FXstreet.com

U.S. NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT ACCOUNTS




Data Headings



Table 1.1.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Gross Domestic Product

Percent; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •    Change in private inventories
  • Net exports of goods and services
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual)

    Table 1.1.2. Contributions to Percent Change in Real Gross Domestic Product

    Percent change at annual rate:
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual) Percentage points at annual rates:
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •   Change in private inventories (Annual)
  • Net exports of goods and services (Annual)
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual)

    Table 1.1.5. Gross Domestic Product

    Billions of dollars
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •   Change in private inventories (Annual)
  • Net exports of goods and services (Annual)
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual)

    Table 1.1.6. Real Gross Domestic Product, Chained Dollars

    Billions of chained (2000) dollars
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •   Change in private inventories (Annual)
  • Net exports of goods and services (Annual)
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual)
  • Residual (Annual) NOTE. Chained (2000) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2000 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines.

    Table 1.1.7. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Prices for Gross Domestic Product

    Percent; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •    Change in private inventories
  • Net exports of goods and services
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual) Addendum:
  •   Gross national product (Annual)

    Table 1.4.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Gross Domestic Product, Gross Domestic Purchases, and Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers

    Percent; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  • Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Less: Exports of goods and services (Annual)
  • Plus: Imports of goods and services (Annual)
  • Equals: Gross domestic purchases (Annual)
  • Less: Change in private inventories
  • Equals: Final sales to domestic purchasers (Annual) Addendum:
  •   Final sales of domestic product (Annual)

    Table 1.4.5. Relation of Gross Domestic Product, Gross Domestic Purchases, and Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  • Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Less: Exports of goods and services (Annual)
  • Plus: Imports of goods and services (Annual)
  • Equals: Gross domestic purchases (Annual)
  • Less: Change in private inventories (Annual)
  • Equals: Final sales to domestic purchasers (Annual) Addendum:
  •   Final sales of domestic product (Annual)

    Table 1.4.6. Relation of Real Gross Domestic Product, Real Gross Domestic Purchases, and Real Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers, Chained Dollars

    Billions of chained (2000) dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  • Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Less: Exports of goods and services (Annual)
  • Plus: Imports of goods and services (Annual)
  • Equals: Gross domestic purchases (Annual)
  • Less: Change in private inventories (Annual)
  • Equals: Final sales to domestic purchasers (Annual) Addendum:
  •   Final sales of domestic product (Annual)

    Table 1.5.1 Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Gross Domestic Product, Expanded Detail

    Percent; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •     Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •     Food (Annual)
  •     Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •     Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  •     Housing (Annual)
  •     Household operation (Annual)
  •       Electricity and gas (Annual)
  •       Other household operation (Annual)
  •     Transportation (Annual)
  •     Medical care (Annual)
  •     Recreation (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •         Information processing equipment and software (Annual)
  •           Computers and peripheral equipment (Annual)
  •           Software 1 (Annual)
  •           Other (Annual)
  •         Industrial equipment (Annual)
  •         Transportation equipment (Annual)
  •         Other equipment (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •    Change in private inventories
  •      Farm
  •      Nonfarm
  • Net exports of goods and services
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross investment (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross investment (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual) 1. Excludes software "embedded,'' or bundled, in computers and other equipment.

    Table 1.5.5 Gross Domestic Product, Expanded Detail

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •     Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •     Food (Annual)
  •     Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •     Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  •     Housing (Annual)
  •     Household operation (Annual)
  •       Electricity and gas (Annual)
  •       Other household operation (Annual)
  •     Transportation (Annual)
  •     Medical care (Annual)
  •     Recreation (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •         Information processing equipment and software (Annual)
  •           Computers and peripheral equipment (Annual)
  •           Software 1 (Annual)
  •           Other (Annual)
  •         Industrial equipment (Annual)
  •         Transportation equipment (Annual)
  •         Other equipment (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •   Change in private inventories (Annual)
  •     Farm (Annual)
  •     Nonfarm (Annual)
  • Net exports of goods and services (Annual)
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross investment (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross investment (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual) 1. Excludes software "embedded,'' or bundled, in computers and other equipment.

    Table 1.5.6 Real Gross Domestic Product, Expanded Detail, Chained Dollars

    Billions of chained (2000) dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •     Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •     Food (Annual)
  •     Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •     Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  •     Housing (Annual)
  •     Household operation (Annual)
  •       Electricity and gas (Annual)
  •       Other household operation (Annual)
  •     Transportation (Annual)
  •     Medical care (Annual)
  •     Recreation (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •         Information processing equipment and software (Annual)
  •           Computers and peripheral equipment 1 (Annual)
  •           Software 2 (Annual)
  •           Other (Annual)
  •         Industrial equipment (Annual)
  •         Transportation equipment (Annual)
  •         Other equipment (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •   Change in private inventories (Annual)
  •     Farm (Annual)
  •     Nonfarm (Annual)
  • Net exports of goods and services (Annual)
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross investment (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross investment (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  • Residual (Annual) 1. The quantity index for computers can be used to accurately measure the real growth of this component. However, because computers exhibit rapid changes in prices relative to other prices in the economy, the chained-dollar estimates should not be used to measure the component's relative importance or its contribution to the growth rate of more aggregate series; accurate estimates of these contributions are shown in table 1.5.2 and real growth rates are shown in table 1.5.1.
    2. Excludes software "embedded,'' or bundled, in computers and other equipment.

    Table 1.7.5. Relation of Gross Domestic Product, Gross National Product, Net National Product, National Income, and Personal Income

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  • Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Plus: Income receipts from the rest of the world (Annual)
  • Less: Income payments to the rest of the world (Annual)
  • Equals: Gross national product (Annual)
  • Less: Consumption of fixed capital (Annual)
  •         Private (Annual)
  •           Domestic business (Annual)
  •             Capital consumption allowances (Annual)
  •             Less: Capital consumption adjustment (Annual)
  •           Households and institutions (Annual)
  •         Government (Annual)
  •           General government (Annual)
  •           Government enterprises (Annual)
  • Equals: Net national product (Annual)
  • Less: Statistical discrepancy (Annual)
  • Equals: National income (Annual)
  • Less: Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments (Annual)
  •       Taxes on production and imports less subsidies 1 (Annual)
  •       Contributions for government social insurance (Annual)
  •       Net interest and miscellaneous payments on assets (Annual)
  •       Business current transfer payments (net) (Annual)
  •       Current surplus of government enterprises 1 (Annual)
  •       Wage accruals less disbursements (Annual)
  • Plus: Personal income receipts on assets (Annual)
  •       Personal current transfer receipts (Annual)
  • Equals: Personal income (Annual) Addenda:
  •   Gross domestic income (Annual)
  •   Gross national income (Annual)
  •   Gross national factor income 2 (Annual)
  •   Net domestic product (Annual)
  •   Net domestic income (Annual)
  •   Net national factor income 3 (Annual) 1. Prior to 1959, current surplus of government enterprises (line 22) is not shown separately; subsidies are included net of the current surplus of government enterprises in line 18.
    2. Consists of compensation of employees, proprietors' income with inventory valuation adjustment (IVA) and capital consumption adjustment (CCAdj), rental income of persons with CCAdj, corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj, net interest and miscellaneous payments, and consumption of fixed capital.
    3. Consists of gross national factor income less consumption of fixed capital.

    Table 1.12. National Income by Type of Income

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     National income (Annual)
  • Compensation of employees (Annual)
  •   Wage and salary accruals (Annual)
  •     Government (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Supplements to wages and salaries (Annual)
  •     Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance funds (Annual)
  •     Employer contributions for government social insurance (Annual)
  • Proprietors' income with IVA and CCAdj (Annual)
  •   Farm (Annual)
  •   Nonfarm (Annual)
  • Rental income of persons with CCAdj (Annual)
  • Corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj (Annual)
  •   Taxes on corporate income (Annual)
  •   Profits after tax with IVA and CCAdj (Annual)
  •     Net dividends (Annual)
  •     Undistributed profits with IVA and CCAdj (Annual)
  • Net interest and miscellaneous payments (Annual)
  • Taxes on production and imports (Annual)
  • Less: Subsidies 1 (Annual)
  • Business current transfer payments(net) (Annual)
  •   To persons (net) (Annual)
  •   To government (net) (Annual)
  •   To the rest of the world (net) (Annual)
  • Current surplus of government enterprises 1 (Annual) Cash flow:
  •   Net cash flow with IVA and CCAdj (Annual)
  •     Undistributed profits with IVA and CCAdj (Annual)
  •     Consumption of fixed capital (Annual)
  •   Less: Inventory valuation adjustment (Annual)
  •   Equals: Net cash flow (Annual) Addenda:
  •   Proprietors' income with IVA and CCAdj (Annual)
  •     Farm (Annual)
  •       Proprietors' income with IVA (Annual)
  •       Capital consumption adjustment (Annual)
  •     Nonfarm (Annual)
  •       Proprietors' income (without IVA and CCAdj) (Annual)
  •       Inventory valuation adjustment (Annual)
  •       Capital consumption adjustment (Annual)
  •   Rental income of persons with CCAdj (Annual)
  •     Rental income of persons (without CCAdj) (Annual)
  •     Capital consumption adjustment (Annual)
  •   Corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj (Annual)
  •     Corporate profits with IVA (Annual)
  •       Profits before tax (without IVA and CCAdj) (Annual)
  •         Taxes on corporate income (Annual)
  •         Profits after tax (without IVA and CCAdj) (Annual)
  •           Net dividends (Annual)
  •           Undistributed profits (without IVA and CCAdj) (Annual)
  •       Inventory valuation adjustment (Annual)
  •     Capital consumption adjustment (Annual) 1. Prior to 1959, subsidies (line 20) and the current surplus of government enterprises (line 25) are not shown separately; subsidies are presented net of the current surplus of government enterprises.
    IVA Inventory valuation adjustment
    CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment

    Table 1.1.3. Real Gross Domestic Product, Quantity Indexes

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •    Change in private inventories
  • Net exports of goods and services
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual)

    Table 1.1.4. Price Indexes for Gross Domestic Product

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •    Change in private inventories
  • Net exports of goods and services
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual)

    Table 1.1.9. Implicit Price Deflators for Gross Domestic Product

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •    Change in private inventories
  • Net exports of goods and services
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual) Addendum:
  •   Gross national product (Annual)

    Table 1.4.3. Real Gross Domestic Product, Real Gross Domestic Purchases, and Real Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers, Quantity Indexes

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  • Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Less: Exports of goods and services (Annual)
  • Plus: Imports of goods and services (Annual)
  • Equals: Gross domestic purchases (Annual)
  • Less: Change in private inventories
  • Equals: Final sales to domestic purchasers (Annual) Addendum:
  •   Final sales of domestic product (Annual)

    Table 1.4.4. Price Indexes for Gross Domestic Product, Gross Domestic Purchases, and Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  • Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Less: Exports of goods and services (Annual)
  • Plus: Imports of goods and services (Annual)
  • Equals: Gross domestic purchases (Annual)
  • Less: Change in private inventories
  • Equals: Final sales to domestic purchasers (Annual) Addendum:
  •   Final sales of domestic product (Annual)

    Table 1.5.3 Real Gross Domestic Product, Expanded Detail, Quantity Indexes

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •     Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •     Food (Annual)
  •     Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •     Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  •     Housing (Annual)
  •     Household operation (Annual)
  •       Electricity and gas (Annual)
  •       Other household operation (Annual)
  •     Transportation (Annual)
  •     Medical care (Annual)
  •     Recreation (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •         Information processing equipment and software (Annual)
  •           Computers and peripheral equipment (Annual)
  •           Software 1 (Annual)
  •           Other (Annual)
  •         Industrial equipment (Annual)
  •         Transportation equipment (Annual)
  •         Other equipment (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •    Change in private inventories
  •      Farm
  •      Nonfarm
  • Net exports of goods and services
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross investment (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross investment (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual) 1. Excludes software "embedded,'' or bundled, in computers and other equipment.

    Table 1.5.4 Price Indexes for Gross Domestic Product, Expanded Detail

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •     Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •     Food (Annual)
  •     Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •     Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  •     Housing (Annual)
  •     Household operation (Annual)
  •       Electricity and gas (Annual)
  •       Other household operation (Annual)
  •     Transportation (Annual)
  •     Medical care (Annual)
  •     Recreation (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •         Information processing equipment and software (Annual)
  •           Computers and peripheral equipment (Annual)
  •           Software 1 (Annual)
  •           Other (Annual)
  •         Industrial equipment (Annual)
  •         Transportation equipment (Annual)
  •         Other equipment (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •    Change in private inventories
  •      Farm
  •      Nonfarm
  • Net exports of goods and services
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross investment (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross investment (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual) 1. Excludes software "embedded,'' or bundled, in computers and other equipment.

    Table 1.1.10. Percentage Shares of Gross Domestic Product

    Percent;
  •     Gross domestic product (Annual)
  • Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Services (Annual)
  • Gross private domestic investment (Annual)
  •   Fixed investment (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Residential (Annual)
  •   Change in private inventories (Annual)
  • Net exports of goods and services (Annual)
  •   Exports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  •   Imports (Annual)
  •     Goods (Annual)
  •     Services (Annual)
  • Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •   Federal (Annual)
  •     National defense (Annual)
  •     Nondefense (Annual)
  •   State and local (Annual)

    Table 2.1. Personal Income and Its Disposition

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  • Personal income (Annual)
  •   Compensation of employees, received (Annual)
  •     Wage and salary disbursements (Annual)
  •       Private industries (Annual)
  •       Government (Annual)
  •     Supplements to wages and salaries (Annual)
  •       Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance funds (Annual)
  •       Employer contributions for government social insurance (Annual)
  •   Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments (Annual)
  •     Farm (Annual)
  •     Nonfarm (Annual)
  •   Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment (Annual)
  •   Personal income receipts on assets (Annual)
  •     Personal interest income (Annual)
  •     Personal dividend income (Annual)
  •   Personal current transfer receipts (Annual)
  •     Government social benefits to persons (Annual)
  •       Old-age, survivors, disability, and health insurance benefits (Annual)
  •       Government unemployment insurance benefits (Annual)
  •       Veterans benefits (Annual)
  •       Family assistance 1 (Annual)
  •       Other (Annual)
  •     Other current transfer receipts, from business(net) (Annual)
  •   Less: Contributions for government social insurance (Annual)
  • Less: Personal current taxes (Annual)
  • Equals: Disposable personal income (Annual)
  • Less: Personal outlays (Annual)
  •   Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Personal interest payments 2 (Annual)
  •   Personal current transfer payments (Annual)
  •     To government (Annual)
  •     To the rest of the world (net) (Annual)
  • Equals: Personal saving (Annual)
  •   Personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income (Annual) Addenda: Disposable personal income:
  •     Total, billions of chained (2000) dollars 3 (Annual) Per capita:
  •       Current dollars (Annual)
  •       Chained (2000) dollars (Annual)
  •   Population (midperiod, thousands) (Annual) Percent change from preceding period:
  •     Disposable personal income, current dollars (Annual)
  •     Disposable personal income, chained (2000) dollars (Annual) 1. Consists of aid to families with dependent children and, beginning with 1996, assistance programs operating under the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996.
    2. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households.
    3. Equals disposable personal income deflated by the implicit price deflator for personal consumption expenditures.

    Table 2.3.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product

    Percent; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •   Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Food (Annual)
  •   Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •   Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •     Gasoline and oil (Annual)
  •     Fuel oil and coal (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Services (Annual)
  •   Housing (Annual)
  •   Household operation (Annual)
  •     Electricity and gas (Annual)
  •     Other household operation (Annual)
  •   Transportation (Annual)
  •   Medical care (Annual)
  •   Recreation (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual) Addenda:
  •   Energy goods and services 1 (Annual)
  •   Personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy. (Annual) 1. Consists of gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods and of electricity and gas.

    Table 2.3.3. Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product, Quantity Indexes

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  •     Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •   Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Food (Annual)
  •   Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •   Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •     Gasoline and oil (Annual)
  •     Fuel oil and coal (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Services (Annual)
  •   Housing (Annual)
  •   Household operation (Annual)
  •     Electricity and gas (Annual)
  •     Other household operation (Annual)
  •   Transportation (Annual)
  •   Medical care (Annual)
  •   Recreation (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual) Addenda:
  •   Energy goods and services 1 (Annual)
  •   Personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy (Annual) 1. Consists of gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods and of electricity and gas.

    Table 2.3.4. Price Indexes for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  •     Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •   Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Food (Annual)
  •   Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •   Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •     Gasoline and oil (Annual)
  •     Fuel oil and coal (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Services (Annual)
  •   Housing (Annual)
  •   Household operation (Annual)
  •     Electricity and gas (Annual)
  •     Other household operation (Annual)
  •   Transportation (Annual)
  •   Medical care (Annual)
  •   Recreation (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual) Addenda:
  •   Energy goods and services 1 (Annual)
  •   Personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy (Annual) 1. Consists of gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods and of electricity and gas.

    Table 2.3.5. Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •   Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Food (Annual)
  •   Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •   Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •     Gasoline and oil (Annual)
  •     Fuel oil and coal (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Services (Annual)
  •   Housing (Annual)
  •   Household operation (Annual)
  •     Electricity and gas (Annual)
  •     Other household operation (Annual)
  •   Transportation (Annual)
  •   Medical care (Annual)
  •   Recreation (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual) Addenda:
  •   Energy goods and services 1 (Annual)
  •   Personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy (Annual) 1. Consists of gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods and of electricity and gas.

    Table 2.3.6. Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product, Chained Dollars

    Billions of chained (2000) dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Durable goods (Annual)
  •   Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •   Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Food (Annual)
  •   Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •   Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •     Gasoline and oil (Annual)
  •     Fuel oil and coal (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Services (Annual)
  •   Housing (Annual)
  •   Household operation (Annual)
  •     Electricity and gas (Annual)
  •     Other household operation (Annual)
  •   Transportation (Annual)
  •   Medical care (Annual)
  •   Recreation (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Residual (Annual) Addenda:
  •   Energy goods and services 1 (Annual)
  •   Personal consumption expenditures excluding food and energy (Annual) 1. Consists of gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods and of electricity and gas.
    NOTE. Chained (2000) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2000 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines.

    Table 2.4.3. Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product, Quantity Indexes

    Index numbers, 2000=100
  •        Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Durable goods (Annual)
  •    Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •      New autos (70) (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used autos (71) (Annual)
  •      Other motor vehicles (72) (Annual)
  •      Tires, tubes, accessories, and other parts (73) (Annual)
  •    Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •      Furniture, including mattresses and bedsprings (29) (Annual)
  •      Kitchen and other household appliances (30) (Annual)
  •      China, glassware, tableware, and utensils (31) (Annual)
  •      Video and audio goods, including musical instruments, and computer goods (91) (Annual)
  •        Video and audio goods, including musical instruments (92) (Annual)
  •        Computers, peripherals, and software (93) (Annual)
  •      Other durable house furnishings (32) (Annual)
  •    Other (Annual)
  •      Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (46) (Annual)
  •      Wheel goods, sports and photographic equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (90) (Annual)
  •      Jewelry and watches (18) (Annual)
  •      Books and maps (87) (Annual)
  • Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •    Food (Annual)
  •      Food purchased for off-premise consumption (3) (Annual)
  •      Purchased meals and beverages (4) (Annual)
  •      Food furnished to employees (including military) and food produced and consumed on farms (5+6) (Annual)
  •      Addenda: Food excluding alcoholic beverages(8) (Annual)
  •               Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-premise consumption (9) (Annual)
  •               Other alcoholic beverages (10) (Annual)
  •    Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •      Shoes (12) (Annual)
  •      Women's and children's clothing and accessories except shoes (14) (Annual)
  •      Men's and boys' clothing and accessories except shoes (15+16) (Annual)
  •    Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •      Gasoline and oil (75) (Annual)
  •      Fuel oil and coal (40) (Annual)
  •    Other (Annual)
  •      Tobacco products (7) (Annual)
  •      Toilet articles and preparations (21) (Annual)
  •      Semidurable house furnishings (33) (Annual)
  •      Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products (34) (Annual)
  •      Drug preparations and sundries (45) (Annual)
  •      Nondurable toys and sport supplies (89) (Annual)
  •      Stationery and writing supplies (35) (Annual)
  •      Net foreign remittances (111 less 113)
  •      Magazines, newspapers, and sheet music (88) (Annual)
  •      Flowers, seeds, and potted plants (95) (Annual)
  • Services (Annual)
  •    Housing (Annual)
  •      Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings--space rent (24) (Annual)
  •      Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings--rent (25) (Annual)
  •      Rental value of farm dwellings (26) (Annual)
  •      Other (27) (Annual)
  •    Household operation (Annual)
  •      Electricity (37) (Annual)
  •      Gas (38) (Annual)
  •      Water and other sanitary services (39) (Annual)
  •      Telephone and telegraph (41) (Annual)
  •      Domestic service (42) (Annual)
  •      Other (43) (Annual)
  •    Transportation (Annual)
  •      User-operated transportation (Annual)
  •        Repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, rental, and leasing (74) (Annual)
  •        Other user-operated transportation (76+77) (Annual)
  •      Purchased local transportation (Annual)
  •        Mass transit systems (79) (Annual)
  •        Taxicab (80) (Annual)
  •      Purchased intercity transportation (Annual)
  •        Railway (82) (Annual)
  •        Bus (83) (Annual)
  •        Airline (84) (Annual)
  •        Other (85) (Annual)
  •    Medical care (Annual)
  •      Physicians (47) (Annual)
  •      Dentists (48) (Annual)
  •      Other professional services (49) (Annual)
  •      Hospitals and nursing homes (50) (Annual)
  •      Health insurance (56) (Annual)
  •    Recreation (Annual)
  •      Admissions to specified spectator amusements (96) (Annual)
  •      Other (94+100+101+102+103) (Annual)
  •    Other (Annual)
  •      Personal care (Annual)
  •        Cleaning, storage, and repair of clothing and shoes (17) (Annual)
  •        Barbershops, beauty parlors, and health clubs (22) (Annual)
  •        Other (19) (Annual)
  •      Personal business (Annual)
  •        Brokerage charges and investment counseling (61) (Annual)
  •        Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (62) (Annual)
  •        Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers (63) (Annual)
  •        Expense of handling life insurance and pension plans (64) (Annual)
  •        Legal services (65) (Annual)
  •        Funeral and burial expenses (66) (Annual)
  •        Other (67) (Annual)
  •      Education and research (Annual)
  •        Higher education (105) (Annual)
  •        Nursery, elementary, and secondary schools (106) (Annual)
  •        Other (107) (Annual)
  •      Religious and welfare activities (108) (Annual)
  •      Net foreign travel
  •        Foreign travel by U.S. residents (110) (Annual)
  •        Less: Expenditures in the United States by nonresidents (112) (Annual) Note. The figures in parentheses are the line numbers of the corresponding items in table 2.5.5.

    Table 2.4.4. Price Indexes for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product

    Index numbers, 2000=100
  •        Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Durable goods (Annual)
  •    Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •      New autos (70) (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used autos (71) (Annual)
  •      Other motor vehicles (72) (Annual)
  •      Tires, tubes, accessories, and other parts (73) (Annual)
  •    Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •      Furniture, including mattresses and bedsprings (29) (Annual)
  •      Kitchen and other household appliances (30) (Annual)
  •      China, glassware, tableware, and utensils (31) (Annual)
  •      Video and audio goods, including musical instruments, and computer goods (91) (Annual)
  •        Video and audio goods, including musical instruments (92) (Annual)
  •        Computers, peripherals, and software (93) (Annual)
  •      Other durable house furnishings (32) (Annual)
  •    Other (Annual)
  •      Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (46) (Annual)
  •      Wheel goods, sports and photographic equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (90) (Annual)
  •      Jewelry and watches (18) (Annual)
  •      Books and maps (87) (Annual)
  • Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •    Food (Annual)
  •      Food purchased for off-premise consumption (3) (Annual)
  •      Purchased meals and beverages (4) (Annual)
  •      Food furnished to employees (including military) and food produced and consumed on farms (5+6) (Annual)
  •      Addenda: Food excluding alcoholic beverages(8) (Annual)
  •               Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-premise consumption (9) (Annual)
  •               Other alcoholic beverages (10) (Annual)
  •    Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •      Shoes (12) (Annual)
  •      Women's and children's clothing and accessories except shoes (14) (Annual)
  •      Men's and boys' clothing and accessories except shoes (15+16) (Annual)
  •    Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •      Gasoline and oil (75) (Annual)
  •      Fuel oil and coal (40) (Annual)
  •    Other (Annual)
  •      Tobacco products (7) (Annual)
  •      Toilet articles and preparations (21) (Annual)
  •      Semidurable house furnishings (33) (Annual)
  •      Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products (34) (Annual)
  •      Drug preparations and sundries (45) (Annual)
  •      Nondurable toys and sport supplies (89) (Annual)
  •      Stationery and writing supplies (35) (Annual)
  •      Net foreign remittances (111 less 113)
  •      Magazines, newspapers, and sheet music (88) (Annual)
  •      Flowers, seeds, and potted plants (95) (Annual)
  • Services (Annual)
  •    Housing (Annual)
  •      Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings--space rent (24) (Annual)
  •      Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings--rent (25) (Annual)
  •      Rental value of farm dwellings (26) (Annual)
  •      Other (27) (Annual)
  •    Household operation (Annual)
  •      Electricity (37) (Annual)
  •      Gas (38) (Annual)
  •      Water and other sanitary services (39) (Annual)
  •      Telephone and telegraph (41) (Annual)
  •      Domestic service (42) (Annual)
  •      Other (43) (Annual)
  •    Transportation (Annual)
  •      User-operated transportation (Annual)
  •        Repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, rental, and leasing (74) (Annual)
  •        Other user-operated transportation (76+77) (Annual)
  •      Purchased local transportation (Annual)
  •        Mass transit systems (79) (Annual)
  •        Taxicab (80) (Annual)
  •      Purchased intercity transportation (Annual)
  •        Railway (82) (Annual)
  •        Bus (83) (Annual)
  •        Airline (84) (Annual)
  •        Other (85) (Annual)
  •    Medical care (Annual)
  •      Physicians (47) (Annual)
  •      Dentists (48) (Annual)
  •      Other professional services (49) (Annual)
  •      Hospitals and nursing homes (50) (Annual)
  •      Health insurance (56) (Annual)
  •    Recreation (Annual)
  •      Admissions to specified spectator amusements (96) (Annual)
  •      Other (94+100+101+102+103) (Annual)
  •    Other (Annual)
  •      Personal care (Annual)
  •        Cleaning, storage, and repair of clothing and shoes (17) (Annual)
  •        Barbershops, beauty parlors, and health clubs (22) (Annual)
  •        Other (19) (Annual)
  •      Personal business (Annual)
  •        Brokerage charges and investment counseling (61) (Annual)
  •        Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (62) (Annual)
  •        Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers (63) (Annual)
  •        Expense of handling life insurance and pension plans (64) (Annual)
  •        Legal services (65) (Annual)
  •        Funeral and burial expenses (66) (Annual)
  •        Other (67) (Annual)
  •      Education and research (Annual)
  •        Higher education (105) (Annual)
  •        Nursery, elementary, and secondary schools (106) (Annual)
  •        Other (107) (Annual)
  •      Religious and welfare activities (108) (Annual)
  •      Net foreign travel
  •        Foreign travel by U.S. residents (110) (Annual)
  •        Less: Expenditures in the United States by nonresidents (112) (Annual) Note. The figures in parentheses are the line numbers of the corresponding items in table 2.5.5.

    Table 2.4.5. Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product

    Billions of dollars
  •        Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Durable goods (Annual)
  •    Motor vehicles and parts (Annual)
  •      New autos (70) (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used autos (71) (Annual)
  •      Other motor vehicles (72) (Annual)
  •      Tires, tubes, accessories, and other parts (73) (Annual)
  •    Furniture and household equipment (Annual)
  •      Furniture, including mattresses and bedsprings (29) (Annual)
  •      Kitchen and other household appliances (30) (Annual)
  •      China, glassware, tableware, and utensils (31) (Annual)
  •      Video and audio goods, including musical instruments, and computer goods (91) (Annual)
  •        Video and audio goods, including musical instruments (92) (Annual)
  •        Computers, peripherals, and software (93) (Annual)
  •      Other durable house furnishings (32) (Annual)
  •    Other (Annual)
  •      Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (46) (Annual)
  •      Wheel goods, sports and photographic equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (90) (Annual)
  •      Jewelry and watches (18) (Annual)
  •      Books and maps (87) (Annual)
  • Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •    Food (Annual)
  •      Food purchased for off-premise consumption (3) (Annual)
  •      Purchased meals and beverages (4) (Annual)
  •      Food furnished to employees (including military) and food produced and consumed on farms (5+6) (Annual)
  •      Addenda: Food excluding alcoholic beverages(8) (Annual)
  •               Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-premise consumption (9) (Annual)
  •               Other alcoholic beverages (10) (Annual)
  •    Clothing and shoes (Annual)
  •      Shoes (12) (Annual)
  •      Women's and children's clothing and accessories except shoes (14) (Annual)
  •      Men's and boys' clothing and accessories except shoes (15+16) (Annual)
  •    Gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods (Annual)
  •      Gasoline and oil (75) (Annual)
  •      Fuel oil and coal (40) (Annual)
  •    Other (Annual)
  •      Tobacco products (7) (Annual)
  •      Toilet articles and preparations (21) (Annual)
  •      Semidurable house furnishings (33) (Annual)
  •      Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products (34) (Annual)
  •      Drug preparations and sundries (45) (Annual)
  •      Nondurable toys and sport supplies (89) (Annual)
  •      Stationery and writing supplies (35) (Annual)
  •      Net foreign remittances (111 less 113) (Annual)
  •      Magazines, newspapers, and sheet music (88) (Annual)
  •      Flowers, seeds, and potted plants (95) (Annual)
  • Services (Annual)
  •    Housing (Annual)
  •      Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings--space rent (24) (Annual)
  •      Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings--rent (25) (Annual)
  •      Rental value of farm dwellings (26) (Annual)
  •      Other (27) (Annual)
  •    Household operation (Annual)
  •      Electricity (37) (Annual)
  •      Gas (38) (Annual)
  •      Water and other sanitary services (39) (Annual)
  •      Telephone and telegraph (41) (Annual)
  •      Domestic service (42) (Annual)
  •      Other (43) (Annual)
  •    Transportation (Annual)
  •      User-operated transportation (Annual)
  •        Repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, rental, and leasing (74) (Annual)
  •        Other user-operated transportation (76+77) (Annual)
  •      Purchased local transportation (Annual)
  •        Mass transit systems (79) (Annual)
  •        Taxicab (80) (Annual)
  •      Purchased intercity transportation (Annual)
  •        Railway (82) (Annual)
  •        Bus (83) (Annual)
  •        Airline (84) (Annual)
  •        Other (85) (Annual)
  •    Medical care (Annual)
  •      Physicians (47) (Annual)
  •      Dentists (48) (Annual)
  •      Other professional services (49) (Annual)
  •      Hospitals and nursing homes (50) (Annual)
  •      Health insurance (56) (Annual)
  •    Recreation (Annual)
  •      Admissions to specified spectator amusements (96) (Annual)
  •      Other (94+100+101+102+103) (Annual)
  •    Other (Annual)
  •      Personal care (Annual)
  •        Cleaning, storage, and repair of clothing and shoes (17) (Annual)
  •        Barbershops, beauty parlors, and health clubs (22) (Annual)
  •        Other (19) (Annual)
  •      Personal business (Annual)
  •        Brokerage charges and investment counseling (61) (Annual)
  •        Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (62) (Annual)
  •        Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers (63) (Annual)
  •        Expense of handling life insurance and pension plans (64) (Annual)
  •        Legal services (65) (Annual)
  •        Funeral and burial expenses (66) (Annual)
  •        Other (67) (Annual)
  •      Education and research (Annual)
  •        Higher education (105) (Annual)
  •        Nursery, elementary, and secondary schools (106) (Annual)
  •        Other (107) (Annual)
  •      Religious and welfare activities (108) (Annual)
  •      Net foreign travel (Annual)
  •        Foreign travel by U.S. residents (110) (Annual)
  •        Less: Expenditures in the United States by nonresidents (112) (Annual) Note. The figures in parentheses are the line numbers of the corresponding items in table 2.5.5.

    Table 2.5.3. Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Expenditure, Quantity Indexes

    Index numbers, 2000=100
  •        Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Food and tobacco (Annual)
  •    Food purchased for off-premise consumption (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Purchased meals and beverages (n.d.) 1 (Annual)
  •    Food furnished to employees (including military) (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Food produced and consumed on farms (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Tobacco products (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Addenda: Food excluding alcoholic beverages (n.d.) (Annual)
  •             Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-premise consumption (n.d.) (Annual)
  •             Other alcoholic beverages (n.d.) (Annual)
  • Clothing, accessories, and jewelry (Annual)
  •    Shoes (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Clothing and accessories except shoes 2 (Annual)
  •      Women's and children's (n.d.) (Annual)
  •      Men's and boys' (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Standard clothing issued to military personnel (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Cleaning, storage, and repair of clothing and shoes (s.) (Annual)
  •    Jewelry and watches (d.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) 3 (Annual)
  • Personal care (Annual)
  •    Toilet articles and preparations (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Barbershops, beauty parlors, and health clubs (s.) (Annual)
  • Housing (Annual)
  •    Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings--space rent (s.) 4 (Annual)
  •    Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings--rent (s.) 5 (Annual)
  •    Rental value of farm dwellings (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) 6 (Annual)
  • Household operation (Annual)
  •    Furniture, including mattresses and bedsprings (d.) (Annual)
  •    Kitchen and other household appliances (d.) 7 (Annual)
  •    China, glassware, tableware, and utensils (d.) (Annual)
  •    Other durable house furnishings (d.) 8 (Annual)
  •    Semidurable house furnishings (n.d.) 9 (Annual)
  •    Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products (n.d) (Annual)
  •    Stationery and writing supplies (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Household utilities (Annual)
  •      Electricity (s.) (Annual)
  •      Gas (s.) (Annual)
  •      Water and other sanitary services (s.) (Annual)
  •      Fuel oil and coal (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Telephone and telegraph (s.) (Annual)
  •    Domestic service (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) 10 (Annual)
  • Medical care (Annual)
  •    Drug preparations and sundries (n.d.) \11\ (Annual)
  •    Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (d.) (Annual)
  •    Physicians (s.) (Annual)
  •    Dentists (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other professional services (s.) \12\ (Annual)
  •    Hospitals and nursing homes \13\ (Annual)
  •      Hospitals (Annual)
  •        Nonprofit (s.) (Annual)
  •        Proprietary (s.) (Annual)
  •        Government (s.) (Annual)
  •      Nursing homes (s.) (Annual)
  •    Health insurance (Annual)
  •      Medical care and hospitalization (s.) \14\ (Annual)
  •      Income loss (s.) \15\ (Annual)
  •      Workers' compensation (s.) \16\ (Annual)
  • Personal business (Annual)
  •    Brokerage charges and investment counseling (s.) (Annual)
  •    Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (s.) (Annual)
  •    Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers (s.) (Annual)
  •    Expense of handling life insurance and pension plans (s.) \17\ (Annual)
  •    Legal services (s.) (Annual)
  •    Funeral and burial expenses (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) \18\ (Annual)
  • Transportation (Annual)
  •    User-operated transportation (Annual)
  •      New autos (d.) (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used autos (d.) (Annual)
  •      Other motor vehicles (d.) (Annual)
  •      Tires, tubes, accessories, and other parts (d.) (Annual)
  •      Repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, rental, and leasing (s.) (Annual)
  •      Gasoline and oil (n.d.) (Annual)
  •      Bridge, tunnel, ferry, and road tolls (s.) (Annual)
  •      Insurance (s.) \19\ (Annual)
  •    Purchased local transportation (Annual)
  •      Mass transit systems (s.) (Annual)
  •      Taxicab (s.) (Annual)
  •    Purchased intercity transportation (Annual)
  •      Railway (s.) (Annual)
  •      Bus (s.) (Annual)
  •      Airline (s.) (Annual)
  •      Other (s.) \20\ (Annual)
  • Recreation (Annual)
  •    Books and maps (d.) (Annual)
  •    Magazines, newspapers, and sheet music (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Nondurable toys and sport supplies (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Wheel goods, sports and photographic equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (d.) (Annual)
  •    Video and audio goods, including musical instruments, and computer goods (d.) (Annual)
  •      Video and audio goods, including musical instruments (d.) (Annual)
  •      Computers, peripherals, and software (d.) (Annual)
  •    Radio and television repair (s.) (Annual)
  •    Flowers, seeds, and potted plants (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Admissions to specified spectator amusements (Annual)
  •      Motion picture theaters (s.) (Annual)
  •      Legitimate theaters and opera, and entertainments of nonprofit institutions (except athletics) (s.) (Annual)
  •      Spectator sports (s.) \21\ (Annual)
  •    Clubs and fraternal organizations (s.) \22\ (Annual)
  •    Commercial participant amusements (s.) \23\ (Annual)
  •    Pari-mutuel net receipts (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) \24\ (Annual)
  • Education and research (Annual)
  •    Higher education (s.) \25\ (Annual)
  •    Nursery, elementary, and secondary schools (s.) \26\ (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) \27\ (Annual)
  • Religious and welfare activities (s.) \28\ (Annual)
  • Foreign travel and other, net
  •    Foreign travel by U.S. residents (s.) \29\ (Annual)
  •    Expenditures abroad by U.S. residents (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Less: Expenditures in the United States by nonresidents (s.) \30\ (Annual)
  •    Less: Personal remittances in kind to nonresidents (n.d.) (Annual) 1. Consists of purchases (including tips) of meals and beverages from retail, service, and amusement establishments, hotels, dining and buffet cars, schools, school fraternities, institutions, clubs, and industrial lunchrooms. Includes meals and beverages consumed both on- and off-premise.
    2. Includes luggage.
    3. Consists of watch, clock, and jewelry repairs, costume and dress suit rental, and miscellaneous personal services.
    4. Consists of rent for space and for heating and plumbing facilities, water heaters, lighting fixtures, kitchen cabinets, linoleum, storm windows and doors, window screens, and screen doors, but excludes rent for appliances and furniture and purchases of fuel and electricity.
    5. Consists of space rent (see footnote 4) and rent for appliances, furnishings, and furniture.
    6. Consists of transient hotels, motels, clubs, schools, and other group housing.
    7. Consists of refrigerators and freezers, cooking ranges, dishwashers, laundry equipment, stoves, room air conditioners, sewing machines, vacuum cleaners, and other appliances.
    8. Includes such house furnishings as floor coverings, comforters, quilts, blankets, pillows, picture frames, mirrors, art products, portable lamps, and clocks. Also includes writing equipment and hand, power, and garden tools.
    9. Consists largely of textile house furnishings, including piece goods allocated to house furnishing use. Also includes lamp shades, brooms, and brushes.
    10. Consists of maintenance services for appliances and house furnishings, moving and warehouse expenses, postage and express charges, premiums for fire and theft insurance on personal property less benefits and dividends, and miscellaneous household operation services.
    11. Excludes drug preparations and related products dispensed by physicians, hospitals, and other medical services.
    12. Consists of osteopathic physicians, chiropractors, private duty nurses, chiropodists, podiatrists, and others providing health and allied services, not elsewhere classified.
    13. Consists of (1) current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) of nonprofit hospitals and nursing homes, and (2) payments by patients to proprietary and government hospitals and nursing homes.
    14. Consists of (1) premiums, less benefits and dividends, for health, hospitalization, and accidental death and dismemberment insurance provided by commercial insurance carriers, and (2) administrative expenses (including consumption of fixed capital) of nonprofit and self-insured health plans.
    15. Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for income loss insurance.
    16. Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for privately administered workers' compensation.
    17. Consists of (1) operating expenses of commercial life insurance carriers, (2) administrative expenses of private noninsured pension plans and publicly administered government employee retirement plans, and (3) premiums, less benefits and dividends, of fraternal benefit societies. For commercial life insurance carriers, excludes expenses for accident and health insurance and includes profits of stock companies and services furnished without payment by banks, credit agencies, and investment companies. For pension and retirement plans, excludes services furnished without payment by banks, credit agencies, and investment companies.
    18. Consists of current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) of trade unions and professional associations, employment agency fees, money order fees, spending for classified advertisements, tax return preparation services, and other personal business services.
    19. Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for motor vehicle insurance.
    20. Consists of baggage charges, coastal and inland waterway fares, travel agents' fees, and airport bus fares.
    21. Consists of admissions to professional and amateur athletic events and to racetracks.
    22. Consists of dues and fees excluding insurance premiums.
    23. Consists of billiard parlors; bowling alleys; dancing, riding, shooting, skating, and swimming places; amusement devices and parks; golf courses; sightseeing buses and guides; private flying operations; casino gambling; and other commercial participant amusements.
    24. Consists of net receipts of lotteries and expenditures for purchases of pets and pet care services, cable TV, film processing, photographic studios, sporting and recreation camps, video cassette rentals, and recreational services, not elsewhere classified.
    25. For private institutions, equals current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) less receipts--such as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments--accounted for separately in consumer expenditures, and less expenditures for research and development financed under contracts or grants. For government institutions, equals student payments of tuition.
    26. For private institutions, equals current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) less receipts--such as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments--accounted for separately in consumer expenditures. For government institutions, equals student payments of tuition. Excludes child day care services, which are included in religious and welfare activities.
    27. Consists of (1) fees paid to commercial, business, trade, and correspondence schools and for fixed capital) by research organizations and foundations for education and research. educational services, not elsewhere classified, and (2) current expenditures (including consumption of
    28. For nonprofit institutions, equals current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) of religious, social welfare, foreign relief, and political organizations, museums, libraries, and foundations. The expenditures are net of receipts--such as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments--accounted for separately in consumer expenditures, and excludes relief payments within the United States and expenditures by foundations for education and research. For proprietary and government institutions, equals receipts from users.
    29. Beginning with 1981, includes U.S. students' expenditures abroad; these expenditures were $0.3 billion in 1981. 30. Beginning with 1981, includes nonresidents' student and medical care expenditures in the United States; student expenditures were $2.2 billion and medical expenditures were $0.4 billion in 1981. Note. Consumer durable goods are designated (d.), nondurable goods (n.d.), and services (s.).

    Table 2.5.4. Price Indexes for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Expenditure

    Index numbers, 2000=100
  •        Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Food and tobacco (Annual)
  •    Food purchased for off-premise consumption (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Purchased meals and beverages (n.d.) 1 (Annual)
  •    Food furnished to employees (including military) (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Food produced and consumed on farms (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Tobacco products (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Addenda: Food excluding alcoholic beverages (n.d.) (Annual)
  •             Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-premise consumption (n.d.) (Annual)
  •             Other alcoholic beverages (n.d.) (Annual)
  • Clothing, accessories, and jewelry (Annual)
  •    Shoes (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Clothing and accessories except shoes 2 (Annual)
  •      Women's and children's (n.d.) (Annual)
  •      Men's and boys' (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Standard clothing issued to military personnel (n.d) (Annual)
  •    Cleaning, storage, and repair of clothing and shoes (s.) (Annual)
  •    Jewelry and watches (d.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) 3 (Annual)
  • Personal care (Annual)
  •    Toilet articles and preparations (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Barbershops, beauty parlors, and health clubs (s.) (Annual)
  • Housing (Annual)
  •    Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings--space rent (s.) 4 (Annual)
  •    Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings--rent (s.) 5 (Annual)
  •    Rental value of farm dwellings (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) 6 (Annual)
  • Household operation (Annual)
  •    Furniture, including mattresses and bedsprings (d.) (Annual)
  •    Kitchen and other household appliances (d.) 7 (Annual)
  •    China, glassware, tableware, and utensils (d.) (Annual)
  •    Other durable house furnishings (d.) 8 (Annual)
  •    Semidurable house furnishings (n.d.) 9 (Annual)
  •    Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Stationery and writing supplies (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Household utilities (Annual)
  •      Electricity (s.) (Annual)
  •      Gas (s.) (Annual)
  •      Water and other sanitary services (s.) (Annual)
  •      Fuel oil and coal (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Telephone and telegraph (s.) (Annual)
  •    Domestic service (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) 10 (Annual)
  • Medical care (Annual)
  •    Drug preparations and sundries (n.d.) \11\ (Annual)
  •    Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (d.) (Annual)
  •    Physicians (s.) (Annual)
  •    Dentists (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other professional services (s.) \12\ (Annual)
  •    Hospitals and nursing homes \13\ (Annual)
  •      Hospitals (Annual)
  •        Nonprofit (s.) (Annual)
  •        Proprietary (s.) (Annual)
  •        Government (s.) (Annual)
  •      Nursing homes (s.) (Annual)
  •    Health insurance (Annual)
  •      Medical care and hospitalization (s.) \14\ (Annual)
  •      Income loss (s.) \15\ (Annual)
  •      Workers' compensation (s.) \16\ (Annual)
  • Personal business (Annual)
  •    Brokerage charges and investment counseling (s.) (Annual)
  •    Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (s.) (Annual)
  •    Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers (s.) (Annual)
  •    Expense of handling life insurance and pension plans (s.) \17\ (Annual)
  •    Legal services (s.) (Annual)
  •    Funeral and burial expenses (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) \18\ (Annual)
  • Transportation (Annual)
  •    User-operated transportation (Annual)
  •      New autos (d.) (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used autos (d.) (Annual)
  •      Other motor vehicles (d.) (Annual)
  •      Tires, tubes, accessories, and other parts (d.) (Annual)
  •      Repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, rental, and leasing (s.) (Annual)
  •      Gasoline and oil (n.d.) (Annual)
  •      Bridge, tunnel, ferry, and road tolls (s.) (Annual)
  •      Insurance (s.) \19\ (Annual)
  •    Purchased local transportation (Annual)
  •      Mass transit systems (s.) (Annual)
  •      Taxicab (s.) (Annual)
  •    Purchased intercity transportation (Annual)
  •      Railway (s.) (Annual)
  •      Bus (s.) (Annual)
  •      Airline (s.) (Annual)
  •      Other (s.) \20\ (Annual)
  • Recreation (Annual)
  •    Books and maps (d.) (Annual)
  •    Magazines, newspapers, and sheet music (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Nondurable toys and sport supplies (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Wheel goods, sports and photographic equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (d.) (Annual)
  •    Video and audio goods, including musical instruments, and computer goods (d.) (Annual)
  •      Video and audio goods, including musical instruments (d.) (Annual)
  •      Computers, peripherals, and software (d.) (Annual)
  •    Radio and television repair (s.) (Annual)
  •    Flowers, seeds, and potted plants (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Admissions to specified spectator amusements (Annual)
  •      Motion picture theaters (s.) (Annual)
  •      Legitimate theaters and opera, and entertainments of nonprofit institutions (except athletics) (s.) (Annual)
  •      Spectator sports (s.) \21\ (Annual)
  •    Clubs and fraternal organizations (s.) \22\ (Annual)
  •    Commercial participant amusements (s.) \23\ (Annual)
  •    Pari-mutuel net receipts (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) \24\ (Annual)
  • Education and research (Annual)
  •    Higher education (s.) \25\ (Annual)
  •    Nursery, elementary, and secondary schools (s.) \26\ (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) \27\ (Annual)
  • Religious and welfare activities (s.) \28\ (Annual)
  • Foreign travel and other, net
  •    Foreign travel by U.S. residents (s.) \29\ (Annual)
  •    Expenditures abroad by U.S. residents (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Less: Expenditures in the United States by nonresidents (s.) \30\ (Annual)
  •    Less: Personal remittances in kind to nonresidents (n.d.) (Annual) 1. Consists of purchases (including tips) of meals and beverages from retail, service, and amusement establishments, hotels, dining and buffet cars, schools, school fraternities, institutions, clubs, and industrial lunchrooms. Includes meals and beverages consumed both on- and off-premise.
    2. Includes luggage.
    3. Consists of watch, clock, and jewelry repairs, costume and dress suit rental, and miscellaneous personal services.
    4. Consists of rent for space and for heating and plumbing facilities, water heaters, lighting fixtures, kitchen cabinets, linoleum, storm windows and doors, window screens, and screen doors, but excludes rent for appliances and furniture and purchases of fuel and electricity.
    5. Consists of space rent (see footnote 4) and rent for appliances, furnishings, and furniture.
    6. Consists of transient hotels, motels, clubs, schools, and other group housing.
    7. Consists of refrigerators and freezers, cooking ranges, dishwashers, laundry equipment, stoves, room air conditioners, sewing machines, vacuum cleaners, and other appliances.
    8. Includes such house furnishings as floor coverings, comforters, quilts, blankets, pillows, picture frames, mirrors, art products, portable lamps, and clocks. Also includes writing equipment and hand, power, and garden tools.
    9. Consists largely of textile house furnishings, including piece goods allocated to house furnishing use. Also includes lamp shades, brooms, and brushes.
    10. Consists of maintenance services for appliances and house furnishings, moving and warehouse expenses, postage and express charges, premiums for fire and theft insurance on personal property less benefits and dividends, and miscellaneous household operation services.
    11. Excludes drug preparations and related products dispensed by physicians, hospitals, and other medical services.
    12. Consists of osteopathic physicians, chiropractors, private duty nurses, chiropodists, podiatrists, and others providing health and allied services, not elsewhere classified.
    13. Consists of (1) current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) of nonprofit hospitals and nursing homes, and (2) payments by patients to proprietary and government hospitals and nursing homes.
    14. Consists of (1) premiums, less benefits and dividends, for health, hospitalization, and accidental death and dismemberment insurance provided by commercial insurance carriers, and (2) administrative expenses (including consumption of fixed capital) of nonprofit and self-insured health plans.
    15. Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for income loss insurance.
    16. Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for privately administered workers' compensation.
    17. Consists of (1) operating expenses of commercial life insurance carriers, (2) administrative expenses of private noninsured pension plans and publicly administered government employee retirement plans, and (3) premiums, less benefits and dividends, of fraternal benefit societies. For commercial life insurance carriers, excludes expenses for accident and health insurance and includes profits of stock companies and services furnished without payment by banks, credit agencies, and investment companies. For pension and retirement plans, excludes services furnished without payment by banks, credit agencies, and investment companies.
    18. Consists of current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) of trade unions and professional associations, employment agency fees, money order fees, spending for classified advertisements, tax return preparation services, and other personal business services.
    19. Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for motor vehicle insurance.
    20. Consists of baggage charges, coastal and inland waterway fares, travel agents' fees, and airport bus fares.
    21. Consists of admissions to professional and amateur athletic events and to racetracks.
    22. Consists of dues and fees excluding insurance premiums.
    23. Consists of billiard parlors; bowling alleys; dancing, riding, shooting, skating, and swimming places; amusement devices and parks; golf courses; sightseeing buses and guides; private flying operations; casino gambling; and other commercial participant amusements.
    24. Consists of net receipts of lotteries and expenditures for purchases of pets and pet care services, cable TV, film processing, photographic studios, sporting and recreation camps, video cassette rentals, and recreational services, not elsewhere classified.
    25. For private institutions, equals current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) less receipts--such as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments--accounted for separately in consumer expenditures, and less expenditures for research and development financed under contracts or grants. For government institutions, equals student payments of tuition.
    26. For private institutions, equals current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) less receipts--such as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments--accounted for separately in consumer expenditures. For government institutions, equals student payments of tuition. Excludes child day care services, which are included in religious and welfare activities.
    27. Consists of (1) fees paid to commercial, business, trade, and correspondence schools and for educational services, not elsewhere classified, and (2) current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) by research organizations and foundations for education and research.
    28. For nonprofit institutions, equals current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) of religious, social welfare, foreign relief, and political organizations, museums, libraries, and foundations. The expenditures are net of receipts--such as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments--accounted for separately in consumer expenditures, and excludes relief payments within the United States and expenditures by foundations for education and research. For proprietary and government institutions, equals receipts from users.
    29. Beginning with 1981, includes U.S. students' expenditures abroad; these expenditures were $0.3 billion in 1981.
    30. Beginning with 1981, includes nonresidents' student and medical care expenditures in the United States; student expenditures were $2.2 billion and medical expenditures were $0.4 billion in 1981.
    Note. Consumer durable goods are designated (d.), nondurable goods (n.d.), and services (s.).

    Table 2.5.5. Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Expenditure

    Billions of dollars
  •        Personal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Food and tobacco (Annual)
  •    Food purchased for off-premise consumption (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Purchased meals and beverages (n.d.) 1 (Annual)
  •    Food furnished to employees (including military) (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Food produced and consumed on farms (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Tobacco products (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Addenda: Food excluding alcoholic beverages (n.d.) (Annual)
  •             Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-premise consumption (n.d.) (Annual)
  •             Other alcoholic beverages (n.d.) (Annual)
  • Clothing, accessories, and jewelry (Annual)
  •    Shoes (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Clothing and accessories except shoes 2 (Annual)
  •      Women's and children's (n.d.) (Annual)
  •      Men's and boys' (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Standard clothing issued to military personnel (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Cleaning, storage, and repair of clothing and shoes (s.) (Annual)
  •    Jewelry and watches (d.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) 3 (Annual)
  • Personal care (Annual)
  •    Toilet articles and preparations (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Barbershops, beauty parlors, and health clubs (s.) (Annual)
  • Housing (Annual)
  •    Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings--space rent (s.) 4 (Annual)
  •    Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings--rent (s.) 5 (Annual)
  •    Rental value of farm dwellings (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) 6 (Annual)
  • Household operation (Annual)
  •    Furniture, including mattresses and bedsprings (d.) (Annual)
  •    Kitchen and other household appliances (d.) 7 (Annual)
  •    China, glassware, tableware, and utensils (d.) (Annual)
  •    Other durable house furnishings (d.) 8 (Annual)
  •    Semidurable house furnishings (n.d.) 9 (Annual)
  •    Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products (n.d) (Annual)
  •    Stationery and writing supplies (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Household utilities (Annual)
  •      Electricity (s.) (Annual)
  •      Gas (s.) (Annual)
  •      Water and other sanitary services (s.) (Annual)
  •      Fuel oil and coal (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Telephone and telegraph (s.) (Annual)
  •    Domestic service (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) 10 (Annual)
  • Medical care (Annual)
  •    Drug preparations and sundries (n.d.) \11\ (Annual)
  •    Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (d.) (Annual)
  •    Physicians (s.) (Annual)
  •    Dentists (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other professional services (s.) \12\ (Annual)
  •    Hospitals and nursing homes \13\ (Annual)
  •      Hospitals (Annual)
  •        Nonprofit (s.) (Annual)
  •        Proprietary (s.) (Annual)
  •        Government (s.) (Annual)
  •      Nursing homes (s.) (Annual)
  •    Health insurance (Annual)
  •      Medical care and hospitalization (s.) \14\ (Annual)
  •      Income loss (s.) \15\ (Annual)
  •      Workers' compensation (s.) \16\ (Annual)
  • Personal business (Annual)
  •    Brokerage charges and investment counseling (s.) (Annual)
  •    Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (s.) (Annual)
  •    Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers (s.) (Annual)
  •    Expense of handling life insurance and pension plans (s.) \17\ (Annual)
  •    Legal services (s.) (Annual)
  •    Funeral and burial expenses (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) \18\ (Annual)
  • Transportation (Annual)
  •    User-operated transportation (Annual)
  •      New autos (d.) (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used autos (d.) (Annual)
  •      Other motor vehicles (d.) (Annual)
  •      Tires, tubes, accessories, and other parts (d.) (Annual)
  •      Repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, rental, and leasing (s.) (Annual)
  •      Gasoline and oil (n.d.) (Annual)
  •      Bridge, tunnel, ferry, and road tolls (s.) (Annual)
  •      Insurance (s.) \19\ (Annual)
  •    Purchased local transportation (Annual)
  •      Mass transit systems (s.) (Annual)
  •      Taxicab (s.) (Annual)
  •    Purchased intercity transportation (Annual)
  •      Railway (s.) (Annual)
  •      Bus (s.) (Annual)
  •      Airline (s.) (Annual)
  •      Other (s.) \20\ (Annual)
  • Recreation (Annual)
  •    Books and maps (d.) (Annual)
  •    Magazines, newspapers, and sheet music (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Nondurable toys and sport supplies (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Wheel goods, sports and photographic equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (d.) (Annual)
  •    Video and audio goods, including musical instruments, and computer goods (d.) (Annual)
  •      Video and audio goods, including musical instruments (d.) (Annual)
  •      Computers, peripherals, and software (d.) (Annual)
  •    Radio and television repair (s.) (Annual)
  •    Flowers, seeds, and potted plants (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Admissions to specified spectator amusements (Annual)
  •      Motion picture theaters (s.) (Annual)
  •      Legitimate theaters and opera, and entertainments of nonprofit institutions (except athletics) (s.) (Annual)
  •      Spectator sports (s.) \21\ (Annual)
  •    Clubs and fraternal organizations (s.) \22\ (Annual)
  •    Commercial participant amusements (s.) \23\ (Annual)
  •    Pari-mutuel net receipts (s.) (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) \24\ (Annual)
  • Education and research (Annual)
  •    Higher education (s.) \25\ (Annual)
  •    Nursery, elementary, and secondary schools (s.) \26\ (Annual)
  •    Other (s.) \27\ (Annual)
  • Religious and welfare activities (s.) \28\ (Annual)
  • Foreign travel and other, net (Annual)
  •    Foreign travel by U.S. residents (s.) \29\ (Annual)
  •    Expenditures abroad by U.S. residents (n.d.) (Annual)
  •    Less: Expenditures in the United States by nonresidents (s.) \30\ (Annual)
  •    Less: Personal remittances in kind to nonresidents (n.d.) (Annual) 1. Consists of purchases (including tips) of meals and beverages from retail, service, and amusement establishments, hotels, dining and buffet cars, schools, school fraternities, institutions, clubs, and industrial lunchrooms. Includes meals and beverages consumed both on- and off-premise.
    2. Includes luggage.
    3. Consists of watch, clock, and jewelry repairs, costume and dress suit rental, and miscellaneous personal services.
    4. Consists of rent for space and for heating and plumbing facilities, water heaters, lighting fixtures, kitchen cabinets, linoleum, storm windows and doors, window screens, and screen doors, but excludes rent for appliances and furniture and purchases of fuel and electricity.
    5. Consists of space rent (see footnote 4) and rent for appliances, furnishings, and furniture.
    6. Consists of transient hotels, motels, clubs, schools, and other group housing.
    7. Consists of refrigerators and freezers, cooking ranges, dishwashers, laundry equipment, stoves, room air conditioners, sewing machines, vacuum cleaners, and other appliances.
    8. Includes such house furnishings as floor coverings, comforters, quilts, blankets, pillows, picture frames, mirrors, art products, portable lamps, and clocks. Also includes writing equipment and hand, power, and garden tools.
    9. Consists largely of textile house furnishings, including piece goods allocated to house furnishing use. Also includes lamp shades, brooms, and brushes.
    10. Consists of maintenance services for appliances and house furnishings, moving and warehouse expenses, postage and express charges, premiums for fire and theft insurance on personal property less benefits and dividends, and miscellaneous household operation services.
    11. Excludes drug preparations and related products dispensed by physicians, hospitals, and other medical services.
    12. Consists of osteopathic physicians, chiropractors, private duty nurses, chiropodists, podiatrists, and others providing health and allied services, not elsewhere classified.
    13. Consists of (1) current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) of nonprofit hospitals and nursing homes, and (2) payments by patients to proprietary and government hospitals and nursing homes.
    14. Consists of (1) premiums, less benefits and dividends, for health, hospitalization, and accidental death and dismemberment insurance provided by commercial insurance carriers, and (2) administrative expenses (including consumption of fixed capital) of nonprofit and self-insured health plans.
    15. Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for income loss insurance.
    16. Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for privately administered workers' compensation.
    17. Consists of (1) operating expenses of commercial life insurance carriers, (2) administrative expenses of private noninsured pension plans and publicly administered government employee retirement plans, and (3) premiums, less benefits and dividends, of fraternal benefit societies. For commercial life insurance carriers, excludes expenses for accident and health insurance and includes profits of stock companies and services furnished without payment by banks, credit agencies, and investment companies. For pension and retirement plans, excludes services furnished without payment by banks, credit agencies, and investment companies.
    18. Consists of current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) of trade unions and professional associations, employment agency fees, money order fees, spending for classified advertisements, tax return preparation services, and other personal business services.
    19. Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for motor vehicle insurance.
    20. Consists of baggage charges, coastal and inland waterway fares, travel agents' fees, and airport bus fares.
    21. Consists of admissions to professional and amateur athletic events and to racetracks.
    22. Consists of dues and fees excluding insurance premiums.
    23. Consists of billiard parlors; bowling alleys; dancing, riding, shooting, skating, and swimming places; amusement devices and parks; golf courses; sightseeing buses and guides; private flying operations; casino gambling; and other commercial participant amusements.
    24. Consists of net receipts of lotteries and expenditures for purchases of pets and pet care services, cable TV, film processing, photographic studios, sporting and recreation camps, video cassette rentals, and recreational services, not elsewhere classified.
    25. For private institutions, equals current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) less receipts--such as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments--accounted for separately in consumer expenditures, and less expenditures for research and development financed under contracts or grants. For government institutions, equals student payments of tuition.
    26. For private institutions, equals current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) less receipts--such as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments--accounted for separately in consumer expenditures. For government institutions, equals student payments of tuition. Excludes child day care services, which are included in religious and welfare activities.
    27. Consists of (1) fees paid to commercial, business, trade, and correspondence schools and for fixed capital) by research organizations and foundations for education and research. educational services, not elsewhere classified, and (2) current expenditures (including consumption of
    28. For nonprofit institutions, equals current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) of religious, social welfare, foreign relief, and political organizations, museums, libraries, and foundations. The expenditures are net of receipts--such as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments--accounted for separately in consumer expenditures, and excludes relief payments within the United States and expenditures by foundations for education and research. For proprietary and government institutions, equals receipts from users.
    29. Beginning with 1981, includes U.S. students' expenditures abroad; these expenditures were $0.3 billion in 1981.
    30. Beginning with 1981, includes nonresidents' student and medical care expenditures in the United States; student expenditures were $2.2 billion and medical expenditures were $0.4 billion in 1981.
    Note. Consumer durable goods are designated (d.), nondurable goods (n.d.), and services (s.).

    Table 2.6. Personal Income and Its Disposition, Monthly

    Billions of dollars; months seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  • Personal income
  •    Compensation of employees, received
  •      Wage and salary disbursements
  •        Private industries
  •        Government
  •      Supplements to wages and salaries
  •    Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments
  •      Farm
  •      Nonfarm
  •    Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment
  •    Personal income receipts on assets
  •      Personal interest income
  •      Personal dividend income
  •    Personal current transfer receipts
  •      Government social benefits to persons
  •      Other current transfer receipts, from business (net)
  •    Less: Contributions for government social insurance
  • Less: Personal current taxes
  • Equals: Disposable personal income
  • Less: Personal outlays
  •   Personal consumption expenditures
  •   Personal interest payments \1\
  •   Personal current transfer payments
  • Equals: Personal saving
  •   Personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income Addenda: Disposable personal income:
  •     Total, billions of chained (2000) dollars \2\ Per capita:
  •       Current dollars
  •       Chained (2000) dollars
  •   Population (midperiod, thousands) \3\
  • 1. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households.
    2. Equals disposable personal income deflated by the implicit price deflator for personal consumption expenditures.
    3. Population is the total population of the United States, including the Armed Forces overseas and the institutionalized population. The monthly estimate is the average of the estimates for the first of the month and the first of the following month; the annual estimate is the average of the monthly estimates.

    Table 3.2. Federal Government Current Receipts and Expenditures

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Current receipts (Annual)
  • Current tax receipts (Annual)
  •   Personal current taxes 1 (Annual)
  •   Taxes on production and imports 2 (Annual)
  •     Excise taxes (Annual)
  •     Customs duties (Annual)
  •   Taxes on corporate income (Annual)
  •     Federal Reserve banks (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Taxes from the rest of the world (Annual)
  • Contributions for government social insurance (Annual)
  • Income receipts on assets (Annual)
  •   Interest receipts 3 (Annual)
  •   Rents and royalties 4 (Annual)
  • Current transfer receipts (Annual)
  •   From business (Annual)
  •   From persons (Annual)
  • Current surplus of government enterprises 5 (Annual)
  •     Current expenditures (Annual)
  • Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Current transfer payments (Annual)
  •   Government social benefits (Annual)
  •     To persons (Annual)
  •     To the rest of the world 6 (Annual)
  •   Other current transfer payments (Annual)
  •     Grants-in-aid to state and local governments (Annual)
  •     To the rest of the world (net) 6 (Annual)
  • Interest payments 3 (Annual)
  •   To persons and business 3 (Annual)
  •   To the rest of the world (Annual)
  • Subsidies 5 (Annual)
  • Less: Wage accruals less disbursements (Annual)
  •     Net Federal Government saving (Annual)
  • Social insurance funds (Annual)
  • Other (Annual) Addenda:
  •   Total receipts (Annual)
  •     Current receipts (Annual)
  •     Capital transfer receipts (Annual)
  •   Total expenditures (Annual)
  •     Current expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross government investment (Annual)
  •     Capital transfer payments (Annual)
  •     Net purchases of nonproduced assets (Annual)
  •     Less: Consumption of fixed capital (Annual)
  •   Net lending or net borrowing (-) (Annual) 1. Includes dividends tax for 1933-34 and automobile use tax for 1942-46 as shown in table 3.4.
    2. Includes the capital stock tax for 1933-45 as shown in table 3.5.
    3. Prior to 1960, interest payments to persons and business (line 29) and interest receipts (line 13) are not shown separately, but are included in interest payments (line 28), which is shown net of interest receipts.
    4. Beginning with 1959, includes royalties paid from petroleum production on the Outer Continental Shelf.
    5. Prior to 1959, subsidies (line 31) and the current surplus of government enterprises (line 18) are not shown separately; subsidies are presented net of the current surplus of government enterprises.
    6. Prior to 1960, government social benefits to the rest of the world (line 24) are included in line 27, "other current transfer payments to the rest of the world (net)."

    Table 3.3. State and Local Government Current Receipts and Expenditures

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Current receipts (Annual)
  • Current tax receipts (Annual)
  •   Personal current taxes (Annual)
  •     Income taxes (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Taxes on production and imports (Annual)
  •     Sales taxes (Annual)
  •     Property taxes (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Taxes on corporate income (Annual)
  • Contributions for government social insurance (Annual)
  • Income receipts on assets (Annual)
  •   Interest receipts 1 (Annual)
  •   Dividends (Annual)
  •   Rents and royalties (Annual)
  • Current transfer receipts (Annual)
  •   Federal grants-in-aid (Annual)
  •   From business (net) (Annual)
  •   From persons (Annual)
  • Current surplus of government enterprises (Annual)
  •     Current expenditures (Annual)
  • Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  • Government social benefit payments to persons (Annual)
  • Interest payments 1 (Annual)
  • Subsidies (Annual)
  • Less: Wage accruals less disbursements (Annual)
  •     Net state and local government saving (Annual)
  • Social insurance funds (Annual)
  • Other (Annual) Addenda:
  •   Total receipts (Annual)
  •     Current receipts (Annual)
  •     Capital transfer receipts (Annual)
  •   Total expenditures (Annual)
  •     Current expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross government investment (Annual)
  •     Capital transfer payments (Annual)
  •     Net purchases of nonproduced assets (Annual)
  •     Less: Consumption of fixed capital (Annual)
  •   Net lending or net borrowing (-) (Annual) 1. Prior to 1946, interest receipts (line 13) are not shown separately, but are shown net of interest payments.

    Table 3.4. Personal Current Tax Receipts

    Billions of dollars
  •      Personal current taxes 1 (Annual)
  • Federal (Annual)
  •    Income taxes (Annual)
  •      Withheld (Annual)
  •      Declarations and settlements (Annual)
  •      Less: Refunds (Annual)
  •    Other taxes 2 (Annual)
  • State and local (Annual)
  •    Income taxes (Annual)
  •    Motor vehicle licenses (Annual)
  •    Property taxes (Annual)
  •    Other taxes 3 (Annual) 1. Excludes estate and gift taxes, which are classified in the NIPAs as capital transfers.
    2. Consists of the dividends tax in 1933-34 and of the automobile use tax in 1942-46.
    3. Consists largely of hunting, fishing, and other personal licenses.

    Table 3.5. Taxes on Production and Imports

    Billions of dollars
  •      Taxes on production and imports (Annual)
  • Federal (Annual)
  •    Excise taxes (Annual)
  •      Gasoline (Annual)
  •      Alcoholic beverages (Annual)
  •      Tobacco (Annual)
  •      Diesel fuel (Annual)
  •      Air transport (Annual)
  •      Crude oil windfall profits tax (Annual)
  •      Other 1 (Annual)
  •    Customs duties (Annual)
  •    Other 2 (Annual)
  • State and local (Annual)
  •    Sales taxes (Annual)
  •      State (Annual)
  •        General 3 (Annual)
  •        Gasoline (Annual)
  •        Alcoholic beverages 3 (Annual)
  •        Tobacco 3 (Annual)
  •        Public utilities 4 (Annual)
  •        Insurance receipts 4 (Annual)
  •        Other 4 (Annual)
  •      Local (Annual)
  •        General (Annual)
  •        Public utilities (Annual)
  •        Other (Annual)
  •    Property taxes (Annual)
  •    Motor vehicle licenses (Annual)
  •    Severance taxes 5 (Annual)
  •    Special assessments (Annual)
  •    Other taxes 6 (Annual) 1. Consists largely of taxes on telephone services, tires, coal, nuclear fuel, and trucks, and of refunds other than those for alcoholic beverages and tobacco.
    2. Consists of the capital stock tax in 1933-45.
    3. For 1929-30, included in line 31.
    4. Prior to 1958, included in line 31.
    5. Prior to 1959, included in line 31.
    6. Consists largely of business licenses and of documentary and stamp taxes. See also footnotes 3, 4, and 5.

    Table 3.6. Contributions for Government Social Insurance

    Billions of dollars
  •      Contributions for government social insurance (Annual)
  • Employer contributions (Annual)
  •    Federal social insurance funds (Annual)
  •      Old-age, survivors, disability, and hospital insurance (Annual)
  •        Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance (Annual)
  •        Hospital insurance (Annual)
  •      Unemployment insurance (Annual)
  •        State unemployment insurance (Annual)
  •        Federal unemployment tax (Annual)
  •        Railroad employees unemployment insurance (Annual)
  •        Federal employees unemployment insurance (Annual)
  •      Railroad retirement (Annual)
  •      Pension benefit guaranty (Annual)
  •      Veterans life insurance (Annual)
  •      Workers' compensation (Annual)
  •      Military medical insurance 1 (Annual)
  •    State and local social insurance funds (Annual)
  •      Temporary disability insurance (Annual)
  •      Workers' compensation (Annual)
  • Employee and self-employed contributions (Annual)
  •    Federal social insurance funds (Annual)
  •      Old-age, survivors, disability, and hospital insurance (Annual)
  •        Employees (Annual)
  •          Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance (Annual)
  •          Hospital insurance (Annual)
  •        Self-employed (Annual)
  •      Supplementary medical insurance (Annual)
  •      State unemployment insurance (Annual)
  •      Railroad retirement (Annual)
  •      Veterans life insurance (Annual)
  •    State and local social insurance funds 2 (Annual) 1. Consists of payments for medical services for dependents of active duty military personnel at nonmilitary facilities.
    2. Consists of contributions for temporary disability insurance.

    Table 3.7. Government Current Transfer Receipts

    Billions of dollars
  •      Current transfer receipts (Annual)
  • From business (net) (Annual)
  •    Federal (Annual)
  •      Deposit insurance premiums (Annual)
  •      Other 1 (Annual)
  •    State and local (net) (Annual)
  •      Fines (Annual)
  •      Net insurance settlements (Annual)
  •      Other 2 (Annual)
  • From persons (Annual)
  •    Federal 3 (Annual)
  •    State and local (Annual)
  •      Fines (Annual)
  •      Other 4 (Annual) 1. Consists largely of fines and of fees.
    2. Consists largely of donations. Beginning with 1997, includes settlements of lawsuits with tobacco companies.
    3. Consists of fines, immigration fees, certain penalty taxes, and excise taxes paid by nonprofit institutions serving households.
    4. Consists largely of donations and other miscellaneous transfers, including unclaimed bank deposits.

    Table 3.8. Current Surplus of Government Enterprises

    Billions of dollars
  •        Current surplus of government enterprises (Annual)
  • Federal (Annual)
  •    Postal Service (Annual)
  •    Federal Housing Administration (Annual)
  •    Tennessee Valley Authority (Annual)
  •    Other 1 (Annual)
  • State and local (Annual)
  •    Water and sewerage
  •    Gas and electricity
  •    Toll facilities
  •    Liquor stores
  •    Air and water terminals
  •    Housing and urban renewal
  •    Public transit
  •    Other 2 1. Consists largely of the Bonneville Power Administration, other electric power agencies, and insurance agencies other than those insuring deposits in financial institutions.
    2. Consists of lotteries, gaming administered by Indian tribal governments, off-track betting, local parking, and miscellaneous activities.

    Table 3.9.1 Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Government Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment

    Percent; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures 1 (Annual)
  •       Gross investment 2 (Annual)
  •         Structures (Annual)
  •         Equipment and software (Annual)
  • Federal (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •   National defense (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •   Nondefense (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  • State and local (Annual)
  •   Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Gross investment (Annual)
  •     Structures (Annual)
  •     Equipment and software (Annual) 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software).
    2. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures.

    Table 3.9.3 Real Government Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment, Quantity Indexes

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  •     Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures 1 (Annual)
  •       Gross investment 2 (Annual)
  •         Structures (Annual)
  •         Equipment and software (Annual)
  • Federal (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •   National defense (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •   Nondefense (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  • State and local (Annual)
  •   Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Gross investment (Annual)
  •     Structures (Annual)
  •     Equipment and software (Annual) 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software).
    2. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures.

    Table 3.9.4 Price Indexes for Government Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  •     Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures 1 (Annual)
  •       Gross investment 2 (Annual)
  •         Structures (Annual)
  •         Equipment and software (Annual)
  • Federal (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •   National defense (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •   Nondefense (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  • State and local (Annual)
  •   Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Gross investment (Annual)
  •     Structures (Annual)
  •     Equipment and software (Annual) 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software).
    2. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures.

    Table 3.9.5 Government Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures 1 (Annual)
  •       Gross investment 2 (Annual)
  •         Structures (Annual)
  •         Equipment and software (Annual)
  • Federal (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •   National defense (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •   Nondefense (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  • State and local (Annual)
  •   Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Gross investment (Annual)
  •     Structures (Annual)
  •     Equipment and software (Annual) 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software).
    2. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures.

    Table 3.9.6. Real Government Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment, Chained Dollars

    Billions of chained (2000) dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Government consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  •       Consumption expenditures 1 (Annual)
  •       Gross investment 2 (Annual)
  •         Structures (Annual)
  •         Equipment and software (Annual)
  • Federal (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •   National defense (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  •   Nondefense (Annual)
  •     Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •     Gross investment (Annual)
  •       Structures (Annual)
  •       Equipment and software (Annual)
  • State and local (Annual)
  •   Consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •   Gross investment (Annual)
  •     Structures (Annual)
  •     Equipment and software (Annual)
  • Residual (Annual) 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software).
    2. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures. NOTE. Chained (2000) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2000 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines, excluding the lines in the addenda.

    Table 3.10.5. Government Consumption Expenditures and General Government Gross Output

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •       Government consumption expenditures 1 (Annual)
  •         Gross output of general government (Annual)
  •           Value added (Annual)
  •             Compensation of general government employees (Annual)
  •             Consumption of general government fixed capital 2 (Annual)
  •           Intermediate goods and services purchased 3 (Annual)
  •             Durable goods (Annual)
  •             Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •             Services (Annual)
  •         Less: Own-account investment 4 (Annual)
  •               Sales to other sectors (Annual)
  • Federal consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross output of general government (Annual)
  •         Value added (Annual)
  •           Compensation of general government employees (Annual)
  •           Consumption of general government fixed capital (Annual)
  •         Intermediate goods and services purchased (Annual)
  •           Durable goods (Annual)
  •           Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •           Services (Annual)
  •       Less: Own-account investment (Annual)
  •             Sales to other sectors (Annual)
  •     Defense consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross output of general government (Annual)
  •         Value added (Annual)
  •           Compensation of general government employees (Annual)
  •           Consumption of general government fixed capital (Annual)
  •         Intermediate goods and services purchased (Annual)
  •           Durable goods (Annual)
  •           Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •           Services (Annual)
  •       Less: Own-account investment (Annual)
  •             Sales to other sectors (Annual)
  •     Nondefense consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross output of general government (Annual)
  •         Value added (Annual)
  •           Compensation of general government employees (Annual)
  •           Consumption of general government fixed capital (Annual)
  •         Intermediate goods and services purchased (Annual)
  •           Durable goods (Annual)
  •           Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •             Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change (Annual)
  •             Other nondurable goods (Annual)
  •           Services (Annual)
  •       Less: Own-account investment (Annual)
  •             Sales to other sectors (Annual)
  • State and local consumption expenditures (Annual)
  •       Gross output of general government (Annual)
  •         Value added (Annual)
  •           Compensation of general government employees (Annual)
  •           Consumption of general government fixed capital (Annual)
  •         Intermediate goods and services purchased (Annual)
  •           Durable goods (Annual)
  •           Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •           Services (Annual)
  •       Less: Own-account investment (Annual)
  •             Sales to other sectors (Annual)
  •               Tuition and related educational charges (Annual)
  •               Health and hospital charges (Annual)
  •               Other sales (Annual) 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software).
    2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets.
    3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment.
    4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software in table 3.9.5.

    Table 3.10.6. Real Government Consumption Expenditures and General Government Gross Output, Chained Dollars

    Billions of chained (2000) dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •        Government consumption expenditures 1
  •          Gross output of general government
  •            Value added
  •              Compensation of general government employees
  •              Consumption of general government fixed capital 2
  •            Intermediate goods and services purchased 3
  •              Durable goods
  •              Nondurable goods
  •              Services
  •          Less: Own-account investment4
  •                Sales to other sectors
  • Federal consumption expenditures
  •        Gross output of general government
  •          Value added
  •            Compensation of general government employees
  •            Consumption of general government fixed capital
  •          Intermediate goods and services purchased
  •            Durable goods
  •            Nondurable goods
  •            Services
  •        Less: Own-account investment
  •              Sales to other sectors
  •      Defense consumption expenditures
  •        Gross output of general government
  •          Value added
  •            Compensation of general government employees
  •            Consumption of general government fixed capital
  •          Intermediate goods and services purchased
  •            Durable goods
  •            Nondurable goods
  •            Services
  •        Less: Own-account investment
  •              Sales to other sectors
  •      Nondefense consumption expenditures
  •        Gross output of general government
  •          Value added
  •            Compensation of general government employees
  •            Consumption of general government fixed capital
  •          Intermediate goods and services purchased
  •            Durable goods
  •            Nondurable goods
  •              Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change
  •              Other nondurable goods
  •            Services
  •        Less: Own-account investment
  •              Sales to other sectors
  • State and local consumption expenditures
  •        Gross output of general government
  •          Value added
  •            Compensation of general government employees
  •            Consumption of general government fixed capital
  •          Intermediate goods and services purchased
  •            Durable goods
  •            Nondurable goods
  •            Services
  •        Less: Own-account investment
  •              Sales to other sectors
  •                Tuition and related educational charges
  •                Health and hospital charges
  •                Other sales
  • Residual 1. Government consumption expenditures are services (such as education and national defense) produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software).
    2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets.
    3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment.
    4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software in table 3.9.5.
    NOTE. Chained (2000) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2000 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines.

    Table 3.11.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real National Defense Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment by Type

    Percent; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     National defense consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  • Consumption expenditures 1 (Annual)
  •   Gross output of general government (Annual)
  •     Value added (Annual)
  •       Compensation of general government employees (Annual)
  •         Military (Annual)
  •         Civilian (Annual)
  •       Consumption of general government fixed capital 2 (Annual)
  •     Intermediate goods and services purchased 3 (Annual)
  •       Durable goods (Annual)
  •         Aircraft (Annual)
  •         Missiles (Annual)
  •         Ships (Annual)
  •         Vehicles (Annual)
  •         Electronics (Annual)
  •         Other durable goods (Annual)
  •       Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •         Petroleum products (Annual)
  •         Ammunition (Annual)
  •         Other nondurable goods (Annual)
  •       Services (Annual)
  •         Research and development (Annual)
  •         Installation support (Annual)
  •         Weapons support (Annual)
  •         Personnel support (Annual)
  •         Transportation of material (Annual)
  •         Travel of persons (Annual)
  •   Less: Own-account investment 4 (Annual)
  •         Sales to other sectors (Annual)
  • Gross investment 5 (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •   Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Aircraft (Annual)
  •     Missiles (Annual)
  •     Ships (Annual)
  •     Vehicles (Annual)
  •     Electronics and software (Annual)
  •     Other equipment (Annual) 1. National defense consumption expenditures are defense services produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software).
    2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets.
    3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment.
    4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software.
    5. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures.

    Table 3.11.3. Real National Defense Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment by Type, Quantity Indexes

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  •     National defense consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  • Consumption expenditures 1 (Annual)
  •   Gross output of general government (Annual)
  •     Value added (Annual)
  •       Compensation of general government employees (Annual)
  •         Military (Annual)
  •         Civilian (Annual)
  •       Consumption of general government fixed capital 2 (Annual)
  •     Intermediate goods and services purchased 3 (Annual)
  •       Durable goods (Annual)
  •         Aircraft (Annual)
  •         Missiles (Annual)
  •         Ships (Annual)
  •         Vehicles (Annual)
  •         Electronics (Annual)
  •         Other durable goods (Annual)
  •       Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •         Petroleum products (Annual)
  •         Ammunition (Annual)
  •         Other nondurable goods (Annual)
  •       Services (Annual)
  •         Research and development (Annual)
  •         Installation support (Annual)
  •         Weapons support (Annual)
  •         Personnel support (Annual)
  •         Transportation of material (Annual)
  •         Travel of persons (Annual)
  •   Less: Own-account investment 4 (Annual)
  •         Sales to other sectors (Annual)
  • Gross investment 5 (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •   Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Aircraft (Annual)
  •     Missiles (Annual)
  •     Ships (Annual)
  •     Vehicles (Annual)
  •     Electronics and software (Annual)
  •     Other equipment (Annual) 1. National defense consumption expenditures are defense services produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software). assumes a zero net return on these assets.
    2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation
    3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment.
    4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software.
    5. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures.

    Table 3.11.4. Price Indexes for National Defense Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment by Type

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  •     National defense consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  • Consumption expenditures 1 (Annual)
  •   Gross output of general government (Annual)
  •     Value added (Annual)
  •       Compensation of general government employees (Annual)
  •         Military (Annual)
  •         Civilian (Annual)
  •       Consumption of general government fixed capital 2 (Annual)
  •     Intermediate goods and services purchased 3 (Annual)
  •       Durable goods (Annual)
  •         Aircraft (Annual)
  •         Missiles (Annual)
  •         Ships (Annual)
  •         Vehicles (Annual)
  •         Electronics (Annual)
  •         Other durable goods (Annual)
  •       Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •         Petroleum products (Annual)
  •         Ammunition (Annual)
  •         Other nondurable goods (Annual)
  •       Services (Annual)
  •         Research and development (Annual)
  •         Installation support (Annual)
  •         Weapons support (Annual)
  •         Personnel support (Annual)
  •         Transportation of material (Annual)
  •         Travel of persons (Annual)
  •   Less: Own-account investment 4 (Annual)
  •         Sales to other sectors (Annual)
  • Gross investment 5 (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •   Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Aircraft (Annual)
  •     Missiles (Annual)
  •     Ships (Annual)
  •     Vehicles (Annual)
  •     Electronics and software (Annual)
  •     Other equipment (Annual) 1. National defense consumption expenditures are defense services produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software). assumes a zero net return on these assets.
    2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation
    3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment.
    4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software.
    5. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures.

    Table 3.11.5. National Defense Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment by Type

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     National defense consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  • Consumption expenditures 1 (Annual)
  •   Gross output of general government (Annual)
  •     Value added (Annual)
  •       Compensation of general government employees (Annual)
  •         Military (Annual)
  •         Civilian (Annual)
  •       Consumption of general government fixed capital 2 (Annual)
  •     Intermediate goods and services purchased 3 (Annual)
  •       Durable goods (Annual)
  •         Aircraft (Annual)
  •         Missiles (Annual)
  •         Ships (Annual)
  •         Vehicles (Annual)
  •         Electronics (Annual)
  •         Other durable goods (Annual)
  •       Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •         Petroleum products (Annual)
  •         Ammunition (Annual)
  •         Other nondurable goods (Annual)
  •       Services (Annual)
  •         Research and development (Annual)
  •         Installation support (Annual)
  •         Weapons support (Annual)
  •         Personnel support (Annual)
  •         Transportation of material (Annual)
  •         Travel of persons (Annual)
  •   Less: Own-account investment 4 (Annual)
  •         Sales to other sectors (Annual)
  • Gross investment 5 (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •   Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Aircraft (Annual)
  •     Missiles (Annual)
  •     Ships (Annual)
  •     Vehicles (Annual)
  •     Electronics and software (Annual)
  •     Other equipment (Annual) 1. National defense consumption expenditures are defense services produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software).
    2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets.
    3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment.
    4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software.
    5. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures.

    Table 3.11.6. Real National Defense Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment by Type, Chained Dollars

    Billions of chained (2000) dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     National defense consumption expenditures and gross investment (Annual)
  • Consumption expenditures 1 (Annual)
  •   Gross output of general government (Annual)
  •     Value added (Annual)
  •       Compensation of general government employees (Annual)
  •         Military (Annual)
  •         Civilian (Annual)
  •       Consumption of general government fixed capital 2 (Annual)
  •     Intermediate goods and services purchased 3 (Annual)
  •       Durable goods (Annual)
  •         Aircraft (Annual)
  •         Missiles (Annual)
  •         Ships (Annual)
  •         Vehicles (Annual)
  •         Electronics (Annual)
  •         Other durable goods (Annual)
  •       Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •         Petroleum products (Annual)
  •         Ammunition (Annual)
  •         Other nondurable goods (Annual)
  •       Services (Annual)
  •         Research and development (Annual)
  •         Installation support (Annual)
  •         Weapons support (Annual)
  •         Personnel support (Annual)
  •         Transportation of material (Annual)
  •         Travel of persons (Annual)
  •   Less: Own-account investment 4 (Annual)
  •         Sales to other sectors (Annual)
  • Gross investment 5 (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •   Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Aircraft (Annual)
  •     Missiles (Annual)
  •     Ships (Annual)
  •     Vehicles (Annual)
  •     Electronics and software (Annual)
  •     Other equipment (Annual)
  • Residual (Annual) 1. National defense consumption expenditures are defense services produced by government that are valued at their cost of production. Excludes government sales to other sectors and government own-account investment (construction and software).
    2. Consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation, is included in government gross output as a partial measure of the services of general government fixed assets; the use of depreciation assumes a zero net return on these assets.
    3. Includes general government intermediate inputs for goods and services sold to other sectors and for own-account investment.
    4. Own-account investment is measured in current dollars by compensation of general government employees and related expenditures for goods and services and is classified as investment in structures and in software.
    5. Gross government investment consists of general government and government enterprise expenditures for fixed assets; inventory investment is included in government consumption expenditures.
    NOTE. Chained (2000) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2000 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines.

    Table 3.12. Government Social Benefits

    Billions of dollars
  •        Government social benefits (Annual)
  • To persons (Annual)
  •    Federal (Annual)
  •      Benefits from social insurance funds (Annual)
  •        Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance (Annual)
  •        Hospital and supplementary medical insurance (Annual)
  •        Unemployment insurance (Annual)
  •          State (Annual)
  •          Railroad employees (Annual)
  •          Federal employees (Annual)
  •          Special unemployment benefits (Annual)
  •        Railroad retirement (Annual)
  •        Pension benefit guaranty (Annual)
  •        Veterans life insurance (Annual)
  •        Workers' compensation (Annual)
  •        Military medical insurance 1 (Annual)
  •      Veterans benefits (Annual)
  •        Pension and disability (Annual)
  •        Readjustment (Annual)
  •        Other 2 (Annual)
  •      Food stamp benefits (Annual)
  •      Black lung benefits (Annual)
  •      Supplemental security income (Annual)
  •      Direct relief (Annual)
  •      Earned income credit (Annual)
  •      Other 3 (Annual)
  •    State and local (Annual)
  •      Benefits from social insurance funds (Annual)
  •        Temporary disability insurance (Annual)
  •        Workers' compensation (Annual)
  •      Public assistance (Annual)
  •        Medical care (Annual)
  •          Medicaid (Annual)
  •          Other medical care 4 (Annual)
  •        Family assistance 5 (Annual)
  •        Supplemental security income 6 (Annual)
  •        General assistance (Annual)
  •        Energy assistance (Annual)
  •        Other 7 (Annual)
  •      Education (Annual)
  •      Employment and training (Annual)
  •      Other 8 (Annual)
  • To the rest of the world 9 (Annual) 1. Consists of payments for medical services for dependents of active duty military personnel at nonmilitary facilities.
    2. Consists of mustering out pay, terminal leave pay, and adjusted compensation benefits.
    3. Consists largely of payments to nonprofit institutions, aid to students, and payments for medical services for retired military personnel and their dependents at nonmilitary fac
    4. Consists of general medical assistance and state child health care programs.
    5. Consists of aid to families with dependent children and, beginning with 1996, assistance programs operating under the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996.
    6. Prior to 1974, consists of old-age assistance, aid to the blind, and aid to the permanently and totally disabled, when the programs were partly federally funded.
    7. Consists of expenditures for food under the supplemental program for women, infants, and children; foster care; adoption assistance; and payments to nonprofit welfare institutio
    8. Consists largely of veterans benefits, Alaska dividends, and crime-victim payments.
    9. Consists of Federal Government social benefits to the rest of the world. Prior to 1960, government social benefits to the rest of the world are included in other current transfer payments to the rest of the world (net) in table 3.1.

    Table 3.13. Subsidies

    Billions of dollars
  •      Subsidies (Annual)
  • Federal (Annual)
  •    Agricultural (Annual)
  •    Housing (Annual)
  •    Maritime (Annual)
  •    Air carriers (Annual)
  •    Other 1 (Annual)
  • State and local (Annual) 1. Consists largely of subsidies to railroads and mass transit systems.

    Table 4.2.5. Exports and Imports of Goods and Services by Type of Product

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Exports of goods and services (Annual)
  • Exports of goods 1 (Annual)
  •   Foods, feeds, and beverages (Annual)
  •   Industrial supplies and materials (Annual)
  •     Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Capital goods, except automotive (Annual)
  •     Civilian aircraft, engines, and parts (Annual)
  •     Computers, peripherals, and parts (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts (Annual)
  •   Consumer goods, except automotive (Annual)
  •     Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Exports of services 1 (Annual)
  •   Transfers under U.S. military agency sales contracts (Annual)
  •   Travel (Annual)
  •   Passenger fares (Annual)
  •   Other transportation (Annual)
  •   Royalties and license fees (Annual)
  •   Other private services (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  •     Imports of goods and services (Annual)
  • Imports of goods 1 (Annual)
  •   Foods, feeds, and beverages (Annual)
  •   Industrial supplies and materials, except petroleum and products (Annual)
  •     Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Petroleum and products (Annual)
  •   Capital goods, except automotive (Annual)
  •     Civilian aircraft, engines, and parts (Annual)
  •     Computers, peripherals, and parts (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts (Annual)
  •   Consumer goods, except automotive (Annual)
  •     Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  • Imports of services 1 (Annual)
  •   Direct defense expenditures (Annual)
  •   Travel (Annual)
  •   Passenger fares (Annual)
  •   Other transportation (Annual)
  •   Royalties and license fees (Annual)
  •   Other private services (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual) Addenda:
  •   Exports of durable goods (Annual)
  •   Exports of nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Exports of agricultural goods 2 (Annual)
  •   Exports of nonagricultural goods (Annual)
  •   Imports of durable goods (Annual)
  •   Imports of nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Imports of nonpetroleum goods (Annual) 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, primarily military equipment purchased and sold by the Federal Government, are included in services. Beginning with 1986, repairs and alterations of equipment are reclassified from goods to services.
    2. Includes parts of foods, feeds, and beverages, of nondurable industrial supplies and materials, and of nondurable nonautomotive consumer goods.

    Table 5.3.1. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Private Fixed Investment by Type

    Percent; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Private fixed investment (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •     Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •     Manufacturing (Annual)
  •     Power and communication (Annual)
  •     Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •     Other structures 1 (Annual)
  •   Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Information processing equipment and software (Annual)
  •       Computers and peripheral equipment (Annual)
  •       Software 2 (Annual)
  •       Other 3 (Annual)
  •     Industrial equipment (Annual)
  •     Transportation equipment (Annual)
  •     Other equipment 4 (Annual)
  • Residential (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •     Permanent site (Annual)
  •       Single family (Annual)
  •       Multifamily (Annual)
  •     Other structures 5 (Annual)
  •   Equipment (Annual)
  •   Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  •   Private fixed investment in equipment and software (Annual)
  •   Private fixed investment in new structures 6 (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •     Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists primarily of religious, educational, vocational, lodging, railroads, farm, and amusement and recreational structures, net purchases of used structures, and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.
    2. Excludes software "embedded,'' or bundled, in computers and other equipment. 3. Includes communication equipment, nonmedical instruments, medical equipment and instruments, photocopy and related equipment, and office and accounting equipment.
    4. Consists primarily of furniture and fixtures, agricultural machinery, construction machinery, mining and oilfield machinery, service industry machinery, and electrical equipment not elsewhere classified.
    5. Consists primarily of manufactured homes, improvements, dormitories, net purchases of used structures, and brokers' commissions on the sale of residential structures.
    6. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.

    Table 5.3.3. Real Private Fixed Investment by Type, Quantity Indexes

    Index numbers, 2000=100; Seasonally adjusted
  •     Private fixed investment (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •     Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •     Manufacturing (Annual)
  •     Power and communication (Annual)
  •     Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •     Other structures 1 (Annual)
  •   Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Information processing equipment and software (Annual)
  •       Computers and peripheral equipment 2 (Annual)
  •       Software 3 (Annual)
  •       Other 4 (Annual)
  •     Industrial equipment (Annual)
  •     Transportation equipment (Annual)
  •     Other equipment 5 (Annual)
  • Residential (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •     Permanent site (Annual)
  •       Single family (Annual)
  •       Multifamily (Annual)
  •     Other structures 6 (Annual)
  •   Equipment (Annual)
  •   Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  •   Private fixed investment in equipment and software (Annual)
  •   Private fixed investment in new structures 7 (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •     Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists primarily of religious, educational, vocational, lodging, railroads, farm, and amusement and recreational structures, net purchases of used structures, and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.
    2. Annual chain-type quantity indexes for computers and peripheral equipment: 1959, .00001; 1960, .00009; 1961, .00017; 1962, .00031.
    Quarterly chain-type quantity indexes for computers and peripheral equipment:
    1959:1, .00000; 1959:2, .00000; 1959:3, .00000, 1959:4, .00003;
    1960:1, .00006; 1960:2, .00007; 1960:3, .00010, 1960:4, .00013;
    1961:1, .00013; 1961:2, .00014; 1961:3, .00020, 1961:4, .00020;
    1962:1, .00023; 1962:2, .00023; 1962:3, .00032, 1962:4, .00048;
    3. Excludes software "embedded,'' or bundled, in computers and other equipment.
    4. Includes communication equipment, nonmedical instruments, medical equipment and instruments, photocopy and related equipment, and office and accounting equipment.
    5. Consists primarily of furniture and fixtures, agricultural machinery, construction machinery, mining and oilfield machinery, service industry machinery, and electrical equipment not elsewhere classified.
    6. Consists primarily of manufactured homes, improvements, dormitories, net purchases of used structures, and brokers' commissions on the sale of residential structures.
    7. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.

    Table 5.3.5. Private Fixed Investment by Type

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Private fixed investment (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •     Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •     Manufacturing (Annual)
  •     Power and communication (Annual)
  •     Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •     Other structures 1 (Annual)
  •   Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Information processing equipment and software (Annual)
  •       Computers and peripheral equipment (Annual)
  •       Software 2 (Annual)
  •       Other 3 (Annual)
  •     Industrial equipment (Annual)
  •     Transportation equipment (Annual)
  •     Other equipment 4 (Annual)
  • Residential (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •     Permanent site (Annual)
  •       Single family (Annual)
  •       Multifamily (Annual)
  •     Other structures 5 (Annual)
  •   Equipment (Annual) Addenda:
  •   Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  •   Private fixed investment in equipment and software (Annual)
  •   Private fixed investment in new structures 6 (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •     Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists primarily of religious, educational, vocational, lodging, railroads, farm, and amusement and recreational structures, net purchases of used structures, and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.
    2. Excludes software "embedded,'' or bundled, in computers and other equipment.
    3. Includes communication equipment, nonmedical instruments, medical equipment and instruments, photocopy and related equipment, and office and accounting equipment.
    4. Consists primarily of furniture and fixtures, agricultural machinery, construction machinery, mining and oilfield machinery, service industry machinery, and electrical equipment not elsewhere classified.
    5. Consists primarily of manufactured homes, improvements, dormitories, net purchases

    Table 5.3.6. Real Private Fixed Investment by Type, Chained Dollars

    Billions of chained (2000) dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
  •     Private fixed investment (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •     Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •     Manufacturing (Annual)
  •     Power and communication (Annual)
  •     Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •     Other structures 1 (Annual)
  •   Equipment and software (Annual)
  •     Information processing equipment and software (Annual)
  •       Computers and peripheral equipment 2 (Annual)
  •       Software 3 (Annual)
  •       Other 4 (Annual)
  •     Industrial equipment (Annual)
  •     Transportation equipment (Annual)
  •     Other equipment 5 (Annual)
  • Residential (Annual)
  •   Structures (Annual)
  •     Permanent site (Annual)
  •       Single family (Annual)
  •       Multifamily (Annual)
  •     Other structures 6 (Annual)
  •   Equipment (Annual)
  • Residual Addenda:
  •   Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  •   Private fixed investment in equipment and software (Annual)
  •   Private fixed investment in new structures 7 (Annual)
  •     Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •     Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists primarily of religious, educational, vocational, lodging, railroads, farm, and amusement and recreational structures, net purchases of used structures, and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.
    2. The quantity index for computers can be used to accurately measure the real growth rate of this component. However, because computers exhibit rapid changes in prices relative to other prices in the economy, the chained-dollar estimates should not be used to measure the component's relative importance or its contribution to the growth rate of more aggregate series; accurate estimates of these contributions are shown in table 5.3.2 and real growth rates are shown in table 5.3.1.
    3. Excludes software "embedded,'' or bundled, in computers and other equipment.
    4. Includes communication equipment, nonmedical instruments, medical equipment and instruments, photocopy and related equipment, and office and accounting equipment.
    5. Consists primarily of furniture and fixtures, agricultural machinery, construction machinery, mining and oilfield machinery, service industry machinery, and electrical equipment not elsewhere classified.
    6. Consists primarily of manufactured homes, improvements, dormitories, net purchases of used structures, and brokers' commissions on the sale of residential structures.
    7. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.
    NOTE. Chained (2000) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2000 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines.

    Table 5.4.1A. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Private Fixed Investment in Structures by Type

    Percent: data from 1930 To 1997
  •      Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •    Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •      Commercial, including office (Annual)
  •        Office, including medical buildings 1 (Annual)
  •        Commercial 2 (Annual)
  •      Hospitals and special care (Annual)
  •    Manufacturing (Annual)
  •    Power and communication (Annual)
  •      Power (Annual)
  •        Electric (Annual)
  •        Other power (Annual)
  •      Communication (Annual)
  •    Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •      Petroleum and natural gas (Annual)
  •      Mining (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Religious (Annual)
  •      Educational (Annual)
  •      Other buildings 3 (Annual)
  •      Railroads (Annual)
  •      Farm (Annual)
  •      Other 4 (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures (Annual)
  • Residential (Annual)
  •    Permanent site (Annual)
  •      Single-family structures (Annual)
  •      Multifamily structures (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Manufactured homes (Annual)
  •      Dormitories (Annual)
  •      Improvements (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures (Annual) Addenda:
  •    Private fixed investment in new structures 5 (Annual)
  •      Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •      Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists of office buildings, except those constructed at manufacturing sites and those constructed by power utilities for their own use. Also includes medical buildings; in table 5.4.1B, these buildings are included in health care.
    2. Consists of stores, restaurants, garages, service stations, warehouses, beauty and trade schools, mobile structures, and other buildings used for commercial purposes. Also includes financial buidings of two stories or less. In table 5.4.1B, financial buildings of two stories or less are included in office; bus or truck garages are included in transportation; and beauty and trade schools are included in educational and vocational structures.
    3. Consists of hotels and motels, buildings used primarily for social and recreational activities, and buildings not elsewhere classified, such as passenger terminals, greenhouses, and animal hospitals.
    4. Consists primarily of streets, dams and reservoirs, sewer and water facilities, parks, and airfields.
    5. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.

    Table 5.4.1B. Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Private Fixed Investment in Structures by Type

    Percent: data from 1998
  •      Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •    Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •      Office 1 (Annual)
  •      Health care (Annual)
  •        Hospitals and special care (Annual)
  •          Hospitals (Annual)
  •          Special care (Annual)
  •        Medical buildings (Annual)
  •      Multimerchandise shopping (Annual)
  •      Food and beverage establishments (Annual)
  •      Warehouses (Annual)
  •      Other commercial 2 (Annual)
  •    Manufacturing (Annual)
  •    Power and communication (Annual)
  •      Power (Annual)
  •        Electric (Annual)
  •        Other power (Annual)
  •      Communication (Annual)
  •    Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •      Petroleum and natural gas (Annual)
  •      Mining (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Religious (Annual)
  •      Educational and vocational (Annual)
  •      Lodging (Annual)
  •      Amusement and recreation (Annual)
  •      Transportation (Annual)
  •        Air (Annual)
  •        Land 3 (Annual)
  •      Farm (Annual)
  •      Other 4 (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures
  • Residential (Annual)
  •    Permanent site (Annual)
  •      Single-family structures (Annual)
  •      Multifamily structures (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Manufactured homes (Annual)
  •      Dormitories (Annual)
  •      Improvements (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures Addenda:
  •    Private fixed investment in new structures 5 (Annual)
  •      Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •      Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists of office buildings, except those constructed at manufacturing sites and those constructed by power utilities for their own use. Includes all financial buildings. Medical buildings are included in health care.
    2. Includes buildings and structures used by the retail, wholesale and selected service industries. Consists of auto dealerships, garages, service stations, drug stores, restaurants, mobile structures, and other structures used for commercial purposes. Bus or truck garages are included in transportation.
    3. Consists primarily of railroads.
    4. Includes water supply, sewage and waste disposal, public safety, highway and street, and conservation and development.
    5. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.

    Table 5.4.3A. Real Private Fixed Investment in Structures by Type, Quantity Indexes

    Index numbers, 2000=100: data from 1929 To 1997
  •      Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •    Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •      Commercial, including office (Annual)
  •        Office, including medical buildings 1 (Annual)
  •        Commercial 2 (Annual)
  •      Hospitals and special care (Annual)
  •    Manufacturing (Annual)
  •    Power and communication (Annual)
  •      Power (Annual)
  •        Electric (Annual)
  •        Other power (Annual)
  •      Communication (Annual)
  •    Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •      Petroleum and natural gas (Annual)
  •      Mining (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Religious (Annual)
  •      Educational (Annual)
  •      Other buildings 3 (Annual)
  •      Railroads (Annual)
  •      Farm (Annual)
  •      Other 4 (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures (Annual)
  • Residential (Annual)
  •    Permanent site (Annual)
  •      Single-family structures (Annual)
  •      Multifamily structures (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Manufactured homes (Annual)
  •      Dormitories (Annual)
  •      Improvements (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures (Annual) Addenda:
  •    Private fixed investment in new structures 5 (Annual)
  •      Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •      Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists of office buildings, except those constructed at manufacturing sites and those constructed by power utilities for their own use. Also includes medical buildings; in table 5.4.3B, these buildings are included in health care.
    2. Consists of stores, restaurants, garages, service stations, warehouses, beauty and trade schools, mobile structures, and other buildings used for commercial purposes. Also includes financial buidings of two stories or less. In table 5.4.3B, financial buildings of two stories or less are included in office; bus or truck garages are included in transportation; and beauty and trade schools are included in educational and vocational structures.
    3. Consists of hotels and motels, buildings used primarily for social and recreational activities, and buildings not elsewhere classified, such as passenger terminals, greenhouses, and animal hospitals.
    4. Consists primarily of streets, dams and reservoirs, sewer and water facilities, parks, and airfields.
    5. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.

    Table 5.4.3B. Real Private Fixed Investment in Structures by Type, Quantity Indexes

    Index numbers, 2000=100: data from 1997
  •      Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •    Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •      Office 1 (Annual)
  •      Health care (Annual)
  •        Hospitals and special care (Annual)
  •          Hospitals (Annual)
  •          Special care (Annual)
  •        Medical buildings (Annual)
  •      Multimerchandise shopping (Annual)
  •      Food and beverage establishments (Annual)
  •      Warehouses (Annual)
  •      Other commercial 2 (Annual)
  •    Manufacturing (Annual)
  •    Power and communication (Annual)
  •      Power (Annual)
  •        Electric (Annual)
  •        Other power (Annual)
  •      Communication (Annual)
  •    Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •      Petroleum and natural gas (Annual)
  •      Mining (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Religious (Annual)
  •      Educational and vocational (Annual)
  •      Lodging (Annual)
  •      Amusement and recreation (Annual)
  •      Transportation (Annual)
  •        Air (Annual)
  •        Land 3 (Annual)
  •      Farm (Annual)
  •      Other 4 (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures
  • Residential (Annual)
  •    Permanent site (Annual)
  •      Single-family structures (Annual)
  •      Multifamily structures (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Manufactured homes (Annual)
  •      Dormitories (Annual)
  •      Improvements (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures Addenda:
  •    Private fixed investment in new structures 5 (Annual)
  •      Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •      Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists of office buildings, except those constructed at manufacturing sites and those constructed by power utilities for their own use. Includes all financial buildings. Medical buildings are included in health care.
    2. Includes buildings and structures used by the retail, wholesale and selected service industries. Consists of auto dealerships, garages, service stations, drug stores, restaurants, mobile structures, and other structures used for commercial purposes. Bus or truck garages are included in transportation.
    3. Consists primarily of railroads.
    4. Includes water supply, sewage and waste disposal, public safety, highway and street, and conservation and development.
    5. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.

    Table 5.4.4A. Price Indexes for Private Fixed Investment in Structures by Type

    Index numbers, 2000=100: data from 1929 To 1997
  •      Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •    Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •      Commercial, including office (Annual)
  •        Office, including medical buildings 1 (Annual)
  •        Commercial 2 (Annual)
  •      Hospitals and special care (Annual)
  •    Manufacturing (Annual)
  •    Power and communication (Annual)
  •      Power (Annual)
  •        Electric (Annual)
  •        Other power (Annual)
  •      Communication (Annual)
  •    Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •      Petroleum and natural gas (Annual)
  •      Mining (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Religious (Annual)
  •      Educational (Annual)
  •      Other buildings 3 (Annual)
  •      Railroads (Annual)
  •      Farm (Annual)
  •      Other 4 (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures
  • Residential (Annual)
  •    Permanent site (Annual)
  •      Single-family structures (Annual)
  •      Multifamily structures (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Manufactured homes (Annual)
  •      Dormitories (Annual)
  •      Improvements (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures
  •    Private fixed investment in new structures 5 (Annual)
  •      Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •      Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists of office buildings, except those constructed at manufacturing sites and those constructed by power utilities for their own use. Also includes medical buildings; in table 5.4.4B, these buildings are included in health care.
    2. Consists of stores, restaurants, garages, service stations, warehouses, beauty and trade schools, mobile structures, and other buildings used for commercial purposes. Also includes financial buidings of two stories or less. In table 5.4.4B, financial buildings of two stories or less are included in office; bus or truck garages are included in transportation; and beauty and trade schools are included in educational and vocational structures.
    3. Consists of hotels and motels, buildings used primarily for social and recreational activities, and buildings not elsewhere classified, such as passenger terminals, greenhouses, and animal hospitals.
    4. Consists primarily of streets, dams and reservoirs, sewer and water facilities, parks, and airfields.
    5. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.

    Table 5.4.4B. Price Indexes for Private Fixed Investment in Structures by Type

    Index numbers, 2000=100: data from 1997
  •      Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •    Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •      Office 1 (Annual)
  •      Health care (Annual)
  •        Hospitals and special care (Annual)
  •          Hospitals (Annual)
  •          Special care (Annual)
  •        Medical buildings (Annual)
  •      Multimerchandise shopping (Annual)
  •      Food and beverage establishments (Annual)
  •      Warehouses (Annual)
  •      Other commercial 2 (Annual)
  •    Manufacturing (Annual)
  •    Power and communication (Annual)
  •      Power (Annual)
  •        Electric (Annual)
  •        Other power (Annual)
  •      Communication (Annual)
  •    Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •      Petroleum and natural gas (Annual)
  •      Mining (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Religious (Annual)
  •      Educational and vocational (Annual)
  •      Lodging (Annual)
  •      Amusement and recreation (Annual)
  •      Transportation (Annual)
  •        Air (Annual)
  •        Land 3 (Annual)
  •      Farm (Annual)
  •      Other 4 (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures
  • Residential (Annual)
  •    Permanent site (Annual)
  •      Single-family structures (Annual)
  •      Multifamily structures (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Manufactured homes (Annual)
  •      Dormitories (Annual)
  •      Improvements (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures Addenda:
  •    Private fixed investment in new structures 5 (Annual)
  •      Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •      Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists of office buildings, except those constructed at manufacturing sites and those constructed by power utilities for their own use. Includes all financial buildings. Medical buildings are included in health care.
    2. Includes buildings and structures used by the retail, wholesale and selected service industries. Consists of auto dealerships, garages, service stations, drug stores, restaurants, mobile structures, and other structures used for commercial purposes. Bus or truck garages are included in transportation.
    3. Consists primarily of railroads.
    4. Includes water supply, sewage and waste disposal, public safety, highway and street, and conservation and development.
    5. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.

    Table 5.4.5A. Private Fixed Investment in Structures by Type

    Billions of dollars: data from 1929 To 1997
  •      Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •    Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •      Commercial, including office (Annual)
  •        Office, including medical buildings 1 (Annual)
  •        Commercial 2 (Annual)
  •      Hospitals and special care (Annual)
  •    Manufacturing (Annual)
  •    Power and communication (Annual)
  •      Power (Annual)
  •        Electric (Annual)
  •        Other power (Annual)
  •      Communication (Annual)
  •    Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •      Petroleum and natural gas (Annual)
  •      Mining (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Religious (Annual)
  •      Educational (Annual)
  •      Other buildings 3 (Annual)
  •      Railroads (Annual)
  •      Farm (Annual)
  •      Other 4 (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures (Annual)
  • Residential (Annual)
  •    Permanent site (Annual)
  •      Single-family structures (Annual)
  •      Multifamily structures (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Manufactured homes (Annual)
  •      Dormitories (Annual)
  •      Improvements (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures (Annual) Addenda:
  •    Private fixed investment in new structures 5 (Annual)
  •      Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •      Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists of office buildings, except those constructed at manufacturing sites and those constructed by power utilities for their own use. Also includes medical buildings; in table 5.4.5B, these buildings are included in health care.
    2. Consists of stores, restaurants, garages, service stations, warehouses, beauty and trade schools, mobile structures, and other buildings used for commercial purposes. Also includes financial buidings of two stories or less. In table 5.4.5B, financial buildings of two stories or less are included in office; bus or truck garages are included in transportation; and beauty and trade schools are included in educational and vocational structures.
    3. Consists of hotels and motels, buildings used primarily for social and recreational activities, and buildings not elsewhere classified, such as passenger terminals, greenhouses, and animal hospitals.
    4. Consists primarily of streets, dams and reservoirs, sewer and water facilities, parks, and airfields.
    5. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.

    Table 5.4.5B. Private Fixed Investment in Structures by Type

    Billions of dollars: data from 1997
  •      Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •    Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •      Office 1 (Annual)
  •      Health care (Annual)
  •        Hospitals and special care (Annual)
  •          Hospitals (Annual)
  •          Special care (Annual)
  •        Medical buildings (Annual)
  •      Multimerchandise shopping (Annual)
  •      Food and beverage establishments (Annual)
  •      Warehouses (Annual)
  •      Other commercial 2 (Annual)
  •    Manufacturing (Annual)
  •    Power and communication (Annual)
  •      Power (Annual)
  •        Electric (Annual)
  •        Other power (Annual)
  •      Communication (Annual)
  •    Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •      Petroleum and natural gas (Annual)
  •      Mining (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Religious (Annual)
  •      Educational and vocational (Annual)
  •      Lodging (Annual)
  •      Amusement and recreation (Annual)
  •      Transportation (Annual)
  •        Air (Annual)
  •        Land 3 (Annual)
  •      Farm (Annual)
  •      Other 4 (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures (Annual)
  • Residential (Annual)
  •    Permanent site (Annual)
  •      Single-family structures (Annual)
  •      Multifamily structures (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Manufactured homes (Annual)
  •      Dormitories (Annual)
  •      Improvements (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures (Annual) Addenda:
  •    Private fixed investment in new structures 5 (Annual)
  •      Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •      Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists of office buildings, except those constructed at manufacturing sites and those constructed by power utilities for their own use. Includes all financial buildings. Medical buildings are included in health care.
    2. Includes buildings and structures used by the retail, wholesale and selected service industries. Consists of auto dealerships, garages, service stations, drug stores, restaurants, mobile structures, and other structures used for commercial purposes. Bus or truck garages are included in transportation.
    3. Consists primarily of railroads.
    4. Includes water supply, sewage and waste disposal, public safety, highway and street, and conservation and development.
    5. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.

    Table 5.4.6B. Real Private Fixed Investment in Structures by Type, Chained Dollars

    Billions of chained (2000) dollars: data from 1997
  •      Private fixed investment in structures (Annual)
  • Nonresidential (Annual)
  •    Commercial and health care (Annual)
  •      Office 1 (Annual)
  •      Health care (Annual)
  •        Hospitals and special care (Annual)
  •          Hospitals (Annual)
  •          Special care (Annual)
  •        Medical buildings (Annual)
  •      Multimerchandise shopping (Annual)
  •      Food and beverage establishments (Annual)
  •      Warehouses (Annual)
  •      Other commercial 2 (Annual)
  •    Manufacturing (Annual)
  •    Power and communication (Annual)
  •      Power (Annual)
  •        Electric (Annual)
  •        Other power (Annual)
  •      Communication (Annual)
  •    Mining exploration, shafts, and wells (Annual)
  •      Petroleum and natural gas (Annual)
  •      Mining (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Religious (Annual)
  •      Educational and vocational (Annual)
  •      Lodging (Annual)
  •      Amusement and recreation (Annual)
  •      Transportation (Annual)
  •        Air (Annual)
  •        Land 3 (Annual)
  •      Farm (Annual)
  •      Other 4 (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures (Annual)
  • Residential (Annual)
  •    Permanent site (Annual)
  •      Single-family structures (Annual)
  •      Multifamily structures (Annual)
  •    Other structures (Annual)
  •      Manufactured homes (Annual)
  •      Dormitories (Annual)
  •      Improvements (Annual)
  •      Brokers' commissions on sale of structures (Annual)
  •      Net purchases of used structures (Annual)
  • Residual (Annual) Addenda:
  •    Private fixed investment in new structures 5 (Annual)
  •      Nonresidential structures (Annual)
  •      Residential structures (Annual) 1. Consists of office buildings, except those constructed at manufacturing sites and those constructed by power utilities for their own use. Includes all financial buildings. Medical buildings are included in health care.
    2. Includes buildings and structures used by the retail, wholesale and selected service industries. Consists of auto dealerships, garages, service stations, drug stores, restaurants, mobile structures, and other structures used for commercial purposes. Bus or truck garages are included in transportation.
    3. Consists primarily of railroads.
    4. Includes water supply, sewage and waste disposal, public safety, highway and street, and conservation and development.
    5. Excludes net purchases of used structures and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.
    NOTE. Chained (2000) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2000 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines.

    Table 5.5.5. Private Fixed Investment in Equipment and Software by Type

    Billions of dollars
  •        Private fixed investment in equipment and software (Annual)
  • Nonresidential equipment and software (Annual)
  •    Information processing equipment and software (Annual)
  •      Computers, software, and communication (Annual)
  •        Computers and peripheral equipment (Annual)
  •        Software 1 (Annual)
  •        Communication equipment 2 (Annual)
  •      Medical equipment and instruments (Annual)
  •      Nonmedical instruments (Annual)
  •      Photocopy and related equipment (Annual)
  •      Office and accounting equipment (Annual)
  •    Industrial equipment (Annual)
  •      Fabricated metal products (Annual)
  •      Engines and turbines (Annual)
  •      Metalworking machinery (Annual)
  •      Special industry machinery, n.e.c. (Annual)
  •      General industrial, including materials handling, equipment (Annual)
  •      Electrical transmission, distribution, and industrial apparatus (Annual)
  •    Transportation equipment (Annual)
  •      Trucks, buses, and truck trailers (Annual)
  •        Light trucks (including utility vehicles) (Annual)
  •        Other trucks, buses, and truck trailers (Annual)
  •      Autos (Annual)
  •      Aircraft (Annual)
  •      Ships and boats (Annual)
  •      Railroad equipment (Annual)
  •    Other equipment (Annual)
  •      Furniture and fixtures (Annual)
  •      Agricultural machinery (Annual)
  •      Construction machinery (Annual)
  •      Mining and oilfield machinery (Annual)
  •      Service industry machinery (Annual)
  •      Electrical equipment, n.e.c. (Annual)
  •      Other (Annual)
  •    Less: Sale of equipment scrap, excluding autos (Annual)
  • Residential equipment (Annual) Addenda:
  •    Private fixed investment in equipment and software (Annual)
  •    Less: Dealers' margin on used equipment (Annual)
  •          Net purchases of used equipment from government (Annual)
  •    Plus: Net sales of used equipment (Annual)
  •          Net exports of used equipment (Annual)
  •          Sale of equipment scrap (Annual)
  •    Equals: Private fixed investment in new equipment and software (Annual) 1. Excludes software "embedded,'' or bundled, in computers and other equipment. n.e.c. Not elsewhere classified.
    2. For 1929-45, includes electrical transmission, distribution, and industrial apparatus (line 18) and electrical equipment, n.e.c. (line 33).

    Table 5.6.5A. Change in Private Inventories by Industry

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates: data from 1947 To 1997
  •     Change in private inventories (Annual)
  • Farm (Annual)
  • Nonfarm (Annual)
  •     Change in book value 1 (Annual)
  •     Inventory valuation adjustment 2 (Annual)
  •   Manufacturing (Annual)
  •     Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Wholesale trade (Annual)
  •     Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •       Merchant wholesalers (Annual)
  •         Durable goods (Annual)
  •         Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •       Nonmerchant wholesalers (Annual)
  •         Durable goods (Annual)
  •         Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Retail trade (Annual)
  •     Durable goods (Annual)
  •       Motor vehicle dealers 3 (Annual)
  •       Other 3 (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  •     Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods (Annual) 1. Beginning with 1982, this series is derived from the Census Bureau series ``current cost inventories.'' For earlier periods, it is derived from the Census Bureau ``book value inventories'' series. The series differ in the treatment of inventories reported on a last-in, first-out (LIFO) basis: The series prior to 1982 is a mix of LIFO and non-LIFO inventories; the series beginning with 1982 is entirely on a non-LIFO basis.
    2. Beginning with 1973, the inventory valuation adjustment (IVA) shown in this table differs from the IVA that adjusts business incomes. The IVA in this table reflects the mix of methods (first-in, first-out; last-in, first-out; etc.) underlying inventories derived primarily from Census Bureau statistics (see footnote 1). This mix differs from that underlying business income derived primarily from Internal Revenue Service statistics. Prior to 1973, the two IVA's are the same because information required for separate estimates is not available.
    3. Prior to 1981, inventories of auto and home supply stores are included in motor vehicle dealers. Beginning with 1981, these inventories are included in ``other durable goods.''
    Note. Estimates for nonfarm industries other than manufacturing and trade for 1986 and earlier periods are based on the 1972 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC). Manufacturing estimates for 1981 and earlier periods and trade estimates for 1966 and earlier periods are based on the 1972 SIC; later estimates for these industries are based on the 1987 SIC. The resulting discontinuities are small.

    Table 5.6.5B. Change in Private Inventories by Industry

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates: data from 1997
  •     Change in private inventories (Annual)
  • Farm (Annual)
  • Mining, utilities, and construction (Annual)
  • Manufacturing (Annual)
  •   Durable goods industries (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods industries (Annual)
  • Wholesale trade (Annual)
  •   Durable goods industries (Annual)
  •   Nondurable goods industries (Annual)
  • Retail trade (Annual)
  •   Motor vehicle and parts dealers (Annual)
  •   Food and beverage stores (Annual)
  •   General merchandise stores (Annual)
  •   Other retail stores (Annual)
  • Other industries (Annual) Addenda:
  •   Change in private inventories (Annual)
  •     Durable goods industries (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods industries (Annual)
  •   Nonfarm industries (Annual)
  •     Nonfarm change in book value 1 (Annual)
  •     Nonfarm inventory valuation adjustment 2 (Annual)
  •   Wholesale trade (Annual)
  •     Merchant wholesale trade (Annual)
  •       Durable goods industries (Annual)
  •       Nondurable goods industries (Annual)
  •     Nonmerchant wholesale trade (Annual) 1. This series is derived from the Census Bureau series ``current cost inventories.''
    2. The inventory valuation adjustment (IVA) shown in this table differs from the IVA that adjusts business incomes. The IVA in this table reflects the mix of methods (such as first-in, first-out and last-in, first-out) underlying inventories derived primarily from Census Bureau statistics (see footnote 1). This mix differs from that underlying business income derived primarily from Internal Revenue Service statistics.
    Note. Estimates in this table are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).

    Table 5.6.6A. Real Change in Private Inventories by Industry, Chained Dollars

    Billions of chained (2000) dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates: data from 1947 to 1997
  •     Change in private inventories (Annual)
  • Farm 1 (Annual)
  • Nonfarm (Annual)
  •   Manufacturing (Annual)
  •     Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Wholesale trade (Annual)
  •     Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •       Merchant wholesalers (Annual)
  •         Durable goods (Annual)
  •         Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •       Nonmerchant wholesalers (Annual)
  •         Durable goods (Annual)
  •         Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Retail trade (Annual)
  •     Durable goods (Annual)
  •       Motor vehicle dealers 2 (Annual)
  •       Other 2 (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •   Other (Annual)
  •     Durable goods (Annual)
  •     Nondurable goods (Annual)
  • Residual 1. Beginning with 1990, farm inventories includes materials and supplies.
    2. Prior to 1981, inventories of auto and home supply stores are included in motor vehicle dealers. Beginning with 1981, these inventories are included in other durable goods."
    Note. Estimates for nonfarm industries other than manufacturing and trade for 1986 and earlier periods are based on the 1972 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC). Manufacturing estimates for 1981 and earlier periods and trade estimates for for 1966 and earlier periods are based on the 1972 SIC; later estimates for for these industries are based on the 1987 SIC. The resulting discontinuities are small.
    NOTE. Chained (2000) dollar series for real change in private inventories are calculated as the period-to-period change in chained-dollar end-of-period inventories. Quarterly changes in end-of-period inventories are stated at annual rates. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines.

    Table 5.7.5A. Private Inventories and Domestic Final Sales of Business by Industry

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted quarterly totals: data from 1947 To 1997
  •     Private inventories 1
  • Farm 2
  • Nonfarm
  •     Durable goods 3
  •     Nondurable goods 3
  •   Manufacturing
  •     Durable goods
  •     Nondurable goods
  •   Wholesale trade
  •     Durable goods
  •     Nondurable goods
  •       Merchant wholesalers
  •         Durable goods
  •         Nondurable goods
  •       Nonmerchant wholesalers
  •         Durable goods
  •         Nondurable goods
  •   Retail trade
  •     Durable goods
  •       Motor vehicle dealers 4
  •       Other 4
  •     Nondurable goods
  •   Other
  •     Durable goods
  •     Nondurable goods
  •      Final sales of domestic business 5
  •      Final sales of goods and structures of domestic business 5
  • Private inventories to final sales
  • Nonfarm inventories to final sales
  • Nonfarm inventories to final sales of goods and structures 1. Inventories are as of the end of the quarter. The quarter-to-quarter change in inventories calculated from current-dollar inventories in this table is not the current-dollar change in private inventories component of GDP. The former is the difference between two inventory stocks, each valued at its respective end-of-quarter prices. The latter is the change in the physical volume of inventories valued at average prices of the quarter. In addition, changes calculated from this table are at quarterly rates, whereas, the change in private inventories is stated at annual rates.
    2. Beginning with 1990, farm inventories includes materials and supplies.
    3. Prior to the fourth quarter of 1958, inventories held by construction establishments are included in line 5.
    4. Prior to 1981, inventories of auto and home supply stores are included in motor vehicle dealers. Beginning with 1981, these inventories are included in ``other durable goods.''
    5. Quarterly totals at monthly rates. Final sales of domestic business equals final sales of domestic product less gross value added of households and institutions and of general government, and it includes a small amount of final sales by farm and by government enterprises.
    Note. Estimates for nonfarm industries other than manufacturing and trade for 1986 and earlier periods are based on the 1972 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC). Manufacturing estimates for 1981 and earlier periods and trade estimates for 1966 and earlier periods are based on the 1972 SIC; later estimates for these industries are based on the 1987 SIC. The resulting discontinuities are small.

    Table 5.7.5B. Private Inventories and Domestic Final Sales by Industry

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted quarterly totals: data from 1996
  •     Private inventories 1
  • Farm
  • Mining, utilities, and construction
  • Manufacturing
  •   Durable goods industries
  •   Nondurable goods industries
  • Wholesale trade
  •   Durable goods industries
  •   Nondurable goods industries
  • Retail trade
  •   Motor vehicle and parts dealers
  •   Food and beverage stores
  •   General merchandise stores
  •   Other retail stores
  • Other industries Addenda:
  •   Private inventories
  •     Durable goods industries
  •     Nondurable goods industries
  •   Nonfarm industries
  •   Wholesale trade
  •     Merchant wholesale trade
  •       Durable goods industries
  •       Nondurable goods industries
  •     Nonmerchant wholesale trade
  •      Final sales of domestic business 2
  •      Final sales of goods and structures of domestic business 2 Ratios of private inventories to final sales of domestic business:
  •    Private inventories to final sales
  •    Nonfarm inventories to final sales
  •    Nonfarm inventories to final sales of goods and structures 1. Inventories are as of the end of the quarter. The quarter-to-quarter change in inventories calculated from current-dollar inventories in this table is not the current-dollar change in private inventories component of GDP. The former is the difference between two inventory stocks, each valued at its respective end-of-quarter prices. The latter is the change in the physical volume of inventories valued at average prices of the quarter. In addition, changes calculated from this table are at quarterly rates, whereas, the change in private inventories is stated at annual rates.
    2. Quarterly totals at monthly rates. Final sales of domestic business equals final sales of domestic product less gross value added of households and institutions and of general government, and it includes a small amount of final sales by farm and by government enterprises.
    Note. Estimates in this table are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).

    Table 5.7.6A. Real Private Inventories and Real Domestic Final Sales of Business by Industry, Chained Dollars

    Billions of chained (2000) dollars; Seasonally adjusted quarterly totals: data from 1947 to 1997
  •     Private inventories 1
  • Farm 2
  • Nonfarm
  •     Durable goods 3
  •     Nondurable goods 3
  •   Manufacturing
  •     Durable goods
  •     Nondurable goods
  •   Wholesale trade
  •     Durable goods
  •     Nondurable goods
  •       Merchant wholesalers
  •         Durable goods
  •         Nondurable goods
  •       Nonmerchant wholesalers
  •         Durable goods
  •         Nondurable goods
  •   Retail trade
  •     Durable goods
  •       Motor vehicle dealers 4
  •       Other 4
  •     Nondurable goods
  •   Other
  •     Durable goods
  •     Nondurable goods
  • Residual
  •      Final sales of domestic business 5
  •      Final sales of goods and structures of domestic business 5 Ratios of private inventories to final sales of domestic business:
  • Private inventories to final sales
  • Nonfarm inventories to final sales
  • Nonfarm inventories to final sales of goods and structures 1. Inventories are as of the end of the quarter. The quarter-to-quarter changes calculated from this table are at quarterly rates, whereas the change in private inventories component of GDP is stated at annual rates.
    2. Beginning with 1990, farm inventories includes materials and supplies.
    3. Prior to the fourth quarter of 1958, inventories held by construction establishments are included in line 5.
    4. Prior to 1981, inventories of auto and home supply stores are included in motor vehicle dealers. Beginning with 1981, these inventories are included in ``other durable goods.''
    5. Quarterly totals at monthly rates. Final sales of domestic business equals final sales of domestic product less gross value added of households and institutions and of general government, and it includes a small amount of final sales by farm and by government enterprises.
    Note. Estimates for nonfarm industries other than manufacturing and trade for 1986 and earlier periods are based on the 1972 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC). Manufacturing estimates for 1981 and earlier periods and trade estimates for 1966 and earlier periods are based on the 1972 SIC; later estimates for these industries are based on the 1987 SIC. The resulting discontinuities are small.
    NOTE. Chained (2000) dollar inventory series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the average of the end-of-year fixed-weighted inventories for 1999 and 2000, divided by 100. Chained (2000) dollar final sales series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2000 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. Because the formula for the chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the corresponding chained-dollar estimates are usually not additive. The residual line is the difference between the first line and the sum of the most detailed lines for inventories.

    Table 6.16C. Corporate Profits by Industry

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates: data from 1987 to 2000
  •     Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments (Annual)
  • Domestic industries (Annual)
  •   Financial (Annual)
  •   Nonfinancial (Annual)
  • Rest of the world (Annual)
  •   Receipts from the rest of the world (Annual)
  •   Less: Payments to the rest of the world (Annual)
  •     Corporate profits with inventory valuation adjustment (Annual)
  • Domestic industries (Annual)
  •   Financial (Annual)
  •     Federal Reserve banks (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  •   Nonfinancial (Annual)
  •     Manufacturing (Annual)
  •       Durable goods (Annual)
  •         Primary metal industries (Annual)
  •         Fabricated metal products (Annual)
  •         Industrial machinery and equipment (Annual)
  •         Electronic and other electric equipment (Annual)
  •         Motor vehicles and equipment (Annual)
  •         Other (Annual)
  •       Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •         Food and kindred products (Annual)
  •         Chemicals and allied products (Annual)
  •         Petroleum and coal products (Annual)
  •         Other (Annual)
  •     Transportation and public utilities (Annual)
  •       Transportation (Annual)
  •       Communications (Annual)
  •       Electric, gas, and sanitary services (Annual)
  •     Wholesale trade (Annual)
  •     Retail trade (Annual)
  •     Other (Annual)
  • Rest of the world (Annual) Note. Estimates in this table are based on the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC).

    Table 6.16D. Corporate Profits by Industry

    Billions of dollars; Seasonally adjusted at annual rates: data from 2001
  •     Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments (Annual)
  • Domestic industries (Annual)
  •   Financial 1 (Annual)
  •   Nonfinancial (Annual)
  • Rest of the world (Annual)
  •   Receipts from the rest of the world (Annual)
  •   Less: Payments to the rest of the world (Annual)
  •     Corporate profits with inventory valuation adjustment (Annual)
  • Domestic industries (Annual)
  •   Financial (Annual)
  •     Federal Reserve banks (Annual)
  •     Other financial 2 (Annual)
  •   Nonfinancial (Annual)
  •     Utilities (Annual)
  •     Manufacturing (Annual)
  •       Durable goods (Annual)
  •         Fabricated metal products (Annual)
  •         Machinery (Annual)
  •         Computer and electronic products (Annual)
  •         Electrical equipment, appliances, and components (Annual)
  •         Motor vehicles, bodies and trailers, and parts (Annual)
  •         Other durable goods 3 (Annual)
  •       Nondurable goods (Annual)
  •         Food and beverage and tobacco products (Annual)
  •         Petroleum and coal products (Annual)
  •         Chemical products (Annual)
  •         Other nondurable goods 4 (Annual)
  •     Wholesale trade (Annual)
  •     Retail trade (Annual)
  •     Transportation and warehousing (Annual)
  •     Information (Annual)
  •     Other nonfinancial 5 (Annual)
  • Rest of the world (Annual) 1. Consists of finance and insurance and bank and other holding companies.
    2. Consists of credit intermediation and related activities; securities, commodity contracts, and other financial investments and related activities; insurance carriers and related activities; funds, trusts, and other financial vehicles; and bank and other holding companies.
    3. Consists of wood products; nonmetallic mineral products; primary metals; other transportation equipment; furniture and related products; and miscellaneous manufacturing.
    4. Consists of textile mills and textile product mills; apparel; leather and allied products; paper products; printing and related support activities; and plastics and rubber products.
    5. Consists of agriculture, forestry, fishing, and hunting; mining; construction; real estate and rental and leasing; professional, scientific, and technical services; administrative and waste management services; educational services; health care and social assistance; arts, entertainment, and recreation; accomodation and food services; and other services, except government.
    Note. Estimates in this table are based on the 1997 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).

    By Economagic
    2100 SouthBridge Parkway, Suite 650
    Birmingham, AL 35209, USA
    Email:
    http://www.economagic.com

  • Interested in forex trading? forex brokerage firms!


    ACM Advanced Currency Markets SA
    Contact the broker/FDM
    Open a demo account
    MG Financial Group
    Contact the broker/FDM
    Open a demo account
    Alpari (UK) Limited
    Contact the broker/FDM
    Open a demo account
    City Credit Capital (UK) Limited
    Contact the broker/FDM
    Open a demo account
    Capital Market Services, L.L.C.
    Contact the broker/FDM
    Open a demo account

    GET CASH BACK FOR YOUR TRADES!   Learn more about the Pip Rebate Program

    Note: All information on this page is subject to change. The use of this website constitutes acceptance of our user agreement. Please read our privacy policy and legal disclaimer.

    Trading foreign exchange on margin carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you. Before deciding to trade foreign exchange you should carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience and risk appetite. The possibility exists that you could sustain a loss of some or all of your initial investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with foreign exchange trading and seek advice from an independent financial advisor if you have any doubts.

    Opinions expressed at FXstreet.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of FXstreet.com or its management. FXstreet.com has not verified the accuracy or basis-in-fact of any claim or statement made by any independent author: errors and Omissions may occur.

    Any opinions, news, research, analyses, prices or other information contained on this website, by FXstreet.com, its employees, partners or contributors, is provided as general market commentary and does not constitute investment advice. FXstreet.com will not accept liability for any loss or damage, including without limitation to, any loss of profit, which may arise directly or indirectly from use of or reliance on such information.

    ©2009 "FXstreet.com. The Forex Market" All Rights Reserved.