Productivity and Labor Costs Report for Q2 2017 (Revised)
Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) this morning released its quarterly report on Productivity and Unit Labor Costs for the second quarter of 2017 (revised):
Nonfarm Productivity
Predicted: +1.3%
Actual: +1.5%
Revised Reading from Previous Quarter: 0.0%
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Unit Labor Costs
Predicted: +0.3%
Actual: +0.2%
Revised Reading from Previous Quarter: +2.2%
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The yellow-highlighted figures represent the quarter-to-quarter change in non-farm productivity and unit labor costs for the United States.
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For non-farm productivity, a positive number represents an improvement in the efficiency of producing domestic goods and services in the U.S., and therefore can signify a favorable inflationary outlook, and vice versa.
The Unit Labor Costs report measures the costs related to producing each unit of output. A positive number can be a harbinger of rising inflation, and vice versa.
The "predicted" figure is what economists were expecting, while the "actual" is the true or real figure.
Click here to view the full Labor Department report (PDF.)
Nonfarm Productivity
Predicted: +1.3%
Actual: +1.5%
Revised Reading from Previous Quarter: 0.0%
=============
Unit Labor Costs
Predicted: +0.3%
Actual: +0.2%
Revised Reading from Previous Quarter: +2.2%
=============
The yellow-highlighted figures represent the quarter-to-quarter change in non-farm productivity and unit labor costs for the United States.
=============
Labor Productivity, Q2 2017 (Revised) |
=============
Unit Labor Costs, Q2 2017 (Revised) |
For non-farm productivity, a positive number represents an improvement in the efficiency of producing domestic goods and services in the U.S., and therefore can signify a favorable inflationary outlook, and vice versa.
The Unit Labor Costs report measures the costs related to producing each unit of output. A positive number can be a harbinger of rising inflation, and vice versa.
The "predicted" figure is what economists were expecting, while the "actual" is the true or real figure.
Click here to view the full Labor Department report (PDF.)
Labels: efficiency, hard_data, inflation, labor_costs, productivity
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