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Chapter 11.
Industry Productivity Measures
Methods
and Sources
Output
Industry output indexes are developed from data collected
by the Bureau of the Census and other sources. Output
indexes are developed as a deflated value of production
or physical quantity of production of an industry. Each
of these methods is discussed in turn.
Deflated value output indexes. More than
two-thirds of the industry output indexes are derived
from data on the value of industry output adjusted for
price change. The adjustment for price change is
accomplished by dividing the value of output by a price
index and is known as a deflated value method.The
resulting indexes are conceptually equivalent to indexes
that are developed using data based on physical
quantities of products.
To make maximum use of the comprehensive data from the
Economic Censuses, output indexes are first derived from
data for two consecutive quinquennial censuses; these
indexes are referred to as benchmark indexes. Annual
indexes for intercensal years are adjusted to the
benchmark levels for the census years.
Benchmark indexes. For
manufacturing industries, with the deflated-value
methodology, current-dollar values of shipments are
deflated with appropriate price indexes for each of the
5-digit product class groups, resulting in quantity
indexes. The Tornqvist formula presented above is used in
the computation of the real-value-of-shipments index for
the industry. Additionally, to arrive at the final
benchmark output index of production, adjustments are
made to reflect net changes in inventories, changes in
industry coverage, resales, and intraindustry transfers.
Benchmark indexes are developed every 5 years, based on
data from Census of Manufactures.
For trade industries, benchmark indexes
are computed from sales data reported in the Census of
Retail Trade. Current-dollar sales are deflated with
appropriate price indexes for each category of
merchandise in the industry, yielding constant-dollar
sales. The Tornqvist formula is then used to calculate
the real sales index for the industry. Additionally, to
arrive at the final benchmark output index of production,
an adjustment is made to reflect changes in industry
coverage. Benchmark indexes are developed every 5 years,
based on data from the Census of Retail Trade.
Benchmark indexes for the services
industries are computed from data reported in the Census
of Service Industries. The methodology is similar to
that used in developing the indexes for the retail trade
industries.
Benchmark indexes for the mining
industries are computed from data reported in the Census
of Mineral Industries.
Annual indexes. For
manufacturing industries, the value of shipments for each
5-digit primary product (wherever made) is deflated by an
appropriate price index. BLS producer price indexes
(PPI's) matching these 5-digit product classes are used
if available.If these price indexes are not available,
deflators are developed by weighting together more
detailed PPI's with base-year value of shipments weights.
For recent years, industry PPI's have been available for
over 90 percent of manufacturing industries.The Tornqvist
formula presented above is used in the calculation of the
real value-of-shipments index for the primary products of
the industry.
For each year, special coverage ratios
for the industry (total value of industry shipments of
all products to total value of primary products, wherever
made) are used to adjust the wherever-made indexes to the
industry basis. The resultant industry indexes are
further adjusted to reflect changes in inventories. These
adjustments yield the estimated industry indexes of
production.
For industries in trade and services,
data on the value of sales for each year are divided by
an industry price index to derive a measure of the change
in the industries' real output. These industry price
indexes are, for the most part, producer and consumer
price indexes developed by BLS. In the case of retail
trade industries, the industry price index is developed
by combining current-year consumer price indexes with
weights based on sales for each category of merchandise
in Census years.
Physical quantity output indexes.
Physical quantity output indexes are, where possible, a
Tornqvist aggregation of quantities of component
products. The basic data on quantities are generally
primary products of an industry classified into product
groups. The finest level of detail is used. For some
industries, the annual indexes are adjusted to
deflated-value benchmark indexes by linear interpolation.
The indexes for both the annual and benchmark series are
developed using the Tornqvist procedure.
Data for the physical quantity output
indexes come from numerous sources, including the U.S.
Departments of Commerce, Energy, and Transportation and
reports from various trade associations. Physical
quantity output indexes are used primarily for the mining
and transportation industries, and for raw commodity
manufactured products.
Sources. Industry output indexes
are prepared from basic data published by various public
and private agencies, using the greatest level of detail
available.
Data from the Bureau of the Census,
U.S. Department of Commerce, are used extensively in
developing output statistics for manufacturing, trade,
and services industries. The U.S. Geological Survey
compiles most of the information for the mining and
cement industries. Other important Government sources
include the U.S. Departments of Energy, Agriculture,
Transportation, and Housing and Urban Development, and
the Federal Railroad Administration, the Federal Reserve
Board, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Important sources of trade association data include the
Textile Economics Bureau, Inc., National Association of
Hosiery Manufacturers, Inc., National Canners
Association, Rubber Manufacturers Association, the
American Iron and Steel Institute, Association of
American Railroads, Ward's Communications, Rice Miller's
Association, National Automobile Dealers Association,
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association, American Bus
Association, International Sleep Products Association,
American Truck Association, American Paper Institute,
Anti Friction Bearing Manufacturers' Association, Fiber
Box Association, Institutional Furniture Manufacturers'
Association, VISA-CARD Network and Interbank Card Network
Association, National Automated Clearing House
Association, Agricultural Chemicals Association,
Association of Oil Pipelines, and the American Gas
Association.
Labor input
The labor input indexes are developed
by dividing the aggregate employee hours for each year by
the base-period aggregate. Because of data limitations,
employee hours are treated as homogeneous and additive
with no distinction made between hours of different
groups of employees. For industriesin which the
self-employed are important, indexes are constructed for
the hours of all persons, which includes paid employees,
partners, proprietors, and unpaid family workers.
Industry employment and employee hour indexes are
developed from basic data compiled by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics and the Bureau of the Census. For most private
nonagricultural industries, BLS publishes employment and
average weekly hours data for production or
nonsupervisory workers and employment data for all
employees. The Bureau of the Census publishes employment
and aggregate hours data for production workers and
employment data for all employees.
BLS and the Bureau of the Census differ in their
definition of employee hours and in their sampling and
reporting methods. In general, BLS data are the preferred
source for measuring industry employment and hours.
Census employment is the sum of an average of production
workers plus the number of other employees in mid-March.
The average of production workers is the average for the
payroll periods for the 12th of March, May, August, and
November. In contrast, the BLS employment statistics
program (790 Survey) collects employment and hours
monthly and the employment levels are benchmarked each
year to comprehensive data from the State unemployment
insurance programs. (See chapter 2.)
Only employment data are available for nonproduction
workers. The average annual hours of these workers must
be estimated.The estimates of aggregate nonproduction
worker employee hours for the manufacturing industries
are derived from published employment data, and estimates
of average annual hours per nonproduction worker.
Prior to 1968, the estimates of average annual hours
worked were calculated by multiplying the number of
workweeks in the year times the scheduled weekly hours.
From 1968 to 1977, the estimates of average annual hours
for nonproduction workers were based on data collected in
the BLS biennial surveys of employee compensation in the
private nonfarm economy. Since these surveys are no
longer conducted, the 1977 levels of average annual hours
per nonproduction worker are being carried forward until
other data become available.
For the mining industries, estimates for the hours of
nonproduction workers are based on data collected by the
Mine Safety and Health Administration. For the trade and
services industries, estimates are made for the hours of
partners, proprietors, and unpaid family workers using
unpublished data collected in the Current Population
Survey, and for supervisory workers using data from the Census
of Population.
All employee hours estimates for manufacturing
industries are derived by summing the aggregate hours for
production workers and the estimated aggregate hours for
nonproduction workers. For trade and services industries,
all-person hours estimates are derived by summing the
aggregate hours for paid employees and the estimated
aggregate hours for partners, proprietors, and unpaid
family workers.
Next: Multifactor
Productivity Measures
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