BUSINESS SITUATION.
Larkins, Daniel ; Morris, Ralph W. ; Argueta, Jennifer S. 等
ECONOMIC growth picked up in the first quarter of 2001 after
slowing in the two preceding quarters, and income accelerated. At the
same time, domestic purchases slowed for the third consecutive quarter,
and prices increased more than in the previous quarter.
According to the "advance" estimates of the national
income and product accounts (NIPA's):
* Real gross domestic product (GDP)--a measure of domestic
production of goods and services--increased 2.0 percent in the first
quarter of 2001, twice the growth rate in the fourth quarter of 2000 and
about the same as in the third quarter of 2000 (table 1 and chart 1).(1)
Despite the step-up, growth in the first quarter was well below the
3.6-percent average rate for the current-expansion (which began in the
second quarter of 1991).
[GRAPH OMITTED]
Table 1.--Real Gross Domestic Product, Real Gross Domestic
Purchases, and Real Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers
[Seasonally adjusted at annual rates]
Billions of chained (1996) dollars
Level Change from preceding quarter
2001 2000 2001
I II III IV I
Gross domestic product 9,439.9 127.1 50.6 24.2 46.2
Less: Exports of goods
and services 1,133.6 37.0 37.0 -19.0 -6.2
Plus: Imports of goods
and services 1,538.5 63.5 61.2 -4.9 -43.0
Equals: Gross domestic
purchases 9,817.0 150.7 71.7 37.2 13.8
Less: Change in private
inventories -7.1 42.0 -6.1 -16.8 -62.8
Nonfarm -13.1 39.3 -4.9 -16.9 -63.6
Farm 5.9 2.6 -1.2 .3 .6
Equals: Final sales to
domestic purchasers 9,811.2 110.6 76.8 51.6 72.3
Personal consumption
expenditures 6,422.6 47.1 69.2 43.5 49.3
Durable goods 921.5 -11.5 16.5 -7.2 25.5
Nondurable goods 1,899.6 16.3 21.5 4.8 12.2
Services 3,617.6 39.5 32.6 43.2 15.1
Private fixed investment 1,794.2 46.7 13.7 -4.2 7.1
Nonresidential 1,442.2 47.2 26.3 -.5 3.9
Structures 301.6 3.0 9.6 7.2 7.8
Equipment and software 1,146.7 46.2 15.8 -9.7 -6.0
Residential 361.9 1.2 -10.3 -3.3 2.9
Government consumption
expenditures and
gross investment 1,605.1 18.6 -5.5 11.4 15.5
Federal 558.6 21.7 -13.0 5.1 7.7
National defense 357.9 13.6 -8.9 7.5 4.2
Nondefense 200.5 8.2 -4.2 -2.3 3.4
State and local 1,046.0 -2.8 7.3 6.2 7.9
Addendum: Final sales of
domestic product 9,433.9 87.3 55.6 38.6 104.4
Percent change from
preceding quarter
2000 2001
II III IV I
Gross domestic product 5.6 2.2 1.0 2.0
Less: Exports of goods
and services 14.3 13.9 -6.4 -2.2
Plus: Imports of goods
and services 18.6 17.0 -1.2 -10.4
Equals: Gross domestic
purchases 6.5 3.0 1.5 .6
Less: Change in private
inventories ... ... ... ...
Nonfarm ... ... ... ...
Farm ... ... ... ...
Equals: Final sales to
domestic purchasers 4.7 3.2 2.1 3.0
Personal consumption
expenditures 3.1 4.5 2.8 3.1
Durable goods -5.0 7.6 -3.1 11.9
Nondurable goods 3.6 4.7 1.0 2.6
Services 4.6 3.7 4.9 1.7
Private fixed investment 11.2 3.1 -.9 1.6
Nonresidential 14.6 7.7 -.1 1.1
Structures 4.4 14.6 10.4 11.0
Equipment and software 17.9 5.6 -3.3 -2.1
Residential 1.3 -10.6 -3.6 3.3
Government consumption
expenditures and
gross investment 4.8 -1.4 2.9 4.0
Federal 17.2 -9.0 3.8 5.7
National defense 16.9 -9.7 8.9 4.9
Nondefense 17.8 -7.9 -4.6 7.0
State and local -1.1 2.9 2.5 3.1
Addendum: Final sales of
domestic product 3.9 2.4 1.7 4.6
NOTE:--Chained (1996) dollar series are calculated as the product of
the chain-type quantity index and the 1996 current-dollar value of the
corresponding series, divided into 100. Because the formula for the
chain-type quantity indexes uses weights of more than one period, the
corresponding chained-dollar estimates usually are not additive.
Chained (1996) dollar levels and residuals, which measure the extent of
nonadditivity in each table, are shown in NIPA table S.1. (See
"Selected NIPA Tables," which begins on page D-2 in this issue.)
* Gross domestic purchases--a measure of domestic demand for goods
and services regardless of where they were produced--increased 0.6
percent, less than half the growth rate in the fourth quarter.(2) The
smaller increase in gross domestic purchases than in GDP in the first
quarter is unusual: In the preceding 8 quarters and in 15 of the
preceding 16 quarters, purchases increased more than GDP.
* Both consumer spending and government spending contributed
substantially to the increase in real GDP in the first quarter, as they
had in the fourth (see NIPA table S.2). The largest offset in the first
quarter was a sharp drop in inventory investment that subtracted 2.5
percentage points from GDP growth.(3) Final sales of domestic
product--GDP less inventory investment--accelerated to its biggest
increase in a year.
* The production of goods increased slightly after decreasing, and
the production of structures stepped up; the production of services
slowed somewhat (table 2). The fourth-quarter decrease in the production
of goods and the first-quarter uptick represent the weakest back-to-back
quarters of the current expansion.
Table 2.--Real Gross Domestic Product by Type of Product
[Seasonally adjusted at annual rates]
Billions of chained (1996) dollars
Level Change from preceding quarter
2001 2000 2001
I II III IV I
Gross domestic product 9,439.9 127.1 50.6 24.2 46.2
Goods 3,827.8 76.9 39.0 -31.7 1.7
Services 4,810.8 59.5 14.8 46.0 31.2
Structures 814.1 -6.1 -1.2 5.3 11.2
Addenda:
Motor vehicle output 303.9 -4.1 -16.1 -19.9 -15.3
Gross domestic
product less motor
vehicle output 9,132.4 130.6 65.5 42.6 60.0
Final sales of computers ... ... ... ... ...
Gross domestic product
less final sales
of computers ... ... ... ... ...
Percent change from
preceding quarter
2000 2001
II III IV I
Gross domestic product 5.6 2.2 1.0 2.0
Goods 8.5 4.1 -3.2 .2
Services 5.2 1.3 3.9 2.6
Structures -3.0 -0.6 2.7 5.7
Addenda:
Motor vehicle output -4.5 -16.9 -21.5 -17.8
Gross domestic
product less motor
vehicle output 6.0 3.0 1.9 2.7
Final sales of computers 55.4 40.6 17.9 21.2
Gross domestic product
less final sales
of computers 5.2 1.8 .8 1.8
NOTE.--See note to table 1 for an explanation of chained
(1996) dollar series. Chained (1996) dollar levels and
residuals for most items are shown in NIPA table 1.4.
Detail on motor vehicle output is shown in NIPA table 8.9B
* The step-up in GDP growth from the fourth quarter to the first
reflected a smaller decrease in exports, upturns in residential and
nonresidential fixed investment, and an acceleration in consumer
spending. (The fourth-quarter deceleration reflected downturns in
exports and nonresidential fixed investment and a slowdown in consumer
spending.)
* Real disposable personal income increased 2.0 percent in the
first quarter after increasing 0.7 percent in the fourth, and the
personal saving rate fell to -1.0 percent from -0.7 percent.(4)
* Real final sales of computers posted below-average growth for the
second quarter in a row, and real motor vehicle output decreased
substantially for the third consecutive quarter (table 2). However, even
if these components are excluded, GDP decelerated about 1 percentage
point in the fourth quarter and accelerated about 1 percentage point in
the first.
Computers.--Real final sales of computers increased 21.2 percent in
the first quarter and 17.9 percent in the fourth--the smallest increases
since the fourth quarter of 1997 and the smallest two-quarter growth
since the second and third quarters of 1994. Consumers and businesses
contributed to the softening in the fourth quarter; in the first
quarter, consumer purchases bounced back, but the softness in business
purchases became more pronounced.
Computer prices decreased sharply in the first quarter after five
quarters in which price drops were smaller than usual. Software prices
increased slightly in both the first and fourth quarters after
increasing substantially for several quarters.
Motor vehicles.--Consumer purchases of motor vehicles turned up.
Manufacturers continued to offer attractive sales-incentive programs on
a broad selection of car and truck models, interest rates on new-car
loans at commercial banks decreased (to 9.2 percent from 9.6 percent),
and motor-vehicle prices held relatively steady after decreasing.
Business purchases of motor vehicles also turned up, perhaps partly
reflecting an increase in purchases by companies with commercial and
rental fleets.
Motor vehicle inventories decreased sharply--the biggest decrease
in 5 years. The inventory-sales ratio for new domestic autos, which is
calculated from units data, dropped to 2.4 at the end of the first
quarter after jumping to 2.9 at the end of the fourth.
Prices
The price index for gross domestic purchases, which measures the
prices paid for goods and services purchased by U.S. residents,
increased 2.8 percent in the first quarter after increasing 1.9 percent
in the fourth (table 3). The acceleration partly reflected the effect of
a pay raise for Federal employees on the prices of Federal Government
consumption expenditures, but it mainly reflected step-ups in the prices
of several categories of personal consumption expenditures (PCE) for
services. Prices of gross domestic purchases less food and energy
increased 2.4 percent after increasing 1.6 percent (chart 2).
[GRAPH OMITTED]
Table 3.--Price Indexes
[Percent change at annual rates; based on seasonally
adjusted index numbers (1996=100)]
2000 2001
II III IV I
Gross domestic product 2.4 1.6 2.0 3.2
Less: Exports of goods and services 1.9 .7 .5 -.4
Plus: Imports of goods and services .2 3.8 .2 -2.1
Equals: Gross domestic purchases 2.1 2.0 1.9 2.8
Less: Change in private inventories ... ... ... ...
Equals: Final sales to domestic purchasers 2.1 2.0 1.9 2.8
Personal consumption expenditures 2.1 1.8 1.9 3.3
Durable goods -.6 -2.3 -1.1 -0.7
Nondurable goods 3.3 2.2 2.0 1.9
Services 2.0 2.5 2.5 4.8
Private fixed investment 1.9 2.0 1.1 .2
Nonresidential 1.6 1.8 .1 -1.3
Structures 3.7 5.0 5.4 6.6
Equipment and software 1.0 .8 -1.6 -3.8
Residential 2.6 2.7 4.4 5.4
Government consumption expenditures and
investment 2.7 2.9 2.8 3.8
Federal .6 2.6 1.5 5.4
National defense .8 2.9 1.4 4.3
Nondefense .4 2.1 1.7 7.3
State and local 3.8 3.1 3.5 3.0
Addenda:
Gross domestic purchases:
Food 2.3 3.5 1.8 4.0
Energy 11.2 11.1 10.3 8.1
Less mod and energy 1.7 1.5 1.6 2.4
Personal consumption expenditures:
Food 2.3 3.7 1.6 4.0
Energy goods and services (1) 13.0 8.6 8.9 10.8
Less food and energy 1.4 1.1 1.6 2.7
(1.) Consists of gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods and of
electricity and gas.
NOTE.--Percent changes in major aggregates are shown in NIPA table
8.1. Index numbers are shown in tables 7.1, 7.2. and 7.4.
Prices of PCE increased 3.3 percent after increasing 1.9 percent.
The acceleration was mainly accounted for by services and largely
reflected step-ups in the prices of financial services, electricity and
gas, and medical care (mainly in physician and "other
professional" services).(5) Food prices also picked up, reflecting
an acceleration in the prices of food purchased for consumption away
from home.
Prices of private nonresidential fixed investment decreased after
edging up. The downturn was accounted for by equipment and software
prices, mainly by computer prices, which declined more in the first
quarter than in the fourth.
Prices of government consumption expenditures and gross investment
increased more than in the fourth quarter. Prices paid by the Federal
Government increased 5.4 percent after increasing 1.5 percent. The
step-up reflected the pay raise for civilian and military personnel;
excluding the pay raise, prices paid by the Federal Government increased
1.3 percent in the first quarter.(6) Prices paid by State and local
governments increased slightly less than in the fourth quarter.
The GDP price index, which measures the prices paid for goods and
services produced in United States, increased 3.2 percent after
increasing 2.0 percent. Unlike the price index for gross domestic
purchases, the GDP price index includes the prices of exports and
excludes the prices of imports. Both import prices and export prices
decreased after increasing, but the downturn in import prices was more
pronounced. The decrease in import prices primarily reflected a sharp
drop in the price of imported petroleum.
Personal Income
Income growth stepped up in the first quarter after a small
increase in the fourth (chart 3):
* Real disposable personal income (DPI) increased 2.0 percent after
increasing 0.7 percent.
* Current-dollar DPI increased 5.3 percent after increasing 2.6
percent.
[GRAPH OMITTED]
The smaller pickup in real DPI than in current-dollar DPI reflected
the acceleration in PCE prices.
The personal saving rate continued its downtrend, reaching -1.0
percent in the first quarter, its lowest quarterly level since the
beginning of the series in 1946. A negative saving rate indicates that
outlays are being financed by the sale of assets, by borrowing, or by
using savings from previous periods. Incomplete data suggest that growth
in consumer credit accelerated in the first quarter.
Although stock market prices dropped last year, they had risen
substantially for an extended period before that, and the resulting
gains have contributed to consumers' ability to spend in excess of
current income.
Personal income increased $121.2 billion in the first quarter after
increasing $80.7 billion in the fourth (table 4). The step-up mainly
reflected accelerations in transfer payments and in government wages and
salaries and an upturn in farm proprietors' income.
Table 4.--Personal Income and Its Disposition
[Billions of dollars; seasonally adjusted at annual rates]
Level Change from
preceding
quarter
2001 2000
I II III
Wage and salary/disbursements 4,948.9 79.7 64.8
Private industries 4,165.7 69.5 59.5
Goods-producing industries 1,183.8 16.2 14.3
Manufacturing 823.0 10.3 8.3
Distributive industries 1,165.7 24.8 22.4
Service industries 1,816.3 28.6 22.9
Government 783.2 10.3 5.2
Other labor income 541.1 6.5 7.1
Proprietors' income with IVA
and CCAdj 723.4 15.6 15.3
Farm 20.9 2.4 10.2
Nonfarm 702.5 13.3 5.0
Rental income of persons
with CCAdj 138.0 -4.8 -2.7
Personal dividend income 414.2 5.7 7.1
Personal interest income 1,047.0 19.7 11.6
Transfer payments to persons 1,115.3 19.2 8.1
Less: Personal contributions
for social insurance 376.9 5.4 4.3
Personal income 8,550.9 136.3 106.9
Less: Personal tax and nontax
payments 1,371.6 37.9 30.9
Equals: Disposable personal
income 7,179.2 98.4 76.0
Less: Personal outlays 7,253.6 88.7 110.4
Equals:. Personal saving -74.3 9.6 -34.4
Addenda: Special factors in
personal income:
In wages and salaries:
Federal pay raise 5.5 0 0
In farm proprietors' income:
Federal subsidies(1) 4.7 .4 13.0
In rental income of persons
with CCAdj:
Federal subsidies(1) 1.0 0 2.9
In transfer payments
to persons:
Elimination of social
security earnings test 0 9.2 -9.2
Social security retroactive
payments 0 0 .6
Cost-of-living adjustments
in Federal transfer
programs 16.6 0 0
In personal tax and nontax
payments:
Federal tax law changes -4.4 0 0
Refunds and State tax
law changes -1.8 1.9 -.5
Change from
preceding
quarter
2000 2001
IV I
Wage and salary/disbursements 67.1 76.9
Private industries 64.4 61.8
Goods-producing industries 11.9 10.5
Manufacturing 5.0 -3.4
Distributive industries 26.3 21.3
Service industries 26.1 30.1
Government 2.8 15.0
Other labor income 6.4 7.1
Proprietors' income with IVA
and CCAdj -11.6 10.2
Farm -13.7 2.9
Nonfarm 2.1 7.3
Rental income of persons
with CCAdj -2.7 2.6
Personal dividend income 7.5 7.0
Personal interest income 8.6 -4.5
Transfer payments to persons 9.8 31.3
Less: Personal contributions
for social insurance 4.5 9.3
Personal income 80.7 121.2
Less: Personal tax and nontax
payments 34.6 28.9
Equals: Disposable personal
income 46.1 92.2
Less: Personal outlays 83.9 115.0
Equals:. Personal saving -37.8 -22.7
Addenda: Special factors in
personal income:
In wages and salaries:
Federal pay raise 0 5.5
In farm proprietors' income:
Federal subsidies(1) -14.2 1.7
In rental income of persons
with CCAdj:
Federal subsidies(1) -3.1 .3
In transfer payments
to persons:
Elimination of social
security earnings test 0 0
Social security retroactive
payments .5 -1.1
Cost-of-living adjustments
in Federal transfer
programs .3 16.3
In personal tax and nontax
payments:
Federal tax law changes 0 -4.4
Refunds and State tax
law changes 2.7 -.7
(1.) Payments authorized by the Agricultural Risk Protection
Act of 2000.
NOTE:--Most dollar levels ate in NIPA table 2.1.
IVA Inventory valuation adjustment
CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment
* The acceleration in transfer payments primarily reflected
cost-of-living adjustments to benefits under social security and other
Federal programs.
* The acceleration in government wages and salaries reflected the
pay raises for Federal civilian and miliary personnel.
* The upturn in farm proprietors' income reflected the
quarterly pattern of Federal farm subsidy payments, which increased $1.7
billion in the first quarter after decreasing $14.2 billion in the
fourth; excluding these subsidies, farm proprietors' income
increased $1.2 billion after increasing $0.5 billion.(7)
Nonfarm proprietors' income also stepped up in the first
quarter, reflecting an upturn in single-family construction (the part of
the construction industry in which proprietorships and partnerships are
concentrated).
These developments were partly offset by a downturn in personal
interest income that mainly reflected the pattern of falling interest
rates.
Personal contributions for social insurance--which is subtracted in
calculating personal income--increased $9.3 billion after increasing
$4.5 billion. The step-up reflected an increase in the social security
taxable earnings base for employees and the self-employed (from $76,200
to $80,400) and an increase in the monthly premium for Medicare supplementary medical insurance.
Personal tax and nontax payments increased $28.9 billion after
increasing $34.6 billion. The deceleration primarily reflected the
indexation provisions of the Federal income tax law.
First-Quarter 2001 Advance GDP Estimate: Source data and
Assumptions
The "advance" GDP estimate for the first quarter is based
on preliminary and incomplete source data; as more and better data
become available, the estimate will be revised. The advance estimate is
based on the following major source data. (The number of months for
which data were available is shown in parentheses.)
Personal consumption expenditures: Sales of retail stores (3) and
unit auto and truck sales (3);
Nonresidential fixed investment: Unit auto and truck sales (3),
construction put in place (2), manufacturers' shipments of
machinery and equipment other than aircraft (3), shipments of civilian
aircraft (2), and exports and imports of machinery and equipment (2);
Residential investment: Construction put in place (2) and
single-family housing starts (3);
Change in private inventories: Manufacturing and trade inventories
(2) and unit and truck inventories (3);
Net exports of goods and services: Exports and imports of goods and
services (2);
Goverment consumption expenditures and gross investment: Some
Federal outlays were available for 2 months, others for 3, State and
local construction put in place (2), State and local employment (3), and
the employment cost index for the quarter;
GDP prices: Consumer price index (3), producer price index (3),
U.S. import and export price indexes (3), and values and quantities of
petroleum imports (2).
BEA made assumptions for source data that were not available. Table
A shows the consumptions for key series; a more comprehensive list is
available on BEA's web site at <www.bea.doc.gov> and on
STAT-USA's Web site at <www.stat-usa.gov>.
Table A.--Summary of Major Data Assumptions
for Advance Estimates, 2001:1
[Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates]
2000
October November December
Private fixed investment:
Nonresidential structures:
Buildings:
Value of new nonresidential
construction put in place 222.1 224.5 219.7
Equipment and software:
Manufacturers' shipments of
complete aircraft 34.9 35.4 31.3
Residential structures:
Value of new residential
construction put in place:
1-unit structures 226.1 227.1 229.1
2-unit-or-more 27.2 28.3 28.6
Change in private inventories,
nonfarm:
Change in inventories for
manufacturing and trade (except
nonmerchant wholesalers) for
industries other than motor
vehicles and equipment in trade 80.1 38.0 -.4
Net exports:(2)
Exports of goods:
U.S. exports of goods,
international-transactions
-accounts basis 795.9 790.2 769.4
Excluding gold 790.3 783.5 762.0
Imports of goods:
U.S. imports of goods,
international-transactions
-accounts basis 1,275.4 1,259.7 1,244.2
Excluding gold 1,269.0 1,252.6 1,237.5
Net exports of goods -479.4 -469.5 -474.8
Excluding gold -478.7 -469.1 -475.5
Government:
State and local:
Structures:
Value of new construction
put in place 170.1 171.0 172.8
2001
January February March(1)
Private fixed investment:
Nonresidential structures:
Buildings:
Value of new nonresidential
construction put in place 231.6 231.9 225.0
Equipment and software:
Manufacturers' shipments of
complete aircraft 33.5 45.5 32.1
Residential structures:
Value of new residential
construction put in place:
1-unit structures 233.5 238.7 236.0
2-unit-or-more 29.8 30.7 30.6
Change in private inventories,
nonfarm:
Change in inventories for
manufacturing and trade (except
nonmerchant wholesalers) for
industries other than motor
vehicles and equipment in trade 31.4 -10.0 .8
Net exports:(2)
Exports of goods:
U.S. exports of goods,
international-transactions
-accounts basis 774.9 782.9 776.7
Excluding gold 769.2 776.1 769.6
Imports of goods:
U.S. imports of goods,
international-transactions
-accounts basis 1,248.8 1,183.2 1,213.3
Excluding gold 1,242.6 1,177.2 1,206.2
Net exports of goods -473.9 -400.2 -436.6
Excluding gold -473.4 -401.0 -436.6
Government:
State and local:
Structures:
Value of new construction
put in place 175.2 172.2 171.3
(1.) Assumption.
(2.) Nonmonetary gold is included in balance-of-payments-basis
exports and imports but is not used directly in the estimation
of NIPA exports and imports.
BEA Estimates of Wages and Salaries for 2000
The annual change from 1999 to 2000 in the national income and
product accounts (NIPA) estimate of wage and salary disbursements is
about $75 billion less than the change in the U.S. total of the State
estimates of wage and salary disbursements that appears elsewhere in
this issue. As explained in the "Note on the Estimates of State
Personal Income" on page 24, the State estimates incorporate newly
available Bureau of Labor Statistics tabulations of wages and salaries
of employees covered by unemployment insurance for 2000. These and other
data will be incorporated into the NIPA estimates in the upcoming annual
NIPA revision, which is scheduled for release July 27, 2001.
(1.) Quarterly estimates in the NIPA's are expressed at
seasonally adjusted annual rates. Quarter-to-quarter dollar changes are
the differences between the published estimates. Quarter-to-quarter
percent changes are annualized and are calculated from unrounded data
unless otherwise specified.
Real estimates are calculated using a chain-type Fisher formula
with annual weights for all years and quarterly weights for all
quarters; real estimates are expressed both as index numbers (1996=100)
and as chained (1996) dollars. Price indexes (1996=100) are also
calculated using a chain-type Fisher formula.
(2.) Gross domestic purchases is calculated as the sum of personal
consumption expenditures, gross private domestic investment, and
government consumption expenditures and gross investment; thus, gross
domestic purchases includes imports of goods and services, which are
subtracted in the calculation of GDP, and does not include exports of
goods and services, which are added in the calculation of GDP.
(3.) In the NIPA's, consumer spending is shown as personal
consumption expenditures, government spending is shown as government
consumption expenditures and gross investment, and inventory investment
is shown as change in private inventories.
(4.) The personal saving rate is measured as personal saving as a
percentage of current-dollar disposable personal income. The
first-quarter estimate of the national saving rate (which is measured as
gross saving as a percentage of gross national product) will be released
at the end of May with the "preliminary" estimate of
first-quarter GDP.
(5.) Financial services include brokerage charges, investment
counseling, bank service charges, trust services, safe deposit, services
furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life
insurance carriers, and expense of handling life insurance and pension
plans.
Other professional services includes medical laboratories, eye
examinations, and all other professional medical services.
(6.) In the NIPA's an increase in the rate of Federal employee
compensation is treated as an increase in the price of employee services
purchased by the Federal Government.
(7.) Federal farm subsidy payments also affected rental income of
persons, which increased $2.6 billion after decreasing $2.7 billion.
Excluding subsidy payments to owners of leased farmland (nonoperator
landlords), rental income increased $2.3 billion after increasing $0.4
billion.