Revised Productivity Growth Stronger in 3Q
December 4, 2002
By Tom Moeller
·
Nonfarm labor productivity last quarter was revised up more than
expected. Consensus estimates were for a revision to 4.3%.
· A large upward revision to output, following the upward revision to GDP growth, was the source of the upward revision. Output was revised to 5.1% growth from 4.0% (AR). Hours worked were unchanged in 3Q, as reported last month. · Unit Labor costs were revised down, declining for the fourth quarter in the last five. Compensation growth was little changed from the earlier report of strong growth. · Manufacturing sector productivity was revised down slightly to 5.5% (5.8% y/y) from 5.9% . Nevertheless, unit labor costs fell 1.0% (-2.1% y/y), the fifth consecutive quarterly decline. · Productivity in the nonfinancial corporate sector, a figure derived from the income side of the National Income and Product Accounts, grew 5.7% (6.7% y/y). Unit labor costs were unchanged (-2.5% y/y).
|
| Nonfarm Business Sector (SAAR) |
3Q '02 Final |
3Q '02 Prelim. | 2Q '02 |
Y/Y |
2001 |
2000 |
1999 |
| Output per Hour | 5.1% | 4.0% | 1.7% | 5.6% | 1.1% | 2.9% | 2.4% |
| Compensation | 4.9% | 4.8% | 3.9% | 3.3% | 2.7% | 6.9% | 4.4% |
| Unit Labor Costs | -0.2% | 0.8% | 2.2% | -2.2% | 1.6% | 3.9% | 2.0% |
ISM Nonmanufacturing Index Firm
December 4, 2002
By Tom Moeller
·
The Institute for Supply Management business activity index of the
nonmanufacturing sector was much stronger than expected last month,
rising to the highest level since May. Consensus expectations were for a
slight increase to 54.0.· The overall index has remained above 50, the dividing line for expansion and contraction, since February. · Of the seasonally adjusted
subgroups, new orders rose sharply and imports rose slightly, but
employment fell. · Business activity for the nonmanufacturing sector is a question separate from the subgroups mentioned above. In contrast, the NAPM manufacturing sector composite index weights the components. · ISM
surveys more than 370 purchasing managers in more than 62 industries
including construction, law firms, hospitals, government and retailers.
The nonmanufacturing survey dates only to July 1997, therefore its
seasonal adjustment should be viewed tentatively. |
| ISM Nonmanufacturing Survey |
Nov |
Oct |
Y/Y |
2001 |
2000 |
1999 |
| Business Activity Index | 57.4 | 53.1 | 49.8 | 49.0 | 59.2 | 59.1 |
Factory Inventories Flat Again
December 4, 2002
By Tom Moeller
·
Manufacturing inventories were unchanged
in October after rising September. The initial report for September was
of no change. During the last three months, factory inventories have
risen 0.3%.
· Excluding the transportation sector inventory accumulation has been slightly stronger than for the total - unchanged in October but up 0.7% since June. · Increases in inventories continued to be led by the nondurable goods sector, up 2.6% during the last five months. Gains have been strong for petroleum, textile products, plastics and basic chemicals. · Decumulation in the durable goods sector continued unabated, down 0.2% m/m and 4.5% YTD. Declines have been widespread amongst industries. · Factory shipments rose 1.0% following two months of decline. For the year shipments have risen 3.0%. Gains have been strongest in nondurable goods industries (3.0% YTD), notably petroleum. Less petroleum, nondurable shipments were up 1.2% YTD in October. Prior months' figures were revised down. Shipments of durable goods rose a strong 1.3% in October (3.0% YTD. · Factory orders rose 1.5% following two months of decline led by higher orders for durable goods, up 2.4% and revised from the advance report of a 2.8% gain. The strong 4.5% rise in nondefense capital goods was little revised.
|
| Inventories |
Oct |
Sept |
Y/Y |
2001 |
2000 |
1999 |
| Mfg Inventories | 0.0% | 0.2% | -4.4% | -8.0% | 4.5% | 3.1% |