Gross product by industry price measures, 1977-96.
Yuskavage, Robert E.
This article presents annual estimates of prices and unit costs by
industry group for 1977-96. The price measures of gross product
originating by industry (GPO) provide insight into the sources of change
in the aggregate price level by industry. For example, the relative
growth rates of prices among industries can be compared, and their
contributions to the aggregate (economy-wide) rate of price change can
be computed. The unit-cost measures by industry can be used to identify
the sources of GPO price change among the cost components Of
GPO--compensation of employees, indirect business taxes, and
property-type income.
These measures of GPO prices and unit costs have not previously
been included in the articles on gross product by industry in the SURVEY
OF CURRENT BUSINESS, and providing them marks another step in continuing
efforts by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) to make the industry
accounts data more useful. Until last year, these articles dealt almost
exclusively with current-dollar and real GPO. In November 1997, BEA
presented and discussed annual estimates of gross output and
intermediate inputs by industry for the first time.(1)
The first part of this article discusses the measurement and
interpretation Of GPO prices, including the relationship Of GPO prices
to gross output prices and intermediate inputs prices. The second part
develops the concept of unit costs in the context of the GPO estimates,
and it describes how these measures can be used to analyze changes in
industry-cost structure and the return to capital. The third part
discusses trends in GPO prices and unit costs by industry group for
1992-96. Tables 4 and 5 at the end of the article present industry price
and unit-cost measures by industry group for 1977-96.
GPO Prices
The GPO price index for an industry or industry group represents the
implicit price for gross output less intermediate inputs. For most
industries and industry groups, the GPO price measures are chain-type
Fisher price indexes computed from data on gross output and intermediate
inputs. For some industries, the GPO price measures are implicit price
deflators because data for gross output prices are not available.
GPO can be defined as either an output measure (gross output less
intermediate inputs) or as an input measure (costs incurred and incomes
earned); see the box "Gross Product Originating." The
measurement of the GPO price index is based on GPO'S definition as
an output measure. As an output measure, GPO, is the difference between
the industry's gross output and its intermediate inputs. Real GPO
and the GPO price index can be derived from these separate measures
using the double-deflation method. In the double-deflation method,
estimates of gross output and of intermediate inputs are used in the
calculation of real GPO.(2) As an input measure, an industry's GPO
represents the value-added inputs (labor services and capital services)
that are combined wA the intermediate inputs (energy, materials, and
purchased services) to produce the gross output of the industry. The GPO
price index thus represents the implicit price paid by the industry for
its value-added inputs. Changes in the GPO price index for the
industries for which the double- deflation method is used primarily
reflect (1) changes in the prices and quantities of the gross output of
the industry, (2) changes in the prices and quantities of the
intermediate inputs used by the industry, and (3) changes in the ratio
of intermediate inputs to gross output.
Gross output
Gross output prices represent the prices received by an industry for
its products. The chain-type price index for gross output is computed
from detailed data for the industry on product sales, shipments) and
prices. Data on current-dollar product sales and shipments by industry
are primarily from annual surveys by the Bureau of the Census. Detailed
price indexes for manufacturing and wholesale trade are primarily
producer price indexes (PPI'S) from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Price indexes for farm products are from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, and price indexes for mineral products are mostly from the
U.S. Department of Interior and the U.S. Department of Energy. Price
indexes for selected products--including computers, semiconductors,
digital telephone switching equipment, and selected equipment purchased
by the U.S. Department of Defense--are from the national income and
product accounts (NIPA'S). Price indexes for retail trade and for
services are primarily BLS consumer price indexes (CPI'S), or they
are derived from the NIPA'S.(3)
Intermediate inputs
Intermediate inputs prices represent the prices paid by an industry
for its inputs of raw materials, semifinished goods, energy, and
services purchased from other industries. The chain-type price index for
intermediate inputs is computed from detailed data on industry product
purchases and prices. Data on the commodity (product) composition of
current-dollar intermediate inputs by industry are obtained primarily
from BEA'S input-output accounts.(4) Detailed price in&xes for
inputs of manufactured goods are from BLS: Primarily PPI'S for
domestic goods and international price indexes for imports. These
indexes are supplemented by selected price indexes from the NIPA'S.
Detailed price indexes for inputs of services are primarily, CPI'S,
or gross output implicit price deflators.(5)
Input-output ratio
An industry's input-output (I-O) ratio is computed as its
intermediate inputs divided by its gross output. For an industry with
one product, changes in the I-O ratio from year to year reflect shifts
in the mix between intermediate inputs and value-added inputs (labor
services and capital services). Such shifts may be viewed as changes in
production technology that result from changes in the optimal input mix.
Examples include economies of scale that result from changes in the rate
of output and the contracting out of services that were once performed
in-house by employees. At the GPO industry level, which approximates the
two-digit Standard Industrial Classification (SIC), changes in the I-O
ratio may also reflect changes in the relative size of the detailed
industries that the GPO industry comprises.
The GPO price index can be viewed as a weighted average of gross
output prices less intermediate inputs prices; thus, changes in the i-o
ratio affect the GPO price index by changing the relative weights
associated with these-prices. Normally, this effect is small in
comparison with the effects of changes in gross output prices or of
changes in intermediate inputs prices.(6)
Relationship to NIPA prices
For the NIPA'S, gross domestic product (GDP) is measured as the
sum of final expenditures. GDP can also be measured as the sum of
industry value added. In concept, the GDP price and quantity indexes
computed from NIPA final expenditures are consistent with those computed
from industry value added because both approaches exclude intermediate
inputs. Consistency is maintained between the two approaches by the use
of common source data for prices whenever possible. For example, the
price indexes that are used for the producers' durable equipment
component of NIPA final expenditures are also used for the gross output
of durable goods manufacturing industries.
In practice, the results of the two approaches differ because of
the lack of data for gross output prices for certain private
services-producing industries and because of the lack of annual data for
the commodity composition of intermediate inputs by industry. In
addition, the two approaches differ in the treatment of trade margins
and transport costs. In the NIPA'S, final expenditures are valued
in purchasers' prices which include the wholesale trade and retail
trade margins and transport costs incurred as goods move through the
distribution system from producers (or importers) to final users. In the
industry approach, value added is valued in producers' prices.
Price measures associated with trade margins and transport costs are
classified in the wholesale trade, retail trade, and transportation
industries.(7)
As a result, price measures for specific GPO industries are not
necessarily comparable to price measures for related NiPA expenditure
components. For example, the NIPA chain-type price index for all durable
goods products may differ from the GPO price index for durable goods
manufacturing. GDP prices by type of expenditure reflect the prices of
goods and services purchased for final use, whether domestically
produced or imported; GPO prices by industry reflect the prices of the
industry's gross output net of intermediate inputs. Gross output
prices from the industry approach are more comparable to NIPA final
expenditure prices, but gross output prices reflect sales by an industry
to all of its customers, whereas NIPA price measures reflect sales to
final purchasers, including sales of imports.
GPO Unit Costs
GPO unit costs show the contribution of the cost components of GPO to
the GPO price index. GPO measures of unit cost are computed by dividing
current-dollar GPO and its components by real (chained-dollar) GPO.(8)
The resulting quotients provide the GPO chain-type price index and the
part of the price index associated with each component. If the unit cost
for a component grows faster than the GPO price index, then the relative
importance of that component in the cost structure has increased.
As an input measure, current-dollar GPO is measured as the sum of
costs incurred and incomes earned in production; it is equal to gross
domestic income, the components of which can be grouped into categories
that approximate the shares of labor and capital. The labor share of
production can be approximated using compensation of employees, which
consists of wage and salary accruals, employer contributions for social
insurance, and other labor income (primarily employer contributions to
private pension plans and health insurance). The capital share of
production (property-type income) can be approximated using the
remaining components of GPO except indirect business tax and nontax
liability, which is excluded because it can be viewed as a part of the
pretax return to capital that accrues to government rather than to
business.(9)
GPO unit-cost measures for compensation of employees (unit labor
costs) include wage and salary accruals, employer contributions for
social insurance, and other labor income. Unit-cost measures for
property-type income (income per unit of gross product) include both
debt-financed and equity-financed capital, including capital consumption
allowances. GPO unit-cost measures do not provide information on the
separate contributions of labor and capital services or of labor and
capital prices to the change in GPO prices, because GPO unit-cost
measures attribute changes in GPO unit prices to the components Of GPO
in proportion to each component's share of current-dollar GPO.
Thus, year-to-year changes in component shares of current-dollar GPO
Will result in changes in the contributions of the components to GPO
prices, even if the prices do not change.
GPO Prices and Unit Costs for 1992-96
This part of the article presents estimates of changes in GPO prices
and unit costs by industry group for 1992-96. The first section
discusses differences in GPO price changes among industries, including
the effects of differences in changes in gross output prices and in
intermediate inputs prices. The second section discusses the
contributions of GPO components to changes in the GPO price index.
GPO price changes
The GDP chain-type price index increased at an average annual rate of
2.5 percent in 1992-96; private industries increased 2.2 percent, and
government increased 3.3 percent (table 1). Among the private industry
groups, the GPO price index for durable goods manufacturing declined 1.2
percent. The GPO price indexes for all the other industry groups
increased; the increases ranged from 0.4 percent for electric, gas, and
sanitary services to 3.8 percent for agriculture, forestry, and fishing.
Except for electric, gas, and sanitary services, the industry groups
with GPO price changes that were less than the GDP price change (2.5
percent) were those associated with the production and distribution of
manufactured goods (manufacturing, transportation, wholesale trade, and
retail trade).
Table 1.--Percent Changes in Chain-Type Price
Indexes by Industry Group, 1993-96
1993 1994 1995
Gross domestic product 2.6 2.4 2.5
Private industries(1) 2.5 1.8 2.0
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing:
Gross output 2.6 -.6 .9
Intermediate inputs 1.9 2.2 1.7
Gross product 3.7 -3.5 -.4
Mining:
Gross output -.5 -3.9 .4
Intermediate inputs 1.3 -1.2 1.8
Gross product -1.9 -5.7 -.5
Construction:
Gross output 3.2 3.5 4.0
Intermediate inputs 3.0 3.0 3.2
Gross product 3.5 4.0 4.8
Manufacturing:
Gross output 1.0 1.2 2.3
Intermediate inputs .8 1.7 4.2
Gross product 1.4 .5 -.9
Durable goods:
Gross output 1.1 1.3 .1
Intermediate inputs 1.1 2.1 2.2
Gross product 1.2 0 -3.1
Nondurable goods:
Gross output .9 1.2 4.9
Intermediate inputs .5 1.2 6.5
Gross product 1.7 1.1 1.9
Transportation and public
utilities(1) 1.8 .7 2.3
Transportation(1) 1.1 1.5 3.2
Communications:
Gross output 1.3 .6 .9
Intermediate inputs -.5 -2.2 -2.1
Gross product 2.2 2.2 2.9
Electric, gas, and sanitary
services:
Gross output 2.6 -.7 -.2
Intermediate inputs 3.7 1.0 -2.6
Gross product 2.1 -1.5 .6
Wholesale trade:
Gross output 1.8 2.7 2.2
Intermediate inputs 2.3 2.6 3.7
Gross product 1.6 2.7 1.5
Retail trade:
Gross output 1.5 1.6 1.1
Intermediate inputs 2.1 2.5 2.9
Gross product 1.2 1.1 .1
Finance, insurance, and real
estate(1) 3.7 2.1 4.4
Services(1) 3.6 3.8 3.2
Government(1) 3.1 3.1 3.4
Addenda:
Private goods-producing
industries(2):
Gross output 1.5 1.2 2.4
Intermediate inputs 1.2 1.8 3.9
Gross product 2.1 .4 0
Private services-producing
industries(1 3) 2.6 2.4 2.9
Average
annual
1996 rate of
change,
1992-96
Gross domestic product 2.3 2.5
Private industries(1) 2.4 2.2
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing:
Gross output 10.3 3.2
Intermediate inputs 5.2 2.7
Gross product 16.6 3.8
Mining:
Gross output 17.1 3.0
Intermediate inputs 10.8 3.1
Gross product 21.0 2.7
Construction:
Gross output 2.3 3.3
Intermediate inputs 1.8 2.7
Gross product 2.8 3.7
Manufacturing:
Gross output -.2 1.1
Intermediate inputs -.2 1.6
Gross product -.4 .2
Durable goods:
Gross output -2.4 0
Intermediate inputs -2.3 .8
Gross product -2.7 -1.2
Nondurable goods:
Gross output 2.4 2.3
Intermediate inputs 2.2 2.6
Gross product 2.8 1.9
Transportation and public
utilities(1) 1.1 1.5
Transportation(1) .6 1.6
Communications:
Gross output 1.9 1.2
Intermediate inputs 1.2 -.9
Gross product 2.7 2.5
Electric, gas, and sanitary
services:
Gross output 2.6 1.1
Intermediate inputs 10.0 2.9
Gross product .3 .4
Wholesale trade:
Gross output 0 1.7
Intermediate inputs 2.1 2.7
Gross product -1.1 1.2
Retail trade:
Gross output 1.3 1.4
Intermediate inputs 2.6 2.5
Gross product .5 .7
Finance, insurance, and real
estate(1) 4.1 3.6
Services(1) 3.4 3.5
Government(1) 3.7 3.3
Addenda:
Private goods-producing
industries(2):
Gross output 1.2 1.6
Intermediate inputs .5 1.8
Gross product 2.3 1.2
Private services-producing
industries(13) 2.5 2.6
(1.) Gross product price index.
(2.) Consists of agriculture, forestry, and fishing, mining;
construction; and manufacturing.
(3.) Consists of transportation and public utilities; wholesale
trade; retail trade; finance, insurance, and real estate; and services.
NOTE.--Estimates for gross output and for intermediate inputs are
shown only for industry groups for which the double-deflation method is
used for each detailed industry in the group. See footnote 2 in the
text.
The GPO price changes for private services-producing industries
(2.6 percent) exceeded the GDP price change, and the GPO price change
for private goods-producing industries (1.2 percent) was less than the
GDP price change. The slower growth in the GPO price index for private
goods-producing industries, compared with the growth for private
services-producing industries, continues a trend that started in 1982
and continued each year except for 1989 (chart 1). In 1989, the GPO
price index for goods-producing industries was boosted by a relatively
large increase in gross output prices for oil and gas extraction. Since
1977, GPO prices for private services-producing industries have
increased faster than GDP prices; since 1992, a deceleration in GPO
prices for private services-producing industries has contributed to a
deceleration in GDP prices.
[Chart 1 ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
As mentioned earlier, the GPO price index can be viewed as a
weighted average of gross output prices and intermediate inputs prices
for industries for which the double-deflation method is used. Changes in
GPO prices are positively correlated with changes in gross output prices
a I and negatively correlated with changes in intermediate inputs
prices. GPO prices increase faster than gross output prices when gross
output prices increase faster than intermediate inputs prices;
conversely, GPO prices increase slower than gross output prices when
gross output prices increase slower than intermediate inputs prices. In
1992-96, GPO prices increased faster than gross output prices in
agriculture, forestry, and fishing, in construction, and in
communications. GPO prices increased slower than gross output prices in
all other industry groups.
In 1996, the GPO price index for private industries increased 2.4
percent, slightly more than the 2.3-percent increase in the GDP price
index. The GPO price index for manufacturing declined for the second
consecutive year, as an increase in nondurable goods was more than
offset by a decline in durable goods. Three of the four other industry
groups for which the GPO price index either increased less than the GDP
price index or decreased are at least partly involved with the
distribution of goods to consumers: Transportation (0.6 percent),
electric, gas, and sanitary services (0-3 percent), wholesale trade (1.1
percent), and retail trade (0-5 percent). Among the industry groups for
which the GPO price index increased more than the GDP price index, the
increases were large in agriculture, forestry, and fishing (16.6
percent) and mining (21.0 percent). The increases were smaller in
finance, insurance, and real estate (4.1 percent) and services (3.4
percent). Government increased 3.7 percent.
Contributions to change.--GPO prices can be used to assess an
industry's contribution to the change in GDP prices. Because real
GDP can be viewed as the combined result of aggregate inputs of labor
services and capital services, the GDP price index can be viewed as the
price index for aggregate inputs of labor services and capital services.
Because GPO as an input measure represents the industry's
value-added inputs of labor services and capital services, the GPO price
index can be used to compute contributions to GDP price change.
The extent to which industries contribute to the change in the GDP
price index depends on the industry's size relative to GDP as well
as on the growth rates in GPO prices.(10) In 1992-96, the largest
contributors to the change in the GDP price index were services and
finance, insurance, and real estate (0.7 percentage point each) (table
2). Government contributed 0.5 percentage points.(11) In manufacturing,
prices were unchanged, so the contribution of manufacturing prices to
GDP price change was 0.0 percentage point; durable goods manufacturing
contributed -0.1 percentage point. In 1995 and 1996, the contribution of
durable goods manufacturing was -0.3 percentage point. Finance,
insurance, and real estate made the largest positive contribution in
each of those years (0.8 percentage point).
Table 2.--Contributions to Percent Change in the Chain-Type
Price Index for Gross Domestic Product, 1993-96
1993 1994 1995
Percent change:
Gross domestic product 2.6 2.4 2.5
Percentage points:
Private Industries 2.2 1.5 1.7
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing .1 -.1 0
Mining 0 -.1 0
Construction .1 .1 .2
Manufacturing .2 .1 -.2
Durable goods .1 0 -.3
Nondurable goods .1 .1 .1
Transportation and public utilities .1 .1 .2
Transportation 0 0 .1
Communications .1 .1 .1
Electric, gas, and sanitary
services .1 0 0
Wholesale trade .1 .2 .1
Retail trade .1 .1 0
Finance, insurance, and real
estate .7 .4 .8
Services .7 .7 .6
Statistical discrepancy(2) 0 0 0
Government .4 .4 .5
Not allocated by Industry(3) 0 .4 .3
1996 1992-96(1)
Percent change:
Gross domestic product 2.3 2.5
Percentage points:
Private Industries 2.1 1.9
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing .3 .1
Mining .3 0
Construction .1 .1
Manufacturing -.1 0
Durable goods -.3 -.1
Nondurable goods .2 .1
Transportation and public utilities .1 .1
Transportation 0 0
Communications .1 .1
Electric, gas, and sanitary
services 0 0
Wholesale trade -.1 .1
Retail trade 0 .1
Finance, insurance, and real
estate .8 .7
Services .7 .7
Statistical discrepancy(2) 0 0
Government .5 .5
Not allocated by Industry(3) -.3 .1
(1.) Average annual rate.
(2.) Equals GOP measured as the sum of expenditures less gross
domestic income.
(3.) Equals GDP less the statistical discrepancy and the sum of GPO
of the detailed industries.
NOTE.--For information on the calculation of the contributions to
percent change, see footnote 10 in the text.
Gross output prices.--Gross output prices, which are the prices
received by producers, can be viewed as a weighted average of the prices
for intermediate inputs and for value-added inputs (labor services and
capital services). In manufacturing, gross output prices increased only
1.1 percent in 1992-96. Gross output prices in durable goods
manufacturing were unchanged, while gross output prices in nondurable
goods manufacturing increased 2.3 percent. The slow growth in the prices
of manufactured product, especially durable goods, together with the
deceleration of prices for private services-producing industries, have
contributed substantially to the low rate Of GDP price change since
1992.
Within durable goods manufacturing, gross output prices in 1992-96
declined in electronic and other electric equipment (5.7 percent) and
industrial machinery and equipment (2.8 percent). The declines were
primarily for products deflated with BEA's quality-adjusted price
indexes: Computers, semiconductors, and digital telephone switching
equipment. Gross output price increases in the remaining industries
ranged from 1.0 percent for instruments and related products to 4.4
percent for lumber and wood products.
Unit costs
Because the GPO price index measures the change in the cost of the
value-added inputs of labor services and capital services, it can be
used in combination with the components of GPO to assess their
contributions to the change in total value-added costs. When a component
of GPO unit costs grows faster than the GPO price index then that
component's contribution to the growth in unit costs has increased.
The cost per unit of real GPO for private industries increased 2.2
percent in 1992-96 (table 3). Compensation of employees per unit of GPO,
(unit labor costs) increased 1.7 percent. Unit costs for indirect
business tax and nontax liability increased 0.8 percent, and unit costs
for property-type income increased 3.2 percent. The larger increase in
the unit costs for property-type income indicates that capital costs
became a larger part Of GPO unit costs during the period or that the
return to capital per unit of gross product increased.
Table 3.--Percent Changes in Current-Dollar Cost Per Unit
of Real Gross Product Originating for Private Industry
Groups, 1993-96
Average
annual
1993 1994 1995 1996 rate of
change,
1992-96
Total 2.5 1.8 2.0 2.4 2.2
Compensation of employees 2.4 0.5 2.0 1.9 1.7
Indirect business tax and
nontax liability : 2.1 2.1 -1.0 0 .8
Property-type income 2.5 4.0 2.6 3.5 3.2
Agriculture, forestry, and 3.7 -3.5 -.4 16.6 3.8
fishing
Compensation of employees 17.6 -9.0 13.7 6.9 6.8
Indirect business tax and
nontax liability 9.4 -6.9 14.8 1.6 4.4
Property-type income -2.4 -.5 -7.9 23.5 2.5
Mining -1.9 -5.7 -5 21.0 2.7
Compensation of employees -5.1 -5.1 -4.4 8.6 -1.7
Indirect business tax and
nontax liability -5.2 -7.3 -9.8 21.7 -.9
Property-type income .9 -5.8 4.2 27.8 6.1
Construction 3.5 4.0 4.8 2.8 3.7
Compensation of employees 2.0 3.4 4.5 3.9 3.5
Indirect business tax and
nontax liability 4.5 0 0 4.3 2.2
Property-type income 7.0 5.5 5.2 .6 4.6
Manufacturing 1.4 .5 -.9 -.4 .2
Compensation of employees .6 -2.9 -3.5 -1.1 -1.7
Indirect business tax and
nontax liability 0 -4.8 -2.5 -2.6 -2.5
Property-type income 3.6 9.7 4.4 1.2 4.7
Durable goods 1.2 0 -3.1 -2.7 -1.2
Compensation of
employees -1.4 -4.0 -4.7 -3.9 -3.5
Indirect business tax and
nontax liability 0 -7.7 0 -4.2 -3.0
Property-type income 11.1 13.4 1.1 .8 6.4
Nondurable goods 1.7 1.1 1.9 2.8 1.9
Compensation of
employees 2.9 -2.0 -1.9 2.4 .3
Indirect business tax and
nontax liability 3.3 -4.8 -1.7 3.4 0
Property-type income -.3 7.0 8.3 3.4 4.5
Transportation and public
utilities 1.8 .7 2.3 1.1 1.5
Compensation of employees .2 0 2.4 1.1 .9
Indirect business tax and
nontax: liability 0 3.0 0 -5.8 -.8
Property-type Income 3.8 1.1 2.4 2.5 2.4
Wholesale trade 1.6 2.7 1.5 -1.1 1.2
Compensation of employees 0 -1.5 4.3 -2.8 0
Indirect business tax and
nontax liability 4.8 4.2 -2.4 -2.9 .9
Property-type income 3.2 13.1 -.9 5.6 5.1
Retail trade 1.2 1.1 .1 .5 .7
Compensation of employees -.2 -.2 1.2 .3 .3
Indirect business tax and
nontax liability 1.6 .5 2.1 .5 1.2
Property-type income 4.4 5.1 -4.4 1.4 1.5
Finance, insurance, and real
estate 3.7 2.1 4.4 4.1 3.6
Compensation of employees 5.8 1.2 1.9 5.3 3.5
Indirect business tax and
nontax liability 2.8 1.4 -.7 2.7 1.5
Property-type income 3.2 2.4 6.8 3.9 4.0
Services 3.6 3.8 3.2 3.4 3.5
Compensation of employees 4.6 3.2 4.8 3.5 4.0
Indirect business tax and
nontax liability 8.0 3.7 3.6 0 3.8
Property income .4 5.4 -1.1 3.0 1.9
In 1992-96, unit labor costs declined in two private industry
groups: Mining and durable goods manufacturing. Unit labor costs
increased in all other private industry groups except wholesale trade,
which was unchanged. In agriculture, forestry, and fishing and in
services, the increases in unit labor costs were larger than the
increases in total unit costs.
As with GPO prices, declines and relatively small increases in
unit labor costs were in industry groups involved with the production
and distribution of goods. In manufacturing, unit labor costs declined
at an average annual rate Of 1.7 percent in 1992-96, compared with a
0.2-percent increase in total unit costs. Unit labor costs in durable
goods manufacturing declined 3.5 percent, while total unit costs
declined 1.2 percent. In -wholesale trade, in retail trade, and in
transportation and public utilities, the increases in unit labor costs
were substantially smaller than the increases in total unit costs.
In 1996, unit labor costs increased 1.9 percent in all private
industries, less than the increase in total unit costs (2-4 percent).
Unit labor costs increased in all private industry groups except durable
goods manufacturing and wholesale trade. Durable goods manufacturing
fell 3.9 percent; this fall marked the fourth consecutive year that unit
labor costs fell in the industry group. Unit labor costs in
manufacturing fell 1.1 percent, the third consecutive annual decline,
despite an increase in nondurable goods manufacturing.
In 1996, the increases in unit labor costs exceeded the increase
in total unit costs in only three industries: Construction; finance,
insurance, and real estate; and services. In construction, unit labor
costs rose faster than total unit costs for the first time since 1992;
unit property-type income increased only 0.6 percent. In finance,
insurance, and real estate, unit labor costs increased considerably more
than in the 2 preceding years. In services, the increase in unit labor
costs was somewhat less than the increase in 1995.
Tables 4 and 5 follow.
[TABULAR DATA 4&5 NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII]
(1) See Sherlene K.S. Lum and Robert E. Yuskavage, "Gross
Product by Industry, 1947--96," SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 77
(November 1997): 20-34.
(2.) For more information on the double-deflation method, see Robert
E. Yuskavage, "Improved Estimates of Gross Product by Industry,
1959-94:" SURVEY 76 (August 1996): 142-145.
(3.) For a list of the sources for current-dollar product detail and
price indexes for gross output, see Yuskavage, "Improved
Estimates:" table 8.
(4.) Ann M. Lawson, "Benchmark Input-Output Accounts for the
U.S. Economy, 1992: Make, Use, and Supplementary Tables," SURVEY 77
(November 1997): 36-82.
(5.) For a list of the sources for the price indexes for intermediate
inputs, see Yuskavage, "Improved Estimates:" table 9.
(6.) The direction and magnitude of the effect on the GPO price index
depends on interactions among the gross output price index, the
intermediate inputs price index, and the input-output ratio.
(7.) In the GPO estimates, the gross output of the wholesale trade
and retail trade industries primarily consists of margin, which is
defined as sales minus the cost of goods sold. Because price indexes for
margin are not available, sales by detailed type of business are
deflated, and the margin rate is assumed to be constant. Such
assumptions are not required for the deflation of NIPA final
expenditures.
(8.) Current-dollar cost per unit of real GPO equals the GPO price
index divided by 100.
(9.) For purposes of this analysis, property-type income is defined
as the sum of corporate profits, proprietors' income, rental income
of persons, net interest, capital consumption allowances, business
transfer payments, and the current surplus of government enterprises
less subsidies. However, a substantial portion of proprietors'
income represents the labor share of production.
(10.) For a description of the calculation of these contributions,
see "Note on Computing Alternative Chained Dollar Indexes and
Contributions to Growth" in J. Steven Landefeld and Robert P.
Parker, "BEAs Chain Indexes, Time Series and Measures of Long-Term
Economic Growth," SURVEY 77 (May 1997): 63. The procedure described
in the note was modified to replace the chain-type quantity index with
the chain-type price index.
(11.) The GPO, price index for government is an implicit price
deflator computed as current-dollar GPO divided by real (chained-dollar)
GPO. For general government, which comprises most of government,
current-dollar GPO consists of compensation of employees and consumption
of fixed capital. Real consumption of fixed capital is estimated by
direct deflation using price indexes from the NIPA's. Real
compensation of employees is estimated by extrapolating base-year
current-dollar values by an indicator of labor input.
RELATED ARTICLE: Gross Product Originating: Definition and
Relationship to Gross Domestic Product
Gross product, or gross product originating (GPO), by industry is
the contribution of each private industry and of government to the
Nation's output, or gross domestic product (GDP). An
industry's GPO, often referred to as its "value added,"
is equal to its gross output (sales or receipts and other operating
income, commodity taxes, and inventory change) minus its intermediate
inputs (consumption of goods and services purchased from other
industries or imported).
For the national income and product accounts (NIPA'S), GDP is
measured as the sum of expenditure components. Gross domestic income
(GDI) is measured as the sum of costs incurred and incomes earned in the
production Of GDP. In concept, GDP and GDI should be the same; in
practice, they differ because their components are estimated using
largely independent and less-than-perfect source data. BEA views GDP as
the more reliable measure of output because the source data underlying
the estimates of expenditures are considered to be more accurate(1) The
difference between GDP and GDI is the "statistical
discrepancy"; it is recorded in the NIPA'S as an
"income" component that reconciles GDI with GDP.
Current-dollar GPO by industry is measured as the sum of
distributions by industry of the components of GDI. Consequently, the
sum of the current-dollar GPO estimates also differs from current-dollar
GDP by the statistical discrepancy. In presenting the GPO estimates, the
statistical discrepancy is included in the GPO of private industries
because of BEA'S view that most of the measurement problems with
the components Of GDi affect the GPO of private industries rather than
the GPO of general government or government enterprises.(2)
Real GDP in the NIPA'S is also measured as the sum of the
expenditure components. Real GPO estimates for most industries are
derived using separate estimates of gross output and intermediate
inputs.(3) The sum of the real GPO estimates differs from real GDP by
the real statistical discrepancy, which is shown as part of
private-industry GPO, and by the category entitled "not allocated
by industry," which is the difference between real GDP and the sum
of real GPO for the detailed industries and of the statistical
discrepancy. The value of the category "not allocated by
industry" reflects the lack of additivity of detailed real GPO
estimates that results from the formula used to calculate real output
and from differences in the source data (both current dollars and
prices) used to estimate industry GPO and the expenditures measure of
real GDP. As with the current-dollar measures, BEA views the source data
used to estimate the components of real GDP to be more reliable. In
addition, the amount of detailed data available to calculate real GDP is
greater than that for the gross output and intermediate inputs available
to calculate real GPO. For some industries, no source data are available
to measure gross output, and the resulting real GPO estimates are
prepared using less reliable methodologies.
(1.) For additional information on the accuracy of the two measures,
see the box "Statistical Discrepancy" in Robert P. Parker and
Eugene P. Seskin, "Annual Revision of the National Income and
Product Accounts," SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 77 (August 1997):19.
(2.) See "Note on Alternative Measures of Gross Product by
Industry," SURVEY 77 (November 1997): 84.
(3.) For information about the computation of the real GPO estimates,
see the box "Computation of the Chain-Type Quantity Indexes for
Double-Deflated Industries" in Robert E. Yuskavage, "Improved
Estimates of Gross Product by Industry, 1959-94," SURVEY 76 (August
1996): 142.
RELATED ARTICLE: Data Availability
This article presents summary estimates of gross product by
industry prices and unit costs. Price indexes and real GPO estimates for
detailed industries for 1977-96 and current-dollar GPO estimates for
1947-96 are available on the Internet on BEA's home page at
<http://www.bea.doc.gov>. They are also available online to
subscribers to STAT-USA's Economic Bulletin Board (call
202-482-1986), Or to STAT-USA'S Internet site at
<http://wwwstat-usa.gov>.
In addition, the following estimates are available from BEA on
diskettes:
* Gross Product by Industry, 1947-96, product number NDN-0174,
price $20.00.
* Gross Output by Detailed Industry, 1977-96, product number
NDN-0175, price $20.00.
* Manufacturing Industry Shipments, 1977-96, product number
NDN-0176, price $20.00.
* Manufacturing Product Shipments, 1977-95, product number
NDN-0177, price $20.00.
To order using Visa or MasterCard, call the BEA Order Desk at
1-800-704-0415 (outside the United States, call (202) 606-9666). To
order by mail, send a check payable to "Bureau of Economic
Analysis, BE53," to BEA Order Desk, Bureau of Economic Analysis,
BE-53, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, DC 20230.
Brian C. Moyer, John Sporing, and Robert A. Sylvester assisted in the
preparation of the estimates and the tables.