Data for December 2013
PPI Detailed ReportData for December 2013EditorsVol. 17, No. 12Joseph KowalAntonio LombardozziLana BorgieBrian HergtContentsProducer Price Indexes, December 2013 . . . .Page1Changes to January 2014 PPI Detailed Report .5Producer Price Index to Transition from Stage-of-Processing to Final Demand-Intermediate DemandAggregation System .6Recalculated Seasonal Adjustment Factors and Relative Importance Figures to be Available onFebruary 14, 2014 .7ChartsFinished goods .Intermediate goods Crude goods .8910Producer Price Indexes1. Stage of processing 2. Selected commodity groupings by stage of process .3. Selected stage of processing groupings, seasonally adjusted 4. Net output of selected industries and industry groups .5. Net output of selected industries and their products .6. Commodity and service groupings and individual items . .7. Durability of product .8. Special commodity groupings 9. Material and supply inputs to construction industries 10. Experimental final demand . . 11. Experimental intermediate demand by commodity type . .12. Experimental intermediate demand by production flow . . 13. Experimental selected commodity groupings by final demand category . 14. Experimental selected commodity groupings of intermediate demand by commodity type .15. Experimental selected commodity groupings of intermediate demand by production flow . .111216171996152153155156158160163166169Technical note .173Tables
Producer Price Index Release DatesThe following is the schedule of release dates for Producer Price Index data for 2014.News releases are issued at 8:30 a.m. eastern time on each release date.Reference MonthRelease DateJanuary 2014Feb. 19, 2014February 2014Mar. 14, 2014March 2014Apr. 11, 2014April 2014May 14, 2014May 2014June 13, 2014June 2014July 16, 2014July 2014Aug. 15, 2014August 2014Sep. 16, 2014September 2014Oct. 15, 2014October 2014Nov. 18, 2014November 2014Dec. 12, 2014ii
Producer Price Indexes – December 2013The Producer Price Index for finished goodsadvanced 0.4 percent in December, seasonally adjusted. Pricesfor finished goods declined 0.1 percent in November and 0.2percent in October. At the earlier stages of processing, pricesreceived by producers of intermediate goods rose 0.6 percentin December, and the crude goods index climbed 2.4 percent.On an unadjusted basis, prices for finished goods increased 1.2percent in 2013 compared with a 1.4-percent advance in 2012.(See table A.)Leading the decrease, prices for fresh and dry vegetablesdropped 13.4 percent.Intermediate goodsThe Producer Price Index for intermediate materials,supplies, and components increased 0.6 percent in Decemberafter two consecutive declines. Nearly three-quarters of thebroad-based advance can be traced to the index forintermediate energy goods, which rose 1.9 percent. Prices forintermediate materials less foods and energy and forintermediate foods and feeds increased 0.2 percent and 0.4percent, respectively. The index for intermediate materials,supplies, and components was unchanged in 2013 following a0.4-percent advance in 2012. (See table B.)Stage-of-Processing AnalysisFinished goodsLeading the December rise in the finished goodsindex, prices for finished energy goods increased 1.6 percent.Also contributing to the advance, the index for finished goodsless foods and energy moved up 0.3 percent. By contrast,prices for finished consumer foods decreased 0.6 percent.Intermediate energy: Prices for intermediate energy goodsmoved up 1.9 percent in December, the largest rise since a3.6-percent jump in February 2013. Accounting for aboutsixty percent of the December increase, the index for dieselfuel climbed 7.9 percent. Higher prices for jet fuel andgasoline also were factors in the advance in the intermediateenergy goods index. (See table 2.)Finished energy: Prices for finished energy goods climbed1.6 percent in December, the largest advance since a 2.5percent jump in June 2013. Over half of the rise in Decembercan be traced to a 2.2-percent increase in the gasoline index.Higher prices for diesel fuel and home heating oil also werefactors in the advance in the finished energy goods index. (Seetable 2.)Intermediate core: The index for intermediate materials lessfoods and energy moved up 0.2 percent in Decembercompared with a 0.1-percent decline in November. Over threequarters of the increase can be attributed to a 1.3-percentadvance in prices for basic organic chemicals. A rise in theindex for biological diagnostics also contributed to higherintermediate core prices.Finished core: The index for finished goods less foods andenergy moved up 0.3 percent in December, the largest advancesince a 0.5-percent rise in July 2012. Nearly half of theDecember increase is attributable to prices for tobaccoproducts, which climbed 3.6 percent. Higher motor vehicleprices also contributed to the advance in the finished coreindex.Intermediate foods: Prices for intermediate foods and feedsrose 0.4 percent in December subsequent to a 0.9-percentdecrease a month earlier. Leading the advance, the index forprepared animal feeds moved up 2.3 percent.Finished foods: The index for finished consumer foods fell0.6 percent in December following no change in November.Chart 2. 12-month percent changes in the Producer PriceIndex for finished goods, not seasonally adjusted:December 2012 – December 2013Chart 1. Monthly percent changes in the Producer PriceIndex for finished goods, seasonally adjusted:December 2012 – December 2013Percent changePercent '12 JanFebMarAprMay June JulyAug SeptOctDec'12 JanNov Dec'131FebMarAprMay June JulyAug Sept OctNov Dec'13
Chart 4. 12-month percent changes in the Producer PriceIndex for intermediate goods, not seasonally adjusted:December 2012 – December 2013Chart 3. Monthly percent changes in the Producer PriceIndex for intermediate goods, seasonally adjusted:December 2012 – December 2013Percent changePercent -1.1-2-2Dec'12 JanFebMarAprMayJuneJulyAugSeptOctDec'12 JanNov Dec'132FebMarAprMay June JulyAugSeptOctNov Dec'13
Crude goodspetroleum. Increases in the indexes for natural gas and coalalso were factors in the advance in crude energy prices. (Seetable 2.)The Producer Price Index for crude materials forfurther processing rose 2.4 percent in December. For the 3months ended in December, prices for crude materials fell 1.1percent following a 0.7-percent decrease from June toSeptember. In December, the monthly advance was led by theindex for crude energy materials, which jumped 6.2 percent.Higher prices for crude nonfood materials less energy alsocontributed to the increase, rising 0.6 percent. By contrast, theindex for crude foodstuffs and feedstuffs moved down 0.3percent. (See table B.)Crude core: The index for crude nonfood materials lessenergy moved up 0.6 percent in December. For the 3 monthsended in December, prices for crude nonfood materials lessenergy advanced 1.5 percent compared with a 1.3-percentdecline from June to September. Most of the monthly increasein December is attributable to prices for carbon steel scrap,which rose 6.0 percent. Higher prices for corn also contributedto the advance in the crude core index.Crude foods: In December, prices for crude foodstuffs andfeedstuffs decreased 0.3 percent. From September toDecember, the crude foods index rose 0.6 percent aftermoving down 5.5 percent for the 3 months ended inSeptember. Leading the monthly decline in December, theindex for slaughter barrows and gilts dropped 9.7 percent.Crude energy: Prices for crude energy materials advanced6.2 percent in December. From September to December, theindex for crude energy materials decreased 3.6 percent afterincreasing 3.8 percent for the 3 months ended in September. InDecember, about two-thirds of the broad-based monthly risecan be traced to a 7.1-percent jump in prices for crude3
Chart 5. Monthly percent changes in the Producer PriceIndex for crude materials, seasonally adjusted:December 2012 – December 2013Chart 6. 12-month percent changes in the Producer PriceIndex for crude materials, not seasonally adjusted:December 2012 – December 2013Percent changePercent 3Dec'12 JanFebMarAprMayJuneJulyAugSeptOct-3.3-4Nov Dec'13Dec'12 JanServices AnalysisFebMarAprMay June JulyAugSeptOct-2.2Nov Dec'13passenger air transportation industry, which rose 5.7 percent.Higher prices for deep sea freight transportation and longdistance specialized freight trucking of new goods alsocontributed to the rise in the transportation and warehousingindustries index. In 2013, the transportation and warehousingindustries index advanced 2.1 percent.Trade industries: The Producer Price Index for the netoutput of total trade industries decreased 0.5 percent inDecember after falling 0.6 percent in November. (Tradeindexes measure changes in margins received by wholesalersand retailers.) Accounting for sixty percent of the Decemberdecline, margins received by gasoline stations withconvenience stores dropped 9.0 percent. Lower marginsreceived by electronics stores and by warehouse clubs andsupercenters also were factors in the decrease in the total tradeindustries index. In 2013, the total trade industries index rose0.7 percent.Services less trade, transportation, and warehousing: TheProducer Price Index for the net output of services less trade,transportation, and warehousing inched up 0.1 percent inDecember, the same as in each of the previous two months.Over half of the December advance can be attributed to a 0.5percent increase in prices received by general medical andsurgical hospitals. Higher prices for portfolio management andpassenger car rental also were factors in the rise in the indexfor services less trade, transportation, and warehousing. In2013, the index for services less trade, transportation, andwarehousing increased 1.6 percent.Transportation and warehousing industries: The ProducerPrice Index for the net output of transportation andwarehousing industries moved up 1.0 percent in Decemberfollowing a 0.4-percent decline in November. Most of theincrease can be traced to prices received by the scheduled4
Changes to January 2014 PPI Detailed ReportWith the publication of the January 2014 PPI Detailed Report,the Producer Price Index (PPI) will transition from the Stageof-Processing (SOP) aggregation system to the Final DemandIntermediate Demand (FD-ID) aggregation system. As aresult of this transition, several tables in this publication willbe changed, one table will be added, while two others will bediscontinued. The table below provides a summary of theforthcoming changes:Current PPI Detailed Report TableJanuary 2014 PPI Detailed Report Table123456789101112131415New r additional information on this transition, see page 6 of this publication, or contact the PPI Section of Index Analysis and PublicInformation at: (202)691-7705.5
Producer Price Index to Transition from Stage-of-Processingto Final Demand-Intermediate Demand Aggregation SystemEffective with the January 2014 PPI data release inFebruary 2014, BLS will transition from the Stage ofProcessing (SOP) to the Final Demand-Intermediate Demand(FD-ID) aggregation system. This shift will result insignificant changes to the PPI news release, as well as otherdocuments available from PPI. The transition to the FD-IDsystem is the culmination of a long-standing PPI objective toimprove the current SOP aggregation system by incorporatingPPIs for services, construction, government purchases, andexports. In comparison to the SOP system, the FD-ID systemmore than doubles current PPI coverage of the United Stateseconomy to over 75 percent of in-scope domestic production.The FD-ID system was introduced as a set of experimentalindexes in January 2011. Nearly all new FD-ID goods,services, and construction indexes provide historical data backto either November 2009 or April 2010, while the indexes forgoods that correspond with the historical SOP indexes go backto the 1970s or earlier.The FD-ID system will highlight the index for finaldemand, which measures price changes for goods, services,and construction sold to final demand: personal consumption,capital investment, government purchases, and exports. Thecomposition of products in the final demand price indexdiffers from that of the finished goods index in two majorrespects. First, it includes government purchases and exports.Second, it includes services and construction, which are notreflected in finished goods.The FD-ID system also includes two separate paralleltreatments of intermediate demand: price changes for goods,services, and construction sold to business as inputs toproduction. The first treatment, intermediate demand bycommodity type, measures price changes based on similarityof product and includes aggregate indexes for processed goodsfor intermediate demand, unprocessed goods for intermediatedemand, and services for intermediate demand.The second treatment, intermediate demand byproduction flow, is a stage-based system of price indexes,where price changes for goods, services, and construction canbe studied as they move through the production chain of theeconomy to final demand. This treatment includes four stagesof intermediate demand, which were established to maximizeforward flow of production through the economy, whileminimizing backflow of production.These FD-ID indexes are constructed using PPIcommodity indexes for goods, services, and construction,where products are assigned to various categories according tobuyer type and level of fabrication. A product purchased bydifferent classes of buyers is assigned to multiple FD-IDaggregates, with unique weights allocated to each aggregatebased on the product’s value of shipments to each buyer type.To assist with the transition to the FD-ID system, PPIwill provide, on a monthly basis, a version of the PPI newsrelease based on the FD-ID model, starting with thepublication of July 2013 data in August. The document will belabeled “Experimental” through the December release inJanuary 2014 and will be posted to the PPI ExperimentalAggregation webpage about two weeks after each ww.bls.gov/ppi/experimentalaggregation.htm, alsocontains detailed methodological information for the FD-IDaggregation system. With the publication of January 2014 datain February 2014, the FD-ID version of the PPI news releasewill become the official news release document of record.Further information also is available from the PPISection of Index Analysis and Public information, at ppiinfo@bls.gov or (202) 691-7705.6
Recalculated Seasonal Adjustment Factors and RelativeImportance Figures to be Available on February 14, 2014Each year with the release of PPI data for January,seasonal adjustment factors and relative importance figures arerecalculated to reflect price movements from the justcompleted calendar year. In accordance with the transition tothe Final Demand-Intermediate Demand aggregation system,aggregate seasonal factor and relative importance data will bepublished on this new basis. The following seasonaladjustment information will be available on February 14, 2014(2 workdays prior to the release of PPI data for January 2014on February 19):relative importance tables for December 2013 will beavailable on February 14, 2014: Direct seasonal factors for commodity indexes for theyear 2014,Recalculated seasonal factors for the last 5 years (20092013) for the commodity indexes,Recalculated seasonal factors for the last 5 years (20092013) for the final demand-intermediate demand indexes. Final demand by individual commodities,Final demand by component series,Individual commodities of intermediate demand bycommodity type,Component series of intermediate demand by commoditytype,Individual commodities of intermediate demand byproduction flow,Component series of intermediate demand by productionflow,Commodities, all levels,Wherever-provided services and construction.To obtain this information, visit the PPI website atwww.bls.gov/ppi or call the Division of Industrial Prices andPrice Indexes, Section of Index Analysis and PublicInformation at (202) 691-7705.This routine recalculation may result in revisions toseasonally adjusted indexes for the previous 5 years, whichalso will be posted on BLS website. In addition, the following7
Chart 1. The Finished Goods Index and its component indexes, January 2008through December 2013, 12-month percentage changesPercent changePanel A121086420-22-4-6Finished goods-8Panel B54321Finisheds ed goods otothere tthana foodsoods aanddeenergye gy0Panel C1086420-2-4Finished consumer foods-6Panel D403020100-1020-20-30-402008Finished energy goods200920102011820122013
Chart 2. The Intermediate Goods Index and its component indexes, January 2008through December 2013, 12-month percentage changesPercent changePanel A20151050-5-10-15-20Intermediate materials, supplies, and componentsPanel B151050-5-10I tIntermediatedi t materialst i l lesslfoodsf d andd energyPanel C302520151050-5-10-15-20Intermediate foods and feedsPanel D5040302010010-10-20-30Intermediate energy goods-402008200920102011920122013
Chart 3. The Crude Goods Index and its component indexes, January 2008 throughDecember 2013, 12-month percentage changesPercent changePanel A6040200-20-40Crude goods for further processing-60Panel B6040200-20-40Crude nonfood materials less energy-60Panel C40200-20Crude foodstuffs and feedstuffs-40100Panel D806040200-20-40-60-802008Crude energy materials200920102011Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Producer Price Index Program1020122013
Table 1. Producer price indexes and percent changes by stage of processing[1982 100]GroupingRelativeimportanceDec. 20121Unadjusted percentchange to Dec. 2013from:Unadjusted indexSeasonally adjusted percent 2013Sept. toOct.Oct. toNov.Nov. toDec.Finished goods. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Finished consumer goods. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Finished consumer foods. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Crude. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Processed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Finished consumer goods, excluding foods. . . . . . . . . . . .Nondurable goods less foods. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Durable goods. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Capital equipment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Manufacturing industries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Nonmanufacturing industries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0233.5153.7165.3167.3164.5196
6.2 percent in December. From September to December, the index for crude energy materials decreased 3.6 percent after increasing 3.8 percent for the 3 months ended in September. In December, about two-
Bruksanvisning för bilstereo . Bruksanvisning for bilstereo . Instrukcja obsługi samochodowego odtwarzacza stereo . Operating Instructions for Car Stereo . 610-104 . SV . Bruksanvisning i original
10 tips och tricks för att lyckas med ert sap-projekt 20 SAPSANYTT 2/2015 De flesta projektledare känner säkert till Cobb’s paradox. Martin Cobb verkade som CIO för sekretariatet för Treasury Board of Canada 1995 då han ställde frågan
service i Norge och Finland drivs inom ramen för ett enskilt företag (NRK. 1 och Yleisradio), fin ns det i Sverige tre: Ett för tv (Sveriges Television , SVT ), ett för radio (Sveriges Radio , SR ) och ett för utbildnings program (Sveriges Utbildningsradio, UR, vilket till följd av sin begränsade storlek inte återfinns bland de 25 största
Hotell För hotell anges de tre klasserna A/B, C och D. Det betyder att den "normala" standarden C är acceptabel men att motiven för en högre standard är starka. Ljudklass C motsvarar de tidigare normkraven för hotell, ljudklass A/B motsvarar kraven för moderna hotell med hög standard och ljudklass D kan användas vid
LÄS NOGGRANT FÖLJANDE VILLKOR FÖR APPLE DEVELOPER PROGRAM LICENCE . Apple Developer Program License Agreement Syfte Du vill använda Apple-mjukvara (enligt definitionen nedan) för att utveckla en eller flera Applikationer (enligt definitionen nedan) för Apple-märkta produkter. . Applikationer som utvecklas för iOS-produkter, Apple .
December 2014 Monday December 1. Tuesday December 2. Wednesday December 3. Thursday December 4. Friday December 5. Saturday December 6. Sunday December 7. Monday December 8. Tuesday December 9 - Fall Semester Ends. Wednesday December 10- Reading Day. Thursday December 11- Final Examinatio
Mary Wolf—December 14 —December 6 Youth Birthdays Adelaide Bass—December 30 Addy Chytka—December 21 Nyabuay Diew—December 17 Quinn Feenstra—December 8 Blaine Fischer—December 21 Liam Fischer—December 22 Danielle Krontz—December 10 Hunter Lake—December 22 Hailey Lieber—December 15
och krav. Maskinerna skriver ut upp till fyra tum breda etiketter med direkt termoteknik och termotransferteknik och är lämpliga för en lång rad användningsområden på vertikala marknader. TD-seriens professionella etikettskrivare för . skrivbordet. Brothers nya avancerade 4-tums etikettskrivare för skrivbordet är effektiva och enkla att