rayon and acetate)
do
Staple, incl. tow (rayon) _ _
_
do
Noncellulosic (nylon, acrylic, protein, etc ) do
Textile glass
fiber
.
do
Exports:
Yarns and monofilaments... _
thous Ib
Staple, tow, and tops
do
Imports:
Yarns and monofilaments
do
Staple, tow, and tops _
do
Stocks, producers', end of mo.:
Filament yarn (rayon and acetate)
mil Ib
Staple, incl. tow (royon)
do
Noncellulosic flberO.
do
Textile glass
fiber
do
Prices, rayon (viscose):
Yarn, filament, 150denierA
$perlb
Staple, 1.5 denierA
do
Manmade fiber and silk broadwoven fabrics: t
Production, qtrlv. avg. or total 9 _ - mil lin yd
Filament varn (100%) fabrics 9
do
Chiefly rayon and/or acetate fabrics— .do
Chiefly nylon fabrics
..
do
Spun yarn (100%) fabrics (except blanketing) 9
mil. lin. yd._
Rayon and/or acetate fabrics and blends
do__._
Polyester blends with cotton _
do
Combinations of filament and spun yarn fabrics
mil. lin. ydExports, piece goods
_ _ -thous. sq. yd
WOOL
Wool consumption, mill (clean basis) :G
Apparel class
Carpet class
Wool imports, clean yield
Duty-free (carpet class)*
Wool prices, raw, clean basis, Boston:
Good French combing and staple:
Graded territory,
fine
Graded fleece, $4 blood
.
Australian, 64s, 70s, good topmaklng

321
12
!31.7
i 33. 5

363
11

361
4

133.2

32.7
33.1

32 9
33.1

109
134
628

106

2131

129
667

147
497

205
566

201
651

169
699

18, 628
15,813
9 849
456
8,349

18. 696
15,758
9 345
467
7,903

18 742
15. 753
11 788

18 660
15,653
9 538
477
8,000

13 625
15 656
8 563

18,807
16, 750
9 895

458
8.780

111

384
24

2

2

472

9, 903

501
5

628
1

587
1

570
3

490
5

400
6

381
4

387
2

697
2

32 5
33.1

31 3
33.2

30 1
33.2

29 4
33.3

30 7
33.4

31 7
33.4

32.1
33.4

32 4
33.3

32 5
32.6

30 6
31.2

30.6
30.7

99

2 129

111

108

118

107

147
797

109

2 102

165
783

132

184
760

114

18 591
15 596
11 579

18 543
15 521
9 494

18 492
15 440
9 294

18 484
15 381
11 ,503

18 442
15 292
9 481

18 376 18 446
15* 208 15, 238
9 422 2 10 272

18 543
15 273
9 678

18 489
15 174
9 608

9 742

7 978

7 798

2 8, 455

7 981

7 931

655

655
923

612

.923

.918

.881

612
879

P 617
p. 878

13 8

11.8

12.4

6 0

4.8

4.8
.36
34.20

100

428

7 220

2

463

475

645

645

650

.911

.911

.920

10. 5

11.5

12 3

12 8

11 0

10 1

5 5

5.3

5.1

5.0

5 5

51

52
25.20

.48
25. 80

.41
26.23

.39
26.73

42
26.92

39.6
15.4
17 0

38 1
15 9
17 0

37.7
16.0
16 9

37.7
16.3
16 9

37.7
17.0
17 1

37 7
17 0
17 8

597.3
181.5
125.0
243.2
47.6

659 2
177 4
144.8
289 0
43.0

676.8
176.6
146.0
305.7
48.5

9,177
4,281

8 196
4 187

8,330
4.003

809
5,463

10 463

53 2
48.4
<79.8
* 27.0

56 8
35 5
<113.3
* 28. 5

.82
.26

.82

660

644

.938

.912

2 312

T 2 190

10 8

10 6

5.4
.51
25.24

' 685. 8

6«0

. 27
r

765 2

r

655
.923

T 2 214

2 063

56
25.95

25 11

45
25.35

37 7
17 0
17 8

37 7
17 0
17 5

38 0
17 0
17 7

37.7
16.5
17 8

37 7
15 8
17 8

36 9
15 6
16 6

36 9
15 8
17 0

36.9
15.8
17.0

P34.9

3 65 6
42 5

3 64.1
3 43. 0

368.1
350.9

10 204
3 947

10, 907
4, 851

10, 831
4,994

728
189
162
322
54

12 357

57.3
33.9
119.6
27.9

53.1
38.5

50.4
35.7

47 o
37 9
135.9
29 7

44 7
40 3

43 6
41 9

.82
.28

.82
.28

.82
28

78
28

7 442
2 499

529

6 691
5 544

437

78
28

20.9
13.4
23.8
14.0

18.2
13.6
16.0
10.4

2 20 7
2 16.0
20.6
14.7

16.1
12.0
13.7

6.9

16 7
10 6
25 9
14.8

$ per lb__
do
do

1.247
1.090
1.155

1.326
1.175
1. 285

1.325
1. 191
1. 275

1.325
1.205
1.275

1.325
1.226
1.275

105 4

104 6

104 6

107 1

71,101
68 485
43 246

66, 531
64 712
45, 466

95.8

95.8

14 061

13 788

9 4
51

9 8
4 8

49

723 9
190 1
141 5
334 1
58 2

9
6
2
7
4

8 899
3 938

8 498
3 664

9 005
3* 199

10 177
5 013

3

563

592

882

967

883

982

11 578

10 453

9 636

6 902

8 911

0
3
7
o

37 9
52 5

36 1
56 6

Or n
60 9

35 9
58 9

34 9
53.2

35 1
49 9

78
28

78
28

78
28

.78
.28

p. 78
p. 28

12 546

13, 251

16, 842

•to A

1s ft
9 0
19 7
11.5

41
48
137
09

131 5
31 0

78
28

6
6
3
8

78
28
864
388
204
71

1
0
3
2

297 2

302 5

156 2
105 7

164 6
105 9

119 1
17 318

16 628

16 612

117 0
15 880

19. 8
11 8

11 5

1.425
1 255
1.455

1.425
1.455

107 9

107 9

34.45

P17.5

12 287

518

17 415

847
372
199
69

0

23 4
12.4
23 1
11.8

2 255

51
26.85

47

15 367

rnil ib
do
do
do

631

26 87

15 462

14, 693

.896

480

.39
33.36

487
12,913

13, 283

631
895

484

.57
26.37

884

13, 684

636
.913

411

52
26.87

13, 089

13, 439

471

7 836

4 9

837

12, 972

474
7 892

31 0
30.6

115
505

5.0

10, 155

11, 633

460

9 609

46
541

4 9

9 160
4 309

T glQ

2

44
599

62
649

9.1

8,662
6,080

' 736. 7

2

89
726

184
2

9 7

8,008
5,556

.82
.28

655

119
111

2 230

705 8
189 3
152.6
313 4
50 5

510

465

2

120
49

13. 8
6 6

10 1
7.1

8 9

9 8

1.450

1.450

1.415

1.375

1.375

1.335

1.398
1 ^00

1.455

1.455

1.439

1.375

1.375

1.375

1.375

1.405
1 300
1.375

107 9

107 9

107 9

107 9

107 5

107 5

107.5

107 5

95.8

95.8

95.8

95.8

11 5

1 OfiQ

9 8

1.405
1 318
1.375

WOOL MANUFACTURES
Knitting yarn, worsted, 2/20s-50s/56s, Bradford
system, wholesale price©
1957-59—100
100 6
Woolen and worsted woven goo~ds,~exc. felts:
Production, qtrly. avg. or totalO-.-thous. lin. yd. 77, 465
Apparel fabrics, total
do
75 310
Women's and children's ..
do
45 423
Suiting, price (wholesale), flannel, men's and
boys, f.o.b. mill
1957-59=100
94.9
r

61,997
59. 302
39, 168
95.8

95.8

2
Revised.
*» Preliminary.
1 Season average.
Data cover 5 weeks; other months,
4 weeks.
3 For month shown.
< Qrtly. average.
O Revisions for Jan. 1962-June 1963 are available.
9 Includes data not shown separately.
t Production and stocks of linters at oil mills revised to approximate running bales; data
back to Aug. 1958 are available.
^Beginning Aug. 1964, margins reflect the 6.5 cents per
pound
cotton
equalization payments made to domestic cotton users on all bales of eligible

cotton opened beginning 4/11/64; note that the Apr.-July 1964 margins exclude these payments.



95.8

68, 640
66,654
42, 570

95.8

95.8

95.8

71, 463
69, 822
46, 538

95.8

95.8

AEfTective Jan. 1964, data not strictly comparable with earlier prices.
t See corresponding note, bottom of p. 8^40.
*New series. See corresponding note in the Aug. 1964 SURVEY. Monthly data back to
1959 are available.
©Beginning July 1964 index, yarn specification changed to "American system, manufacturer to knitter."

November 1964

SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS

S-40
Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1962
and descriptive notes are shown in the 1963
edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS

1962 | 1963

Monthly
average

1964

1963

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

1 Sept.
1

Oct.

TEXTILE PRODUCTS—Continued
APPAREL
Fosierv, shipments
thous doz. pairs.. 14,343
Men's apparel, cuttings: t
Tailored garments:
Suits
_.- thous. units.. 1,685
401
Overcoats and topcoats
do. _
Coats (separate) dress and sport
do
Trousers (separate) dress and sport
do
Shirts (woven fabrics), dress and sport thous. doz_
Work clothing:
Dnnearees and waistband overalls _ __do
Shirts
do
Women's, misses', juniors' outerwear, cuttings: t
Coats
thous units
Dresses
do
Suits
do
Blouses waists and shirts
Skirts
'

thous doz
do

15.007

15, 194

17, 584

14,331

13, 399

16, 350

15, 411

15, 423

14, 763

13, 892

16, 544

15, 174

16, 661

1,799

1,589

2,011

1,787

1,677

1,771

1,724

158

189

209

1,664

1,929

316

231

1,934

343
882

1 218

9,560

2,100

967
7,384

1 169

8 843
1,918

9,480
2,276

1 022

2,061

1,054
9,120
2,071

1,853

281
303

366
313

410
311

475
341

373
307

2,002

2,046
21,914
828

2,529

806

18, 874

22, 353

2,001
18, 933

636

858

796

1,370

1,363

656

825

1 263

1 640

978

943
9,527

20, 880

329

2,440

804

1,757

1,156

1,893

384

390

311

407

1,116
10, 847

2,098

1, 024
11, 354
1,975

659
9,947

2,020

1,173
10, 672
2,118

1,730

993
11,360
2,028

424
325

433
319

444
339

425
306

415
304

379
268

403
318

2 247
21, 920
1,259

2, '445
24, R66
1,362

1,588
28, 149

1,032
29, 943

1,541
25, 545

584

628

2,408
2,135
22, 953 ••19,918
909 ' 1,008

2,521
20, 338

1,408

1,500

1,442

1,471

1,250

225

309

1 021
9 698

2,138

1 030
9, 587
2,101

325
219

402
336

15,915
770

1,727

1 351

1,041

690

607

8,383

741

868

758

776

825

844

1,354

923

T

1, 274

••900

16, 896

927

1,328

875

TRANSPORTATION EQUIPMENT
AEROSPACE VEHICLES
Orders new (net) qtrly avg or total
mil. $
IT S Government
do
Prime contract
do
Sales (net), receipts or billings, qtrly. avg. or total
mil. $
IT S Government
do

3,741
2,996
3,330

4,414
3,519
4 018

5 194
4 003
4 680

3,656
2,758
3 263

4,899
3,863
4 443

4,580
3,396
4 192

3,993
3,138

4.102
3,301

4,170
3 418

4,257
3,398

4,098
3,144

4,345
3,365

Backlog of orders end of year or qtr 9
do
U S Government
do
Aircraft (complete) and parts
do
Engines (aircraft) and parts
do
Missiles, space vehicle systems, engines, propulsion units and parts
mil $
Other related operations (conversions, modifications) products services
mil $

13, 138
10, 572
5,045
1,527

13 919
10 953
5 301
1 510

14 522
11 579
5 345
1 484

13,919
10, 953
5 301
1,510

14 705
11,665
5 879
1 383

14, 940
11, 696
6 180
1,342

4,056

4 661

5 151

4,661

4 809

4,826

1,480

1 295

1,365

1,295

1,403

Aircraft (civilian)' Shipments ©
do
Airframe weight © thous lb
Exports
mil $

81.8
1 682
27.3

57 2
1 340
20 3

58.4
1 199
13 2

63.3
1 380
11.6

52.8
1 306
20.9

88.1
2 045
15.4

84.6
1 815
41.8

66.5
1 567
17.9

96.7
2 Oil
25.0

114.6
2 297
33.4

92.3
1 997
24.0

96.0
2 091
19.8

71.4
1 631
24.9

89.2
1 748
19.5

14.0

681.1
654.6
577.8
562. 8
103. 3
91.9

758.4
730 0
636 5
620 3
121 9
109 7

598.8
566.1
481.8
463 0
117.0
103 1

945.7
906.2
804.0
779.2
141.7
127.0

873.3
836.8
748.5
726.2
124.7
110.6

881.8
846.4
754. 0
733.0
127.8
113.5

859.6
831.5
726.2
709.0
133.5
122.5

814.1
784.8
681.1
665.4
133.1
119.4

860.5
829.3
718.0
700.9
142.5
128.4

939.9
909.3
786.4
770.2
153.5
139.1

875.7
845.1
735.0
719.5
140.7
125.6

893.2
862.6
740.6
726.7
152.5
136.0

691.4
670.3
570.3
562.2
121.1
108.1

339.6
319.9
237.3
230.8
102.2
89.1

700.9
671.1
581.9
563.8
119.1
107.3

20, 100
11, 246
8, 855

22 928

17 142
8,294
8 848

27, 970
14, 998
12, 972

42, 056
29, 066
12, 990

34,607
24, 799
9,808

33. 829
20, 274
13, 555

27, 606
13, 995
13 611

23, 857
11, 932
11. 925

22, 407
12. 031
10, 376

27, 769
13,166
14, 603

34, 681
18,986
15, 695

22, 032
10, 677
11, 355

26, 308
14, 927
11,381

22, 853
11, 895
10, 958

33, 080
32, 063

3fi 534 32350
35 308 31 019

38, 835
36, 834

39, 086
38, 504

40, 952 45, 588
40,037 44, 330

38 426
38, 243

47, 238
46, 868

46, 404
45, 950

41,211
40, 808

47, 015
46, 481

47, 172
46, 812

20, 430
20, 181

40, 283
39, 632

6 465
3' 385

6 404
3 736

7,434
4,556

6.590
4,311

5,910
3,609

7,184
4,246

8,141
4,745

7,991
4,562

8,185
4,614

7,888
4,538

7,309
4,366

1,326

MOTOR VEHICLES
Factory sales, total
Domestic
.
Passenger cars, total
Domestic
Trucks and buses, total
Domestic

.
_

Exports, total
Passenger cars (new and used)
Trucks and buses

thous. „
do
do
do
do
do
number
do
do

Imports (cars, trucks, buses), total a"
do
Passeneer cars (new and used)d*
do
Shipments, truck trailers: A
Complete trailers and chassis
_
do
Vans...
.
_
do
Trailers and chassis (detachable), sold separately
number
Registrations:©
New passenger cars
thous
Foreign cars
_. _ _
do
New commercial cars (trucks)
do

6,081
3,733

1? -851

10' 076

6,503
4,139

6,135
3,802

537

44^

427

459

342

289

515

607

623

627

651

806

62Q 7
39 i
103 7

285
403 fi
33 7
93 5

365

578.2
28.3
89.1

714. 7
32.2
117.1

640 2
26.4
100.4

712.0
35.8
114.6

612.0
35.4
102.7

551.8
29.8
90.9

636 9
35.8
108.3

812.3
45.0
132.5

780.6
41.3
124.3

754.3
42.5
122.4

724.2
44.2
123.0

648 7
42.4
111.1

565.4
42.4
121.1

3,046
1,962
1,085

3,747
2,608
1,140

4 327
2,984
1 343

4, 725
3, 366
1,359

3,911
2,925
986

4,442
3,087
1,355

5,253
3,299
1,954

5,467
3,674
1,793

6,780
4,336
2,444

6,529
3,531
2,998

6,931
3,947
2,984

6, 759
4,190
2,569

5,258
4,055
1,203

4,349
2,875
1,474

4,314
2,899
1,415

3,076
1,979
1,097

5,097
3,665
1,432

2 319
1,' 921
398

8 066
3, 637
4,429

8 273
6,673
1,600

9 827
7,868
1,959

10 552
3,441
7,111

3 701
3,172
529

7 040
5,454
1, 586

2 796
2,496
300

6,943
4,894
2,049

4 593
3,554
1,039

'4,644
••3,627
1,017

7 344
4,124
3,220

4,045
2,631
1,414

14,315
6,788
7,527

22, 183
12, 645
9,538

18 388
11 188
7,200

22 196
11,626
10, 570

26 611
15,425
11, 186

32,311
20, 161
12, 150

37, 836
20,291
17,545

36, 080
19, 789
16, 291

36, 922
20, 960
15, 962

34, 690
19, 930
14,760

33, 410
21, 084
12, 326

30, 631
20, 383
10,248

28, 618
19, 757
8,861

31 598
21,006
10, 592

31, 278
20, 688
10, 590

23
174

16
198

42
220

35
202

24
178

14
317

5
352

5
387

5
382

5
377

6
371

15
356

21
363

30
333

28
305

1,552
8.0

1,515
6.8

1,527
7 7

1,521
71

1,519
7 0

1,515
6.8

1,513
6.5

1,507
6.3

1,505
6.3

1,503
6.2

1,502
6.1

1,501
6.0

1,500
6.1

1,499
6.0

1,497
60

1491.5
1411.2
180. 3

RAILROAD EQUIPMENT
Freight cars (ARCI):
Shipments
Equipment manufacturers, total
Railroad shops, domestic . .
New orders...
_
Equipment manufacturers, total
Railroad shops, domestic
Unfilled orders, end of year or mo _
Equipment manufacturers, total
Railroad shops, domestic
.
Passenger cars: Shipments
Unfilled orders, end of mo
Freight cars, class 1 (AAR): §
Number owned, end of year or mo
Held for repairs, % of total owned

number
do
do
do
do...
do
do
do
do
do
do. .
thous..

r
Revised.
1 Preliminary estimate of production.
t Monthly revisions for Jan. 1961-Oct. 1962 are available upon request.
Q Total includes backlog for nonrelated products and services and basic research.
©Data include military-type planes shipped to foreign governments.
cfData cover comolete units, chassis, and bodies.
AEffective with the Apr. 1964 SURVEY, shipments have been substituted for production.
Shipments of trailer chassis only and dump trailer chassis, sold separately, are now included
with the complete trailers and chassis (except detachable). Data back to 1958 are available.
OCourtesy of R. L. Polk A Co.; republication prohibited.
§ Excludes railroad-owned private refrigerator cars and private line cars.




r
T

NOTE FOR MANMADE FIBER FABRICS, P. S-39. {Effective 1st qtr. 1964.
data reflect revised fabric classifications. The difference between total production and the
sum of data for filament, spun, and mixed yarn fabrics shown separately (p. S-39) covers
upholstery, blanketing, silk, paper, and other specialty fabrics. The difference between the
total for 100% filament yarn and the components shown, covers all other filament yarn goods,
including glass fiber and polyester fiber fabrics. Earlier data comparable with the detail
shown are not available. F'igures for 1st atr. 1964 reported under the new classification
system and receded to the old are summarized for comparison with data shown in the Aug.
1964 and earlier issues of the SURVEY as follows (mil. yd.): Total, 840.5; rayon, 485.2; nylon,
79.1; polyester, 204.0; silk, 4.3.

INDEX TO CURRENT BUSINESS STATISTICS, Pages S1-S40
SECTIONS
General:
Business indicators
Commodity prices
Construction and real estate
Domestic trade

1-7
7, 8
9, 10
10-12

Employment and population
Finance
Foreign trade of the United States
Transportation and communications

12-16
16-21
21-23
23, 24

Industry:
Chemicals and allied products
Electric power and gas
Food and kindred products; tobacco
Leather and products

25
26
26-30
30, 31

Lumber and products
Metals and manufactures
Petroleum, coal, and products
Pulp, paper, and paper products

31
32-34
35,36
36, 37

Rubber and rubber products
Stone, clay, and glass products
Textile products
-_
Transportation equipment

37
38
38-40
40

INDIVIDUAL SERIES
Advertising
Aerospace vehicles..
Agricultural loans
Air carrier operations
Aircraft and parts
3,
Alcohol, denatured and ethyl
Alcoholic beverages
Aluminum
Appnrel
1, 3, 4, 7, 8,
Asphalt and tar products
Automobiles, e t c _ _ _ 1, 3-6, 8, 10, 11, 13-15,

10, 11,16
40
16
23
13 15, 40
25
8, 10, 26
23, 33
10-15, 40
35, 36
19, 22, 40

Balance of international payments
Banking
Barley
Barrels and drums
Battery shipments
Beef and veal
Beverages
4,8,
Blast furnaces, steel works, etc
Bonds, outstanding, issued, prices, sales,
yields
Brass and bronze.
Brick
Broker's balances
Building and construction materials- 8, 10, 31,
Building costs
Building permits. _
Business incorporations (new), failures
Business population
Business sales and inventories
Butter

2
16, 17
27
33
34
28
10, 26
13-15
18-20
33
38
20
36, 38
9, 10
9
7
2
4,5
27

Cans (tinplate)
33
Carloadings
24
Cattle and calves
28
Cement and croncrete products
8 1 0 , 38
Cereal and bakery products
8
Chain-store sales, firms with 4 or more and 11
or more stores
12
Cheese
27
Chemicals
4-6,8, 13-15, 19, 22, 25
Cigarettes and cigars
8, 30
Civilian employees, Federal
14
Clay products
8, 38
Coal
4, 8, 13-15, 22, 24, 35
Cocoa
23,29
Coffee
23, 29
Coke
24, 35
Communications
2, 13-15, 20, 24
Confectionery, sales
29
Construction:
Contracts
9
Costs
9, 10
Employment, hours, earnings, wages
13-16
Highways and roads
9, 10
Housing starts
9
New construction put in place
1, 2, 9
Consumer credit
17, 18
Consumer expenditures
1, 2
Consumer goods output, index
3, 4
Consumer price index
7
Copper
23,33
Corn
27
Cost of living (see Consumer price index)
7
Cotton, raw and manufactures
7. 8, 22, 38, 39
Cottonseed cake and meal and oil
30
Credit, short - and intermediate-term
17,18
Crops
3, 7, 27, 28, 30, 38
Crude oil and natural gas
4, 13-15, 35
Currency in circulation
19
Dairy products
<.
Debits, bank
Debt, U.S. Government
Department stores
Deposits, bank
Disputes, industrial
Distilled spirits

Dividend
payments, rates, and yields
Drug stores, sales _ i
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

3, 7, 27
16
18
11,12,17
16, 17, 19
16
26
1,3, 18-21
11, 12

National defense expenditures
1, 18
National income and product
1, 2
National parks, visits
24
Newsprint
23, 37
New York Stock Exchange, selected data
20, 21
Nonferrous metals
3, 8, 19, 23, 33, 34
Noninstallment credit
17. 18

Earnings, weekly and hourly
14-16
Eating and drinking places
11, 12
Eggs and poultry
3, 7, 29
Electric power
,. 4, 8, 26
Electrical machinery and equipment
3,
5,6, 13-15, 19,22,34
Employment estimates
12-14
Employment Service activities
16
Expenditures, U.S. Government
18
Explosives
25
Exports (see also individual commodities)
1.
2,21-23
Express operations
23

Oats
27
Oil burners
34
Oils and fats
8, 22, 29, 30
Orders, new and unfilled, manufacturers'
6
Ordnance
13-15

Failures, industrial and commercial
7
Fans and blowers
34
Farm income, marketings, and prices
1, 3, 7
Farm wages
16
Fats and oils
8,22, 29, 30
Federal Government
finance
18
Federal Reserve banks, condition of
16
Federal Reserve member banks
17
Fertilizers
8, 25
Fire losses
10
Fish oils and
fish
29
Flooring, hardwood
31
Flour, wheat
28
Food products___ 4-8, 10, 11, 13-15, 19, 22, 23, 27-30
Foreclosures, real estate
10
Foreign trade (see also individual commod.)
21-23
Foundry equipment
34
Freight carloadings
24
Freight cars (equipment)
4, 40
Fruits and vegetables
7, 8, 22
Fuel oil
35, 36
Fuels
4, 8, 35, 36
Furnaces
34
Furniture
3,4,8, 11-15, 17
Furs
23

Paint and paint materials
8, 25
Panama Canal traffic
24
Paper and products and pulp
3,
5,6,8, 13-15, 19,23,36,37
Parity ratio
7
Passports issued
24
Payrolls, indexes
14
Personal consumption expenditures
1, 2
Personal income
2, 3
Petroleum and products
4-6,
8, 11, 13-15, 19, 22, 23, 35, 36
Pig iron
32
Plant and equipment expenditures
2, 20
Plastics and resin materials
25
Population. _ _
12
Pork
28
Postal savings
17
Poultry and eggs
3, 7, 29
Prices (see also individual commodities)
7, 8
Printing and publishing
4, 13-15
Profits, corporate
1, 19
Public utilities
2-4, 7-9, 13-15, 18-21
Pullman Company
24
Pulp and pulpwood
36
Purchasing power of the dollar
8

Gas, output, prices, sales, re venues
4, 8, 26
Gasoline
1,35,36
Glass and products
38
Glycerin
25
Gold
19
Grains and products
7, 8, 22, 24, 27, 28
Grocery stores
11, 12
Gross national product
1, 2
Gross private domestic investment
1, 2
Gypsum and products
8, 38

Radiators and convectors
34
Radio and television
4, 8, 10, 11, 34
Railroads
2, 13, 14, 16, 18, 20, 21, 24, 40
Railways (local) and bus lines
13-15, 23
Rayon and acetate
39
Real estate
10, 17, 18
Receipts, U.S. Government
18
Recreation
7
Refrigerators and home freezers
34
Rent (housing)
7
Retail trade
4,5,7, 11-15, 17,18
Rice
27
Roofing and siding, asphalt
36
Rubber and products (incl. plastics)
4-6,
8, 13-15, 23, 37
Rye.
27

Hardware stores
Heating equipment
Hides and skins
Highways and roads
Hogs
Home Loan banks, outstanding advances
Home mortgages
Hosiery
Hotels
Hours of work per week
Housefurnishings
1, 4,
Household appliances and radios
Housing starts a n d permits

11
8, 34
8, 30
9, 10
28
10
10
40
14, 15, 24
14
7, 8, 10-12
4, 8. 11, 34
___
9

Imports (see also individual commodities) 1, 2 , 2 2 , 23
Income, personal
2, 3
Income and employment tax receipts
18
Industrial production indexes:
By industry
3, 4
By market grouping
3, 4
Installment credit
12, 17, 18
Installment sales, department stores
12
Instruments and related products
3, 13-15
Insulating materials
34
Insurance, life
18, 19
Interest and money rates
17
Inventories, manufacturers' and trade
4-6, 11,12
Inventory-sales ratios
5
Iron and steel__ 3, 5, 6, 8, 10, 13-15, 19, 22, 23, 32, 33
Labor advertising index, disputes, turnover
16
Labor force
12
Lamb and mutton
28
Lard
28
Lead
33
Leather and products
3,8, 13-15,30, 31
Life insurance
_
18, 19
Linseed oil
30
Livestock
3, 7 , 8 , 2 4 , 2 8
Loans, real estate, agricultural, bank, brokers'
(see also Consumer credit)
10, 16, 17, 20
Lubricants
35,36
Lumber and products
3, 8, 10-15, 19, 3 1
Machine tools
34
Machinery
3,5,6,8, 13-15, 19,22,34
Mail order houses, sales
11
Manmade fibers and manufactures
8,39
Manufacturers' sales (or shipments), inventories, orders
4-6
Manufacturing employment, production workers, payrolls, hours, earnings
13-15
Manufacturing production indexes
3, 4
Margarine
29
Meat animals and meats
3, 7 , 8 , 2 2 , 2 8
Medical and personal care
7
Metals
3-6, 8, 13-15, 19, 22, 23, 32-34
Milk
27
Mining and minerals
2-4, 8, 13-15, 19, 20
Monetary statistics
19
Money supply.
19
Mortgage applications, loans, rates
10, 16, 17
Motor carriers
23, 24
Motor vehicles
1, 3-6, 8, 10, 11, 13-15, 19, 22, 40
Motors and generators
34

Saving, personal
2
Savings deposits
17
Securities issued
19, 20
Security markets
20,21
Services
1, 2, 13-15
Sheep and larnbs
28
Shoes and other footwear
8, 11, 12, 31
Silver
19
Soybean cake and meal and oil
30
Spindle activity, cotton
39
Steel ingots and steel manufactures
32, 33
Steel scrap
32
Stock prices, earnings, sales, etc
20, 21
Stone, clay, glass products
3-5, 8, 13-15, 19, 38
Stoves and ranges
34
Sugar
23, 29
Sulfur
25
Sulfuric acid
25
Superphosphate
25
Tea imports
29
Telephone, telegraph, cable, and radiotelegraph carriers
13-15, 24
Television and radio
4, 8, 10, 11, 34
Textiles and products._ 3, 5, 6, 8, 13-15, 19, 22, 38-40
Tin
23, 33
Tires and inner tubes
8, 11, 12, 37
Tobacco and manufactures
4-8, 10, 13-15, 22, 30
Tractors
22, 34
Trade (retail and wholesale)
4, 5, 11, 12
Transit lines, local
23
Transportation
1, 2, 7, 13-15, 23, 24
Transportation equipment
3-6, 13-15, 19, 40
Travel.
23, 24
Truck trailers
40
Trucks (industrial and other)
34, 40
Unemployment and insurance
1 2, 16
U.S. Government bonds
16-18, 20
U.S. Government
finance
18
Utilities
2-4, 9, 13-15, 18-21, 26
Vacuum cleaners
Variety stores
Vegetable oils
Vegetables and fruits
Vessels cleared in foreign trade
Veterans'benefits
Wages and salaries
Washers and driers
Water heaters
Waterway traffic
Wheat and wheat
Wholesale price indexes
Wholesale trade
Wood pulp
Wool and wool manufactures
Zinc

-

flour

34
11, 12
30
7, 8, 22
24
16, 18
1, 3, 14-16
34
34
24
28
8
4, 5, 7,13-15
36
7, 8, 23, 39
33, 34

UNITED STATES
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE

PENALTY FOR PRIVATE USE TO A V O I D
PAYMENT OF POSTAGE, $30O
(GPO)

First-Class Mail

DIVISION OF PUBLIC DOCUMENTS

WASHINGTON, D.C. 2O4O2
OFFICIAL




BUSINESS

The Office of Business Economics Calls Attention to

BUSINESS STATISTICS
1963 edition
FOURTEENTH VOLUME in a series of
statistical supplements to the monthly Survey of
Current Business, the latest (1963) biennial edition
provides historical data for each of over 2,500 economic indicators.
Monthly data are shown back to 1959, with
quarterly series back to 1951 and annual averages
from 1939. Explanatory notes for each series refer
to the source and methodology used, define the
statistical units, and specify both the comparability
of current and past figures and the adequacy of
coverage.
-[PRICE, $2.00]Orders may be placed with the Superintendent of
Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 10401, or with any Field Office of the
U.S.

D E P A R T M E N T OF C O M M E R C E