BLS DAILY REPORT, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1997: New orders for manufactured durable goods jumped 4.8 percent to $195 billion in November, with heightened demand for transportation equipment leading the advance, the Commerce Department reports. When transportation equipment is removed from the calculations, durable goods orders decreased 0.2 percent, for its second monthly decline. Demand for durables has increased in 5 of the last 6 months, and in the year to date new orders are 7 percent greater than in the same period last year (Daily Labor Report, page D-1; The Washington Post, page C1). __The New York Times (page D3) says that more evidence of slackening economic growth emerged today, even as the government reported that orders for relatively costly factory goods posted the biggest gain in almost 5 years in November. The surge in orders was concentrated in commercial aircraft and military hardware, produced over extended periods. The chief economist for Merrill Lynch said the November decline in orders for capital goods (machinery used in production, about half of which is sold abroad) "may be among the first signs that the Asian crisis is hitting home." The experimental geometric mean version of the CPI kept to pattern in its divergence from the CPI-U, rising 1.6 percent in the year ending in November, according to BLS data. The official CPI-U rose 1.8 percent in the same period. BLS is testing the experimental geometric mean CPI (called the CPI-XG) against another experimental index that uses the same arithmetic average method of calculating price changes as the CPI-U, but recalculates it to make a more suitable comparison with the geometric mean index. The differences between the two experimental indexes has converged in October to about 0.3 percentage point, about what BLS expected (Daily Labor Report, page A-10). U.S. economic growth in the third quarter was 3.1 percent at an annual rate, a little slower than previously reported, the Commerce Department says. Consumer spending increased 5.5 percent in the third quarter, after rising just 0.9 percent in the second. "Inflation remains invisible," said a Merrill Lynch senior economist, noting that the chain-weight price index for domestic purchases edged up only 1.3 percent in the third quarter (Daily Labor Report, page D-3; The Washington Post, page C1). For years, the government's economic statistics have been attacked as out of touch with today's economy. And no wonder - all the official employment data and other economic numbers have been collected, according to the Standard Industrial Classification, or SIC, a system that originated in the 1930s, and looks it. It was easy to find employment data for 31 different apparel industries. Meanwhile, the entire shrink-wrapped software industry was squished into one category. Now, starting with the 1997 Economic Census, which is being mailed to 5 million companies, the government is switching to a new way of classifying industries. Called the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) it includes information on more than 300 new industries, from satellite communications to casinos to nail salons, while grouping new and existing industries into more useful sectors. Eventually, virtually all official data - employment, wages, sales, capital investment, profits - will be available for the new sectors and industries. This major revision will put a tremendous burden on the government's statistical agencies, already hampered by tight budgets. The first NAICS data won't appear until early 1999 and won't be fully integrated into the federal statistics until 2004 at the earliest. Moreover, the difference between old SIC and new NAICS industries is so great that many historical comparisons will become difficult to make. But such disruptions are the price to be paid for a clearer picture of the new information-driven economy (Business Week, December 29, page 42). The Business Outlook of Business Week, December 29, page 74, reports that a cooldown - not a recession - is in the forecast. But the big unknown is still Asia. Business Week expects the U.S. economy to grow 2.4 percent next year, measured by fourth-quarter to fourth-quarter growth in real gross domestic product, and consumer inflation to edge up only to about 2.5 percent, as a pickup in service prices offsets a continued decline in goods inflation. And after the unemployment rate declines slightly from November's 24-year low of 4.6 percent, we look for joblessness to rise to 4.8 percent by yearend, amid slower growth..
<<application/ms-tnef>>
- Going semi-off line, Michael Perelman Mon 22 Dec 1997, 18:17 GMT
- capitalist progress, Michael Perelman Mon 22 Dec 1997, 18:16 GMT
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Mon 22 Dec 1997, 15:29 GMT
- <Possible follow-up(s)>
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Tue 23 Dec 1997, 21:19 GMT
- BLS Daily Report, Richardson_D Wed 24 Dec 1997, 21:54 GMT
- Holiday Greeting and Year-end Reflection, Michael Eisenscher Mon 22 Dec 1997, 08:26 GMT
- Fixing on LM, valis Mon 22 Dec 1997, 04:01 GMT
- <Possible follow-up(s)>
- Re: Fixing on LM, MIKEY Mon 22 Dec 1997, 13:36 GMT
- MAI again. Question for Max., Michael Perelman Mon 22 Dec 1997, 03:53 GMT