Bureau of Economic Analysis. Gross Domestic Product by Industry: GDP Gross Output | Industry: Wood products, Primary metals, Computer and electronic products, Electrical equipment, appliances, and components, Paper products, Plastics and rubber products, 1997 - 2012. Data-Planet™ Statistical Datasets by Conquest Systems, Inc. Dataset-ID: 003-006-004
Dataset: Gross output represents the value added by an industry less the costs of intermediate inputs like energy, raw materials, and semi-finished goods. Value added is measured by sales or receipts and other operating income, commodity taxes, and inventory change.
The industry economic accounts show the industry dimension of economic activity in the United States. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) -by-industry accounts provides information on value added, gross output, and intermediate inputs by industry for the US economy in both current and chained (real) dollars. This dataset also includes KLEMS (capital, labor, energy, materials, and purchased services) and employment data. Value added is a measure of the contribution of each private industry and of government to the Nation's GDP. It is defined as an industry's gross output (sales or receipts and other operating income, commodity taxes, and inventory change) minus its intermediate inputs (energy, raw materials, semi-finished goods, and purchased services). BEA publishes current-dollar estimates of an industry’s gross output and intermediate inputs, as well as the composition of its value added, which consists of compensation of employees, gross operating surplus, and taxes on production and imports, less subsidies. Chain-type price and quantity indexes of gross output, intermediate inputs, and value added are published by industry. Contributions to the percent change in real GDP are also published by industry group. Industries are defined according to the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS).
http://www.bea.gov/industry/gdpbyind_data.htm
Category: Industry, Business, and Commerce
Subject: Value, Economic Conditions, Industry
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis
Along with the Census Bureau and STAT-USA, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) is part of the Department of Commerce Economics and Statistics Administration. BEA produces economic accounts statistics that enable government and business decisionmakers, researchers, and the public to follow and understand the performance of the United States economy. BEA economic statisticsare k...