Federal Reserve Economic Data

Table Data - Labor Compensation for Manufacturing: Heavy Duty Truck Manufacturing (NAICS 336120) in the United States

Title Labor Compensation for Manufacturing: Heavy Duty Truck Manufacturing (NAICS 336120) in the United States
Series ID IPUEN336120L020000000
Source U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Release Industry Productivity
Seasonal Adjustment Not Seasonally Adjusted
Frequency Annual
Units Millions of Dollars
Date Range 1987-01-01 to 2021-01-01
Last Updated 2023-03-06 12:17 PM CST
Notes Labor compensation, defined as payroll plus supplemental payments, is a measure of the cost to the employer of securing the services of labor. Payroll includes salaries, wages, commissions, dismissal pay, bonuses, vacation and sick leave pay, and compensation in kind. Supplemental payments include both legally required expenditures and payments for voluntary programs. The legally required portion consists primarily of federal old age and survivors’ insurance, unemployment compensation, and workers’ compensation. Payments for voluntary programs include all programs not specifically required by legislation, such as the employer portion of private health insurance and pension plans.
DATE VALUE
1987-01-01 1279.131
1988-01-01 1260.729
1989-01-01 1364.839
1990-01-01 1319.835
1991-01-01 1339.337
1992-01-01 1440.947
1993-01-01 1529.256
1994-01-01 1646.468
1995-01-01 1679.572
1996-01-01 1596.763
1997-01-01 1654.169
1998-01-01 1881.992
1999-01-01 2306.236
2000-01-01 2182.523
2001-01-01 1710.275
2002-01-01 1745.410
2003-01-01 1596.635
2004-01-01 1897.947
2005-01-01 2117.280
2006-01-01 2025.379
2007-01-01 1901.356
2008-01-01 1763.230
2009-01-01 1642.377
2010-01-01 1681.566
2011-01-01 2302.796
2012-01-01 2365.996
2013-01-01 2267.114
2014-01-01 2518.420
2015-01-01 2648.320
2016-01-01 2502.884
2017-01-01 2297.636
2018-01-01 2745.013
2019-01-01 2856.550
2020-01-01 2518.039
2021-01-01 2787.833

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