No. 376. INDEXES OF OUTPUT PER MAN-HOUR, HOURLY COMPENSATION, and Unit LABOR COSTS IN THE PRIVATE ECONOMY: 1950 TO 1972 [1967 100. Prior to 1960, excludes Alaska and Hawaii] 1 Refers to gross national product in 1958 prices. 2 Hours of all persons in private industry engaged in production: includes man-hours of proprietors and unpaid family workers. Based primarily on establishment data. Wages and salaries of employees plus employers' contribution for social insurance and private benefit plans. Also includes an estimate of wages, salaries, and supplemental payments for the self-employed. Source: U.S. Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, February 1973. Data from U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. No. 377. INDEXES OF OUTPUT PER MAN-HOUR-ALL EMPLOYEES AND PRODUCTION WORKERS, SELECTED INDUSTRIES: 1960 To 1971 [1967=100. Prior to 1960, excludes Alaska and Hawaii. See Historical Statistics, Colonial Times to 1957, series W 13-32 and W 44, for indexes on a 1947 base] NA Not available. 1 Man-hours worked, except as noted. Refers to output per employee. Nonsupervisory workers. Includes anthracite and bituminous coal. Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Indexes of Output Per Man-hour for Selected Industries, 1989, and 1947–70 (Bulletin No. 1692). No. 378. AVERAGE WEEKLY EARNINGS, IN CURRENT AND 1967 DOLLARS, PRIVATE NONAGRICULTURAL AND MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES: 1955 TO 1973 [Prior to 1960, excludes Alaska and Hawaii. Includes overtime. Based on reports from employing establishments and relate to full- and part-time wage and salary workers in nonagricultural establishments who worked during or received pay for, any part of the pay period which includes the 12th of the month. See headnote, table 379. See Historical Statistics, Colonial Times to 1957, series D 626-628, for related but not comparable data] 1 Preliminary. * Earnings in current dollars divided by the consumer price index on a 1967 base. 3 Average gross weekly earnings less social security and Federal income taxes. Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment and Earnings, monthly. In U.S. Council of Economic Advisers, Economic Report of the President, January 1973. No. 379. HOURLY AND WEEKLY EARNINGS IN PRIVATE INDUSTRY, BY INDUSTRY GROUP: 1960 To 1973 [Data are for production workers in mining and manufacturing, construction workers in contract construction, and nonsupervisory employees in other industries. Excludes agriculture] Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment and Earnings, monthly. No. 380. PERCENT CHANGES IN EARNINGS, COMPENSATION, AND PRICES: 1965 TO 1972 1 Average hourly earnings are on a "gross" basis reflecting not only changes in basic hourly and incentive wage rates but also such variable factors as premium pay for overtime and late-shift work and changes in output of workers paid on an incentive plan. 2 Reflects purchasing power of money earnings. 3 Based on employee compensation data from U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, and man-hours data from U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Includes employer contributions to social insurance and to private welfare and pension plans. Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Monthly Labor Review. No. 381. HOURLY AND WEEKLY EARNINGS (INCLUDING Overtime) IN CURRENT AND 1972 DOLLARS, SELECTED INDUSTRIES: 1960 To 1972 1 Earnings in current dollars divided by consumer price index on base 1972=100. Source: U.S. Council of Economic Advisers. Based on U.S. Dept. of Labor data. No. 382. INDEXES OF UNION WAGE RATES IN SELECTED TRADES: 1950 TO 1972 [1967=100. As of July 1, except as noted. Prior to 1965, excludes Alaska. Indexes of rates reflect changes in minimum hourly wage scales. Year-to-year changes in union scales are based on comparable quotations for each individual trade weighted by membership for current year. See Historical Statistics, Colonial Times to 1957, series D 642-653, for printing on 1948-49 base and other trades on 1947-49 base] 1 Includes lithographers. 2 As of Oct. 1. Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Union Wages and Hours, annual. No. 383. PRODUCTION WORKERS, MANUFACturing IndusTRIES-HOURS AND GROSS EARNINGS, BY STATES: 1960 TO 1972 1 For 1960, Alaska and Hawaii included in United States averages but individual State data not available. Represents Washington, D.C., Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area. Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment and Earnings, monthly. Compiled from data supplied by cooperating State agencies. No. 384. NONSUPERVISORY WORKERS, MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY AND PRIVATE NONFARM ECONOMY-PERCENT DISTRIBUTION BY AVERAGE HOURLY EARNINGS, UNITED STATES AND REGIONS: 1964 AND 1970 Excludes premium pay for overtime and for work on weekends, holidays, and late shifts. For composition of regions, see fig. I, p. xii] No. 385. PERCENT INCREASE IN AVERAGE PAY FOR SELECTED OCCUPATIONS AND Covers the 57-month period between June 1967 and March 1972. For further details, see National Survey of Professional, Administrative, Technical, and Clerical Pay, Bulletin No. 1764. ? Derived from gross hourly earnings by assuming that overtime paid for at rate of time and one-half. 3 Covers cities with 1970 population of 100,000 or more. Relates to cities of 100,000 population in 1970 and also to counties of this size in Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas that had county-wide school systems. Data derived from the National Education Association's biennial salary survey reports and relate to the 5 school years ending with 1970-71. Covers July 1966-1971. Basic salary scales reflect only statutory changes in salaries. Average salary rates show statutory changes and the effect of changes in the proportion of workers at each step within the salary ranges for individual grades. Average salaries measure the effect not only of statutory changes in basic pay scales and ingrade salary increases, but also changes in the proportion of workers in various grades. Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Current Wage Developments, Report No. 296, September 1972. |