SHIPMENTS TO FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AGENCIES, 1979

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CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3
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April 17, 2007
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2
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June 1, 1981
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REPORT
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Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Current Industrial Reports U. S. Department of Commerce BUREAU OF THE CENSUS Shipments to Federal Government Agencies, 1979 MA -175 (79) -1 N FILE DEPT ( :v ELE,M.EE INSTRUCTIONS APPLY I.. CJ Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Issued June 1981 Shipments to Federal Government Agencies, 1979 MA -175 (79)-1 U.S. Department of Commerce Malcolm Baldrige, Secretary Joseph R. Wright, Jr., Deputy Secretary William A. Cox, Acting Chief Economist BUREAU OF THE CENSUS Daniel B. Levine, Acting Director Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 BUREAU OF THE CENSUS Daniel B. Levine, Acting Director Shirley Kallek, Associate Director for Economic Fields INDUSTRY DIVISION Roger H. Bugenhagen, Chief ACKNOWLEDGMENTS-This report was prepared in the Industry Division by Wayne McCaughey, Chief Special Projects Branch, and re- viewed by Mary W. Jenkins with the assistance of David Peterson, under the direction of John Wikoff, Assistant Division Chief for Commodity and Special Programs, and Jacob Silver, Assistant Division Chief for Minerals and Special Projects. Electronic computer programs were de- veloped by Stephen Potemkin under the direction of Charles Wood and John Wasil. Special acknowledgment is given to the many private firms and the Department of Defense which participated in these surveys. U.S. Bureau of the Census, Shipments to Federal Government Agencies, 1979, MA-175(79)-1 U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 1981. For sale by Data User Services Division, Customer Services (Publications), Bureau of the Census, Washington, D.C. 20233, or any U.S. Department of Commerce district office. Postage stamps not acceptable; currency submitted at sender's risk. Remittances from foreign countries must be by international money order or by a draft on a U.S. bank. Price, 90 cents per copy. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Contents Page INTRODUCTION ................................................ 1 TABLES 1. Value of Shipments to Federal Government Agencies-Summary by Agency: 1977 to 1979 ............................................ 6 2. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, and Government Shipments, by Industry Groups: 1977 to 1979 ............................ . 3. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, and Government Shipments, by Industry and Agency: 1979 ...... . ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, and Government Shipments, by Industry and Agency: 1978 Revised ......................... 12 5. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, and Government Shipments, by Geographic Area and Agency: 1979 ..... .................... 16 6. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, and Government Shipments, by Geographic Area and Agency: 1978 Revised .................... 24 7. Employment, Costs, Value Added, and Value of Shipments, by Industry and Geographic Area for Department of Defense Facilities: 1979 ................ 30 8. Employment, Costs, Value Added, and Value of Shipments, by Industry and Geographic Area for Department of Defense Facilities: 1978 Revised ...................................................... 32 APPENDIXES A. Definitions of Standard Consolidated Statistical Areas and Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas ............................................ A.1 B. Limitations of the Data and Explanation of Terms ................... . . . . . . . . B.1 C. Description of Survey Sample and Estimating Procedure ....................... C?1 D. Survey Forms and Instructions ........................................ D-1 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Introduction SUMMARY OF SURVEY RESULTS The total value of all shipments by private manufacturing firms in 92 selected industries was estimated at $534.9 billion in 1979, of which $58.7 billion or 11 percent was accounted for by shipments to the Federal Government. The agency with the largest dollar volume of procurement during 1979 was the Department of Defense (DOD) with $43.0 billion, followed by the Department of Energy (DOE) with $3.1 billion and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) with $3.0 billion. The "other agencies" category (i.e., agencies other than DOD, NASA, and DOE; receiving agencies not known to the manufacturer; and plants which have less than $1 million in Federal shipments) was estimated at $9.6 billion. (See chart A.) Of the $58.7 billion of manufactured products shipped, $42.9 billion represented prime shipments, and $15.8 billion were done on indirect or subcontracts. Total employment in all defense-oriented industries was estimated to be 6.0 million, of which 998,500 employees were engaged in work related to Federal Government expenditures for manufactured products. By agency, DOD shipments sup- ported an estimated 719,800 employees; NASA, 46,200; DOE, 39,600; and "other agencies," 192,900. Ten industries shipped more than $1 billion of their products to the Federal Government. (See chart B.) These industries were led by SIC 3662, radio and TV communications equipment, at $10,249.5 million; SIC 3721, aircraft, at $7,932.5 million; and SIC 3761, guided missiles and space vehicles, at $7,778.6 million. Manufacturers in 17 States shipped more than $1 billion in manufactured goods to Federal agencies in 1979. This compares with manufacturers in 15 States in 1978. California led with $14,186.4 million; New York was second with $4,482.2 million; followed by Texas with $3,555.0 million; Missouri with $3,189.9 million; and Connecticut with $2,872.1 million. (See chart C.) Los Angeles led, among standard metropolitan statistical areas (SMSA's), with $7,805.0 million; second was St. Louis, Mo.-Illinois with $2,796.8 million; and third was San Jose with $2,640.8 million. (Appendix A contains definitions of the SMSA's.) The value of shipments to the Federal Government rose approximately 14 percent, from $51.7 billion in 1978 to $58.7 billion in 1979. Related employment increased by 4 percent, from 958,700 to 998,500. These data are based on a survey conducted by the Bureau of the Census, Report on Shipments to Federal Government Agencies in 1979. Appendix B provides limitations of the data and an explanation of the terms. This report continues several revisions in the methodology and data presentation which were initiated with the 1978 survey. (See Shipments to Federal Government Agencies, 1978, MA-175(78)-1). Appendix C de- scribes the major methodology change as well as the survey sample and estimating procedure. Appendix D contains repro- ductions of the report forms and instructions. In addition to form MA-175, which collected information on the amounts private industry shipped to the Federal Govern- ment, tables 7 and 8 contain information on Department of Defense-owned and -operated manufacturing facilities. In 1979, total revenue at these facilities amounted to $9.9 billion, an increase of 9 percent from the 1978 level of $9.1 billion. Total employment in 1979 was 240,400, a slight increase from the 240,300 employed in 1978. These data are based upon reports filed by the Department of Defense: Department of Defense- Owned and -Operated Establishments Primarily Engaged in Manufacturing and Assembly and/or Research and Development (Form MA-171). For 1979 and 1978, there were reports from 85 such installations. CONFIDENTIALITY OF DATA FOR INDIVIDUAL COMPANIES The Bureau of the Census is prohibited by law (title 13, United States Code) from publishing any statistics that disclose information reported by individual companies. In suppressing figures to avoid disclosing information on individual companies, geographic region and division totals are given precedence over individual States, and States are given precedence over standard metropolitan statistical areas. In tables showing industry detail, major industry group (two-digit) totals take precedence over industry group (three-digit) totals which, in turn, take pre- cedence over individual industries (four-digit). DESCRIPTION OF TABLES Abbreviations-The following abbreviations and symbols occur frequently in the tables and footnotes: Represents zero. (X) Not applicable. (NA) Not available. (D) Withheld to avoid disclosing figures for individual companies. n.e.c. Not elsewhere classified. DOD Department of Defense. DOE Department of Energy. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 NASA National Aeronautics and Space Administration. SMSA St d d t li ti i l RELATED REPORTS an ar me ropo tan sta st ca area. SIC Standard Industrial Classification. The Bureau of the Census also publishes the following related reports: Rounding of Data-For all tables, the sum of the detailed figures may not add to the total because of independent rounding of the figures making up the totals. Industry Classification-Establishments in these surveys are MQ-37D Quarterly Backlog of Orders of Aerospace ompanies C coded into industries and geographical areas based upon the M3-1 Monthly Manufacturers' Shipments, In- 1972 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC system' and the Ventories, and Orders 1977 Geographic Reference Manual2). Dollar Adjustment-All dollar figures are in current dollars; i.e., they have not been adjusted for price change. Current Industrial Report MQ-37D Odelle Thomas (301) 763-2824 ' Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Standard Industrial Classification Manual 1972. Washington, D.C. 20402: Sup erintendent of Documents U S Government Pri ti Offi M3-1 Report Ruth Runyan (301) 763-2502 , . . n ng ce. 2 Geographic Reference Manual, 1977 Economic Censuses, Reference Series: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, EC 77-R-1. To order Census Bureau publications Customer Services (DUSD) (301) 449-1600 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 CHART A. Distribution of Value of Manufacturers' Shipments to Federal Agencies: 1979 CHART B. Value of Shipments to the Federal Government 1978 by the 10 Leading Industries: 1978 and 1979 1979 2819- Industrial inorganic chemicals 3573- Electronic computing equipment 3662-.Radio and TV communication equipment 3724- Aircraft engines. and engine parts 3728- Aircraft equipment, n.e.c. 3731-,Shipbuilding and repairing 3761- Guided missiles and space vehicles 3764-Space propulsion units and parts $1.5 $2.2 $ $9.0 $7.9 1 $8.2 '? $1.4 $1.0 I I a I I I I I 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Billions of dollars $2.3 $2.3 Ar r,rniror-1 Fr%r P,=i,=rea 7nn7/na/17 - f'I,4-RnPMMR00049R001002540002-3 $1.3 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Table It. Value of Shipments to Federal Government Agencies-Summary by Agency: 1977 to 1979 Item 1979 1978 1977 Totals ............................... 534,942.0 431,212.4 381,273.3 Government shipments ....................... 58,713.2 51,719.5 50,196.3 Prime contracts .......................... 42,908.7 38,331.4 36,904.5 DOD .................................... 34,896.4 31,925.7 30,737.3 NASA ................................... 2,293.3 1,864.4 1,869.4 DOE .................................... 1,939.6 1,625.9 22,068.6 Other agencies ......................... 3,779.4 2,915.4 2,229.2 Subcontracts ............................. 15,804.5 13,388.1 13,291.8 Agency known ........................... 10,527.4 9,317.3 9,016.1 DOD .................................. 8,151.0 7,457.1 7,557.8 NASA ................................. 709.3 676.6 568.2 DOE .................................. 1,126.3 866.5 2452.0 Other agencies ............... ..... 540.8 417.1 438.1 Agency not known ....................... 5,277.1 4,070.8 4,275.7 DOD, NASA, DOE ....................... 12 472.9 ' 31 907.4 1,557.7 Other agencies ....................... , 445.7 Data from plants with less than $1 million in Federal shipments...... 2,804.2 2,163.4 2,272.3 Other than Government shipments ............. 476,228.2 379,492.9 331,077.0 1Represents value of shipments (Federal Government and private) for the industries covered. 2DOE was created in 1978 from several agencies. The data for 1977 are for the Energy Research and Development Administration (ERDA). 3Beginning with the 1978 form, the subcontract categories for DOD, NASA, DOE, and other agencies were combined for respondents. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 n J J O n .C .o N v1 N .o n J n ./1 n .o N n N W N W W O. n .~ n W ?-~ N O. .?1 w N O\ .+ .-1 W n O o. N .o a W O 0 v. J a Il1 n O O 1/. In .o J n W - .o n n N n J Y > N O Ui N N N n .-1 .-1 N W .-1 N N g ~ In .+ o n n a 1 .o W n v. W 1 n o a n N W D\ J n n N n O. n o. o. V1 .-1 .-1 W W O a n a N N. n W N o. W N c O O W 01? J O W n n W .o O. n - n V1 v~ O yi n N .y C h N N N v1 W .a N N W .o n W n o. .o O .-1 o T n n J P O W N. .D J W W O. W O W S N .o o. n .+ o W n n n N O .o W o. tl. .O O 1/1 ?O S W o. S O n n N V. n W N N N N V. 44 N N O - J N n N N n n vl W n n N S W n n .o S T ./1 V1 O n n .-1 n n n N o .a W N ~~}} O\ n n V1 O .?~ n n N O W n n o. Vl .o N n n N .~ O W O V1 o. 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N OO m tl tl 4 9 w 9 t0 N 0 i 8 g 6 N ttl .. i B 9 d c! tl Y V V tl 01 W d .!0 N . C L w W +Oi ai 01 o O Y U C tl O V ; M C O 0 > B i N A 11 t C N p 4 tl W N o O N N. 9 v M B tl O C w k C O U 0 4? 'C 60 r U N 4 U - F 4) O. C U o 0 N M 44 U Y 01 U a u . p r 1 ? d 01 w U M U C O w N W Y 0) d 7 d .4 6 w7 o O O c 1 U 9 0 0 tl 44 u 0 U tl 0> .r w a E0 'O ti tl m F 8 W u W E V] 9 O I t0 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 w . ? a Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Table 3. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, Government shipments Number Value adds Total Nalue Total Prime contracts Code Industr f b me of shi t y o y p n s employees manufactu a and receipts Value of Value of Employees shipments Employees shipments .All industries ..................................... 6,030.6 234,440.0 534,942.0 998.5 58,713.2 691.4 42,908.7 28 Chemicals and allied products ............................ 122.4 .7,572.4 17,940.5 21.8 2,313.1 20.0 2,142.3 2813 Industrial gases ....................................... 8.4 988.1 1,867.1 (S) (S) (S) (S) 2819 Industrial inorganic chemicals, n.e.c .................. 76.1 4,181.9 9,613.3 16.3 2,056.8 15.2 1,926.1 2873 Nitrogenous fertilizers ................................ 10.4 1,159.7 2,588.4 (S) (S) (S) (S) 2874 Phosphatic fertilizers .................................. 13.6 735.6 3,001.9 (S) (S) (S) (S) 2892 Explosives ............................................. 13.9 507.1 869.8 5.1 187.7 4.5 163.3 29 Petroleum and coal products .............................. 114.0 27,161.7 136,001.0 1.8 2,194.5 1.3 1,832.9 2911 Petroleum refining ..................................... 103.7 26,405.5 133,328.1 1.7 2,183.2 1.3 1,832.9 2992_ Lubricating oils and greases ........................... 10.3 756.2 2,672.9 (S) (S) (S) (S) 30 Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products ............... 151.5 3,980.4 8,262.9 5.9 283.0 2.7 144.8 3041 Rubber and plastic hose and belting .................... 36.9 1,047.8 2,133.2 0.6 24.0 0.4 14.6 3069 Fabricated rubber products, n.e.c ...................... 114.6 2,932.6 6,129.7 5.3 259.0 2.3 130.2 3293 Gaskets, packets,-and sealing devices .................... 33.5 909.7 1,570.8 0.8 26.8 0.1 4.4 33 Primary metal industries ................................. 371.2 14,188.8 39,757.6 19.1 1,278.1 2.1 182.1 3324 Steel investment foundries ............................. 16.6 455.8 785.9 2.2 116.7 (A) 0.6 3325 Steel foundries, n.e.c ................................. 57.1 1,847.0 248.5 (S) (S) (S) (S) 3339 Primary nonferrous metals, n.e.c ....................... 9.7 743.1 1,437.3 0.7 63.8 (A) 4.7 3351 Copper rolling and drawing ............................. 38.0 1,776.5 5,689.3 0.8 84.3 0.3 37.8 3353 Aluminum sheet, plate, and foil ........................ 36.7 1,889.4 8,162.7 0.6 123.7 0.1 12.0 3354. Aluminum extruded products ............................. 31.2 1,155.6 3,073.9 (S) (S) (S) (S) 3355 Aluminum rolling and drawing, n.e.c .................... 4.6 342.0 1,243.5 0.1 20.1 (A) 0.7 3356 Nonferrous rolling and drawing, n.e.c .................. 21.0 926.5 3,452.8 1.5 206.8 (A) 3.5 3357 Nonferrous wire drawing and insulating ................. 65.7 2,607.6 7,919.2 2.6 162.0 0.9 73.7 3361 Aluminum foundries ..................................... 70.0 1,863.4 3,626.0 6.0 244.0 0.7 43.9 3369 Nonferrous foundries, n.a.c ............................. 20.6 581.9 1,118.5 (S) (S) (S) (S) 34 Fabricated metal products ................................ 712.1 21,324.8 42,960.6 91.4 4,068.7 50.3 2,340.7 3441 Fabricated structural metal ............................ 115.8 3,213.0 7,841.4 6.3 311.5 4.2 194.7 3443 Fabricated plate work (boiler shops) ................... 144.7 3,403.4 6,983.1 12.5 380.1 1.8 103.7 3451 Screw machine products ................................. 53.2 1,485.7 2,790.6 1.6 70.9 - - 3452 Bolts, nuts, rivets, and washers ....................... 71.2 2,171.7 4,550.2 4.1 284.4 0.4 30.4 3462 Iron and steel forgings ................................ 37.5 1,497.0 3,385.2 2.3 202.5 (A) 0.7 3463 Nonferrous forgings .................................... 7.9 369.1 849.5 1.3 172.9 (A) 0.2 3482 Small arms ammunition .................................. 10.2 294.0 602.5 (S) (S) (S) (S) 3483 Ammunition, except for small arms, n.e.c ............... 21.5 537.8 1,074.6 19.8 847.4 19.0 805.0 3484 Small arms ............................................. 19.2 658.5 973.9 3.8 199.0 2.6 139.4 3489 Ordnance and accessories, n.e.c ........................ 24.8 787.2 1,011.1 19.0 745.4 15.4 643.6 3494 Valves and pipe fittings ............................... 114.3 4,007.8 7,225.7 5.3 302.2 1.5 98.4 3499 Fabricated metal products, n.e.c ....................... 91.8 2,899.6 5,672.8 11.4 321.7 1.5 96.5 35 Machinery, except electrical ............................. 1,430.0 51,332.5 97,114.7 72.4 3,879.9 34.7 2,185.1 3511 Turbines and turbine generator sets .................... 38.2 1,795.1 3,067.7 3.6 234.1 2.1 153.3 519 Internal combustion engines, n.e.c ..................... 107.7 4,051.2 10,255.3 3.8 342.6 1.8 180.3 531 Construction machinery ................................. 179.7 7,923.0 16,707.9 3.5 223.6 1.3 102.5 536 Hoists, cranes, and monorails .......................... 15.3 552.1 1,025.7 (S) (S) (S) (S) 537 Industrial trucks and tractors ......................... 35.4 1,171.8 2,836.5 (S) (S) (S) (S) 541 Machine tools, metal cutting types ..................... 73.3 2,744.8 4,607.5 0.8 43.2 0.2 11.9 542 Machine tools, metal forming types ..................... 31.9 907.0 1,933.5 2.1 22.1. 0.2 9.3 561 Pumps and pumping equipment ............................ 63.9 2,470.8 4,517.7 2.8 175.4 1.2 76.7 562 Ball and roller bearings ............................... 56.8 1,686.7 3,123.5 2.8 117.6 0.6 25.0 563 Air and gas compressors ................................ 34.6 1,291.2 2,447.0 1.2 72.3 0.6 42.1 566 Speed changers, drives, and gears ...................... 27.1 809.3 1,340.7 (S) (S) (S) (S) 568 Power transmission equipment, n.e.c .................... 31.8 1,097.2 1,906.1 1.4 77.4 0.3 18.1 569 General industrial machinery, n.e.c .................... 61.9 1,921.9 3,225.1 1.1 67.2 0.5 31.0 573 Electronic computing equipment ......................... 293.3 12,792.4 23,146.9 19.6 1,268.0 15.3 987.3 574 Calculating and accounting machines .................... 17.6 564.9 1,163.7 (S) (S) (S) (S) 579 Office machines, n.e.c ................................. 48.8 1,858.2 3,285.7 1.2 83.5 0.9 62.6 592 Carburetors, pistons, rings, valves .................... 36.2 1,266.2 2,020.6 (S) (S) (S) (S) 599 Machinery, except electrical, n.e.c .................... 276.5 6,428.7 10,503.6 23.6 842.3 6.5 230.3 6 Electrical and electronic equipment ...................... 1,579.9 51,637.5 90,600.5 259.3 13,090.1 166.0 8,691.2 612 Transformers ........................................... 49.1 1,515.2 2,989.9 (S) (S) (S) (S) 613 Switchgear and switchboard apparatus ................... 78.7 2,704.1 4,527.6 3.7 112.8 1.0 31.5 621 Motors and generators .................................. 105.2 3,223.1 5,861.9 5.9 244.9 1.6 67.6 622 Industrial controls .................................... 70.9 2,277.6 3,807.1 1.3 66.8 0.2 7.8 643 Current-carrying wiring devices ........................ 46.5 1,405.4 2,444.6 (S) (S) (S) (S) 644 Noncurrent-carrying wiring devices ..................... 31.9 1,072.5 2,063.3 (S) (S) (S) (S) 661 Telephone and telegraph apparatus ...................... 153.0 5,797.7 11,896.7 5.3 305.2 3.6 207.2 662 Radio and TV communication equipment ................... 393.0 13,122.9 20,625.3 195.4 10,249.5 145.6 7 640.7 671 Electron tubes, receiving type ......................... , 672 Cathode ray television picture tubes ................... 50.9 1,947.1 3,770.6 6.4 200.7 3.1 99.5 673 673 Electron tubes, transmitting ........................... 674 674 Semiconductors and related devices ..................... 139.5 5,096.1 7,795.3 5.5 307.0 0.4 20.6 675 675 Electronic capacitors .................................. 29.5 620.4 982.9 2.5 75.9 0.2 3 8 676 676 Electronic resistors ................................... 20.5 530.6 669.7 0.9 25.9 0.1 . 1 7 677 Electronic coils and transformers ...................... 26.1 441.7 727.9 (S) (S) (S) 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 . (S) 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 (Employment figures in thousands; 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 and Government Shipments, by Industry and Agency: 1979 Value of shipments Value of shipments Value of shipments Value of shipments Standard error of estimate .(percent) for total Government shipments' 1.8 (8) 170.8 5.2 234.6 0.2 43.3 15.3 1 930.3 1 1 104 9 1.1 (S) 130 7 (S) 0 4 (S) (S) (S) (S) , (S) . (S) . (S) (S) (5) 0.6 . (S ) (S) 24.4 . (S) (S) 4.7 48.1 (S) (S) 174 8 (A) (S) (S) (A) 0.1 (S) (S) 15.3 (S) (S) 1,930.3 (S) (S) 0.6 (S) (S) 78.3 (S) (S) . (A) (B) 12.9 0.5 0 4 361.6 1.1 1,636.6 2.4 0 3 0 7 555 2 . (S) 350.3 (S) 1.1 (S) 1,636.6 (S) 2.4 (S) (S) . 0.3 (S) . 0,6 (S) . 543.9 (S) 3.2 0.2 138.2 9.4 3.3 0.3 170.3 12.1 (A) (B) (A) (B) 2.6 112.5 3.0 128 8 3 0 0.3 11.9 . . 158.2 (A) (B) (A) (B) 2.3 100.6 17.0 1,096.0 6.6 498.8 (A) 1.9 0.7 53 1 11 8 724 3 2.2 (8) 116.1 0.8 50.7 (A) 0.8 (A) . 0.5 . 1 4 . 64 7 0 7 (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) . (S) . (S) . 0 59.1 0.2 16.7 (A) 0.2 0.5 42.6 (A) 4 3 .5 0.5 46.5 111.7 0.1 0.6 10.0 121.7 (A) 0.4 (A) 2.6 0.7 . 71.3 (5) (S) (S) (A) 2.0 0.1 19.4 0.1 (S) 6 8 (S) (S) (5) (S) (S) (S) 1.5 203.3 (A) . 0.1 (A) (A) 0.5 (A) (A) 1 5 12.8 206 7 1.7 88.3 1.2 86.1 (A) 0.5 (A) 0.9 . 1 4 . 74 5 5.3 (S) 200.1 (S) 2.0 (S) 89.5 (S) (A) (S) (A) (S) 0.2 (S) 5.4 (S) . 3.8 (S) . 149.1 (S) 41.1 2.1 1,728.0 116.8 44.8 3.4 2,360.7 143.8 0.8 56.1 13.6 597.0 32.2 1,054.9 10.7 1.6 276.4 70.9 1.4 135.6 0.2 14.3 (C) 2.1 (I) 122.4 (F) 8.8 (K) 107.8 3.7 254.0 1.1 63.3 (A) 1.9 - 1.6 3 0 70.9 219 2 2.3 201.8 1.1 102.2 (A) 3 1 . . 1.3 (S) 0 172.7 (S) 1.3 (S) 152.4 (S) (A) (S) . 0.4 (S) (A) (S) 0.3 (S) (E) 0.1 (S) 97.2 19.8 (S) .8 1.2 42.4 59.6 19.5 3.8 836.4 197.8 0.1 2.6 0.1 4.5 0.1 3.9 3.6 102.1 6.4 330.5 0.2 18.2 9.9 363 9 (A) 2 5 1.2 33 1 3.8 203.8 2.4 140.8 0.3 15.6 0.1 . 5 7 . 2 5 . 140 1 9.9 225.2 0.5 31.9 1.0 . 70.2 . 9.9 . 219.6 37.7 1,694.8 32.3 1,944.6 1.5 86.8 2.2 115.3 36 4 1 733 2 1.5 80.8 2.3 153.6 (A) (F) (B) (H) . 1 0 , . 53 7 2.0 162.3 3.3 312.1 (A) (B) (B) (G) . 0 3 . 22 2 2.2 121.1 2.3 168.9 (A) (A) 0.7 . 1 2 . 54 0 (S) (S) 0 (S) (S) (5) (S) (S) (S ) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (5) (S) . (S) (S) . (S) (S) .6 1.9 31.3 12.8 0.3 0.8 15.3 8.4 (A) (A) 0.5 27.9 1 6 98 7 1 7 1.3 13.7 . . . 108.9 (A) (B) (B) (G) 0 9 57 2.2 0 92.6 0.7 34.0 (A) (A) (F) . 2 1 .4- 81 3 .6 (S) 1.1 30.2 (S) 59.3 0.8 (S) 0.6 52.7 (S ) 31.7 (S) (A) (S) (S) (A) (S) . 0.4 (S) . 19.6 (S) 0.6 36.2 0.4 26 6 0.8 45.7 4.3 (S) 280.7 (S) 10.0 (S) . 647.4 (S) 1.2 (S) 74.6 (S) (A) 0.5 (S) 1.0 34.0 (S) 0.7 7.9 (S) 39.6 512.0 (S) 0.3 (S) 20.9 (S) 0.2 (S) 13.3 (S) (A) (S) 0.2 (S) (A) (S) 0.5 (S) 1.0 (S) 69.5 (S) 17.1 612.0 7.2 257.6 0.3 9.2 1.0 35.2 15.1 540.3 93.3 (S) 2.7 4,399.0 (S) 81.3 195.1 (S) 1.3 9,863.1 (S) 39 3 7.0 (S) 381.2 (S) 2.7 (S) 124.6 (S) 54.5 (S) 2,721.2 (5) 4.3 177.3 4.1 . 171.6 (A) 0.6 0.2 24.4 0.1 0.1 3.2 5.7 2.3 1 1 70.1 43 2 1.1 (S) (S) 59.0 (S) (S) 0.6 (S) (S) 32.7 (S) (S) (S) (S) (A) (S) (S) 0.1 (S) (S) 1.8 (S) (S) . 0.6 (S) (S) . 32.3 (S) (S) 1.7 98.0 3.6 190.6 0.1 5.2 (A) (A) 1 6 109 4 49.8 2,608.8 161.5 8,476.1 5.4 281.5 0.3 13.5 . 28.2 . 1,478.4 0.2 5.1 286.4 2.1 118.8 0.1 4.7 0.1 3.2 3 2 180 3 2.3 72.1 0.3 8.0 - 0.1 0.6 . 2 1 . 67 2 0.8 24.2 0.1 3.1 (A) 0.2 (A) 0.1 . 0.8 . 22 5 (S ) (5) (S) (S) (5) (S) (S) (S) (S) . (S) 2 (X) (X) (X) 18 17 12 19 19 (X) 11 5 (X) 6 11 3 18 19 6 1 1 6 (X) (X) 17 14 7 15 19 8 18 17 5 16 9 (X) 16 4 (x) 12 18 14 19 (X) 11 5 6 14 9 (7() 28 2813 2819 2873 2874 2892 29 2911 2992 30 3041 3069 33 3324 3325 3339 3351 3353 3354 3355 3356 3357 3361 3369 34 3441 3443 3451 3452 3462 3463 3482 3483 3484 3489 3494 3499 35 3511 3519 3531 3536 3537 3541 3542 3561 3562 3563 3566 3568 3569 3573 3574 3579 3592 3599 36 3612 3613 3621 3622 3643 3644 3661 3662 3671 3672 3673 3674 3675 3676 3677 - ...... 4 rgxr Polo-nco ,)nn7ina717 CAA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 10 Table-3. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, Government shipments Number Value added Total value Total Prime contracts Code Industry f b of shi ments o y p employees manufacture and receipts Value of Value of Employees shipments Employees shipments. 36 Electrical and electronic equipment--Continued 3678 Electronic connectors .................................. 34.1 1,187.0 1,889.4 3.9 190.4 0.8 30.8 3679 Electronic components, n.e.c ........................... 179.4 4,840.2 9,102.3 15.7 609.7 5.0 207.1 3691 Storage batteries ...................................... 27.2 1,232.8 2,769.2 (8) (8) (8) (8) 3692 Primary batteries, dry and wet ......................... 12.2 455.1 904.6 1.9 91.9 0.9 48.0 3693 X-ray apparatus and tubes .............................. 40.6 1,406.0 2,592.0 (8) (8) (8) (8) 3694 Engine electrical equipment ............................ 65.2 2,123.0 4,015.9 1.6 82.8 0.3 9.6 3699 Electrical equipment and supplies, n.e.c ............... 26.4 639.0 1,164.3 (8) (8) (8) (8) 37 Transportation equipment ................................. 941.5 32,405.4 63,803.1 462.0 28,249.3 377.9 23,269.9 3713 Truck and bus bodies ................................... 37.2 1,062.9 2,539.8 (8) (8) (8) (8) 3715 Truck trailers ......................................... 25.0 530.1 2,613.1 (8) (8) (8) (8) 3721 Aircraft ................. .......................... 262.9 9,480.2 21,600.2 114.8 7,932.5 108.5 7,500.0 3724 Aircraft engines and engine parts ...................... 137.0 5,618.2 11,121.5 53.6 4,649.3 25.8 2,749.8 3728 Aircraft equipment, n.e.c .............................. 126.2 3,952.3 6,896.3 43.6 2,344.6 22.7 1,232.6 3731 Shipbuilding and repairing ............................. 178.9 4,555.7 7,827.7 80.2 2,850.7 75.6 2,696.8 3761 Guided missiles and space vehicles ..................... 128.2 5,477.6 8,325.5 131.8 7,778.6 118.1 7 085.9 3764 Space propulsion units and parts ....................... 23.1 905.9 1,336.4 20.1 1,416.6 13.5 , 965.8 3769 Space vehicle equipment, n.e.c ......................... 9.2 322.0 459.6 6.1 372.3 5.1 317.0 3795 Tanks and tank components .............................. 13.8 500.5 1,083.0 10.4 815.0 8.2 685.0 38 Instruments and related products ......................... 537.7 22,054.8 34,917.5 50.4 2,571.6 23.9 1 526.8 3811 Engineering and scientific instruments ................. 48.9 1,601.9 2,507.4 10.1 454.3 4.1 , 216 9 3823 Process control instruments ............................ 53.8 1,959.5 2,890.4 1.5 71.5 0.6 . 24 9 3824 Fluid meters and counting devices ...................... 16.7 428.1 742.1 (S) (S) (S) . (S) 3825 Instruments to measure electricity ..................... 87.6 2,777.8 4,146.6 12.3 616.4 5.7 319 1 3829 Measuring and controlling devices, n.e.c ............... 35.7 771.4 1,371.1 5.2 205.1 2.0 . 102 6 3832 Optical instruments and lenses ......................... 43.6 1,514.0 2,367.0 7.6 381.8 4.6 . 243 4 3842 Surgical appliances and supplies ....................... 61.5 2,067.1 3,603.0 4.3 124.1 1.0 . 8 62 3843 Dental equipment and supplies .......................... 15.3 561.6 1,039.3 0.6 29.3 0.3 . 12 4 3851 Ophthalmic goods ....................................... 29.4 851.2 1,372.5 (S) (S) (S) . (S) 3861 Photographic equipment and supplies .................... 117.8 8,806.9 13,216.5 5.7 567.4 3.9 486 8 3873 watches, clocks, and watchcases ........................ 27.4 715.3 1,661.6 1.8 76.7 1.3 . 47.3 88 Miscellaneous industries2 ................................ 36.8 1,872.0 2,012.8 13.6 758.1 12.4 588.6 Note: In some instances, data are withheld to avoid disclosing the operations of individual companies. The data withheld are expressed in terms of the symbols and ranges shown below. In all instances, where the data are less than 0.1, the symbol (A) is used. Symbol Range Symbol Range Symbol Range (A) ....... Less than 0.1 (G) ....... 5.0 to 9.9 (K) ....... 100.0 to 249.9 (B) ....... 0.1 to 0.4 (H) ....... 10.0 to 24.9 (L) ....... 250.0 to 499.9 (C) ....... 0.5 to 0.9 (I)....... 25.0 to 49.9 (M)....... 500.0 to 999.9 (E) ....... 1.0 to 1.9 (S)....... 50.0 to 99.9 (N)....... 1,000.0 and over (F)....... 2.0 to 4.9 See text for a description of the methodology. - Represents zero. N.e.c. Not elsewhere classified. (S) Data suppressed because they did not meet publication standards. This includes cells where the total value of. Government shipments is less than $20.0 million or the standard error is 20 or greater. (X) Not applicable. 1The standard error estimates are those for the unadjusted (reciprocal) Government shipments that were reported on the MA-175. 2Represents nonmanufacturing facilities of the manufacturing companies canvassed, in addition to selected nonprofit research corporations working_ on Government contracts. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 and Government Shipments, by Industry and Agency: 1979-Continued ? Government shipments--Continued Standard error of ?ro DOD To NASA To DOE To other agencies p Subcontracts esos t) Code for total Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of shipments Employees Value of shipments Employees Value of shipments Government shipments' shipments shipments 3.1 159.6 2.0 93.7 (B) (E) (B) (E) 0 1.7 8 5 93.0 5 221 19 11 3678 3679 10.7 402.6 8.1 317.6 0.3 9.6 1.5 (S) 61. (S) . (8) . (8) (X) 3691 (B) (8) (B) (B) (8) (A) (8) (C) 0.2 (0) 0.2 (0) 19 3692 1.0 43.9 1.5 76.3 (8) (B) (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (X) 3693 (S) (8) (S) - (A) - 0.5 48.7 2 3694 1.3 73.2 1.1 34.1 (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (X) 3699 (8) (B) (8) (8) (8) 84.1 4,979.4 394.3 24,324.7 35.2 2,344.9 3.9 195.4 28.6 (S) 1,384.3 (8) 1 (X) 37 3713 (B) (8) (B) (8) (S) (S) (8) (S) (8) (S) (8) (8) (X) 3715 (8) (B) (S) 7 107 (8) 541 5 7 (8) 2.0 (8) 110.6 0.1 6.9 5.0 273.5 1 3721 6.3 27.8 432.5 1,899.5 . 50.5 . , 4,476.3 0.9 67.2 0.4 19.4 1.8 0 4 86.4 7 214 1 4 3724 3728 20.9 1,112.0 35.7 1,923.8 2.2 117.0 1.7 0 6 89.1 19.6 . 8.6 . 317.8 2 3731 4.6 13 7 153.9 692 7 71.0 102.7 2,513.3 5,906.9 20.8 1,436.5 . 0.4 21.3 7.9 413.9 1 3 3761 3764 . 6.6 . 450.8 13.7 981.5 5.9 404.9 0.3 17.3 0.2 0 1 12.9 2 5 8 3769 1.0 55.3 2.2 136.7 3.4 208.6 0.4 - 21.8 - . (A) . 0.5 2 3795 2.2 130.0 10.4 814.5 - - 26.5 1,044.8 28.9 1,612.6 1.3 75.8 0.6 24.6 6 5 19.6 3 3 858.6 142.0 3 9 38 3811 6.0 237.4 6.6 301.4 0.1 5.3 0.1 (A) . (C) . 1.0 49.4 19 3823 0.9 46.6 0.4 15.9 (B) (G) (S) (S) (S) (S) (B) (X) 3824 (8) (S) 3 (S) 7 7 (S) 427 6 (S) 0.5 27.6 0.1 2.8 4.0 158.4 6 3825 6.6 3 2 297. 102 5 . 1.9 . 103.8 0.1 2.8 0.1 2.4 3.1 96.1 18 9 3829 3832 . 3.0 . 138.4 6.0 292.2 (B) (H) (B) (0) (B) 1.0 3.6 56.4 78.1 11 3842 3.3 61.3 0.7 45.0 (A) (E) - - 0.5 25.6 13 3843 0.3 16.9 0.1 3.7 (S) - (B) - (S) (B) (S) (8) (S) (X) 3851 (S) 8 1 (S) 80 6 (S) 3.7 348.9 0.1 6.6 (A) 6.4 1.9 205.5 1 19 3861 3873 . 0.5 . 29.4 1.5 64.5 (A) ?(B) - (A) 0.3 12.1 1.2 169.5 8.0 394.8 (B) (H) (C) (I) 4.8 328.0 (X) 88 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 12 Table 4. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, and Government shipments Number value added Total value Total Prime contracts Code Industry of by of shipments employees manufacture and receipts Employees Value of Employees Value of shipments shipments All industries ............................... 5,591.1 197,023.4 431,212.4 958.7 51,719.5 677.7 38,331.4 28 Chemicals and allied products ...................... 128.4 7,938.3 17,408.5 29.8 1,874.1 25.8 1,710.8 2813 Industrial gases ................................. 7.9 781.8 1,385.0 0.5 140.5 0.3 125.0 2819 Industrial inorganic chemicals, n.e.c............ 82.1 4,878.0 9,801.4 23.8 1,505.4 20.6 1,385.7 2873 Nitrogenous fertilizers .......................... 12.1 1,073.4 2,661.9 (S) (S) (S) (S) 2874 Phosphatic fertilizers ............................ 14.5 771.4 2,863.7 (S) (S) (S) (S) 2892 Explosives ..7 11.8 433.7 696.5 5.4 220.4 4.8 194.9 29 Petroleum and coal products ........................ 111.9 14,409.2 98,671.3 1.8 1,993.0 1.5 1,845.0 2911 Petroleum refining ............................... 101.7 13,707.9 96,806.7 1.7 1,980.7 1.5 1,844.3 2992 Lubricating oils and greases ..................... 10.2 701.3 1,864.6 (S) (S) (S) (S) 30 Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products......... 137.5 3,594.0 6,938.1 5.4 254.0 2.9 155.0 3041 Rubber and plastic hose and belting .............. belting 38.2 1,060.6 2,007.8 1.0 30.9 0.7 21.6 3069 Fabricated rubber products, ............... 99.3 2,533.4 4,930.3 4.4 223.1 2.2 133.4 3293 Gaskets, packets, and sealing devices .............. 34.3 907.1 1,481.0 (S) (S) (S) (S) 33 Primary metal industries ........................... 438.5 11,562.8 32,644.6 14.6 1,001.3 1.0 140.5 3324 Steel investment foundries ....................... 12.0 325.3 487.3 0.9 39.9 (A) 0.1 3325 Steel foundries, n.e.c ........................... 57.3 1,608.6 2,592.2 4.0 168.2 0.3 11.4 3339 Primary nonferrous metals, n.e.c ................. 8.9 461.1 1,044.2 0.9 64.5 (A) 3.3 3351 Copper rolling and drawing ....................... 33.3 1,169.3 4,090.5 0.7 76.6 0.2 51.1 3353 Aluminum sheet, plate, and foil .................. 33.9 1,853.0 7,349.1 0.5 102.1 (A) 8.8 3354 Aluminum extruded products ....................... 28.5 830.9 2,414.0 0.9 70.3 (A) 2.4 3355 Aluminum rolling and drawing, n.e.c .............. 5.0 239.3 1,152.5 (S) (S) (S) (S) 3356 Nonferrous rolling and drawing, n.e.c............ 18.2 756.0 2,747.4 1.5 174.2 (A) 4.7 3357 Nonferrous wire drawing and insulating........... 68.0 2,421.6 7,060.4 2.0 136.7 0.5 56.1 3361 Aluminum foundries ............................... 55.5 1,425.6 2,825.5 2.4 123.6 (A) 0.1 3369 Nonferrous foundries, n.e.c ...................... 17.9 472.1 881.5 0.7 26.6 (A) 2.0 34 Fabricated metal products .......................... 648.5 19,959.3 37,317.8 76.4 3,469.9 42.8 1,739.8 3441 Fabricated structural metal ...................... 100.6 2,648.8 6,144.0 4.0 216.3 1.2 66.1 3443 Fabricated plate work (boiler shops) ............. 126.4 4,291.3 8,040.2 5.6 367.7 1.1 73.2 3451 Screw machine products ........................... 48.5 1,257.4 2,097.5 (S) (S) (S) (S) 3452 Bolts, nuts, rivets, and washers ................. 64.5 2,113.7 3,811.3 3.4 159.3 0.6 30.9 3462 Iron and steel forgings .......................... 41.4 1,474.7 3,191.3 3.6 245.1 0.6 42.2 3463 Nonferrous forgings .............................. 6.2 274.9 569.8 0.9 97.7 (A) 0.1 3482 Small arms ammunition ............................ 10.2 295.0 496.8 2.8 129.0 2.6 123.7 3483 Ammunition, except for small arms, n.e.c......... 21.3 556.6 873.7 16.0 566.8 13.2 460.7 3484 Small arms ....................................... 19.2 558.2 875.1 3.4 182.6 2.5 134.8 3489 Ordnance and accessories, n.e.c .................. 25.3 658.0 890.9 17.4 608.6 15.4 545.2 3494 Valves and pipe fittings ......................... 113.1 3,746.2 6,352.7 (S) (S) (S) (S) 3499 Fabricated metal products, n.e.c ................. 71.8 2,084.5 3,974.5 3.8 181.8 2.3 96.5 35 Machinery, except electrical ....................... 1,258.8 45,713.7 82,587.3 56.2 3,327.4 24.7 1,820.9 3511 Turbines and turbine generator sets .............. 39.5 1,478.8 2,733.0 4.5 271.7 2.9 181.4 3519 Internal combustion engines, n.e.c ............... 95.9 4,010.6 9,618.0 3.9 393.4 2.7 297.0 3531 Construction machinery ........................... 169.0 7,554.4 15,700.4 3.1 223.0 1.8 138.6 3536 Hoists, cranes, and monorails .................... 16.4 522.6 962.6 (S) (S) (S) (S) 3537 Industrial trucks and tractors ................... 31.4 1,062.2 2,425.3 0.5 45.4 0.3 33.5 3541 Machine tools, metal cutting types ............... 64.3 2,267.0 3,611.8 1.4 65.0 0.2 12.4 3542 Machine tools, metal forming types ............... 25.2 841.3 1,366.0 (8) (S) (S) (S) 3561 Pumps and pumping equipment ...................... 66.9 2,514.1 4,277.2 2.4 148.3 0.9 56.3 3562 Ball and roller bearings ......................... 52.7 1,663.0 2,946.3 2.2 89.7 0.6 25.1 3563 Air and gas compressors .......................... 32.9 1,347.5 2,341.7 0.7 52.3 0.3 18.7 3566 Speed changers, drives, and gears ................ 25.9 861.2 1,345.8 0.7 30.5 (A) 0.4 3568 Power transmission equipment, n.e.c .............. 34.0 1,154.5 1,839.0 (S) (S) (S) (S) 3569 General industrial machinery, n.e.c .............. 60.2 1,892.1 3,131.6 (S) (S) (S) (S) 3573 Electronic computing equipment ................... 232.1 9,627.8 16,557.6 16.0 1,095.1 12.4 899.5 3574 Calculating and accounting machines .............. 18.6 485.7 1,063.5 0.4 23.0 0.2 14.9 3579 Office machines, n.e.c ........................... 46.1 1,935.3 3,002.8 2.1 102.0 1.1 59.7 3592 Carburetors, pistons, rings, valves .............. 33.3 1,069.4 1,608.5 (S) (S) (S) (S) 3599 Machinery, except electrical, n.e.c .............. 214.4 5,426.2 8,056.2 14.6 625.4 0.5 42.1 36 Electrical and electronic equipment ................ 1,414.4 43,181.8 72,025.5 268.6 11,685.0 165.6 7,591.0 3612 Transformers ..................................... 44.6 1,280.7 2,451.6 2.4 101.7 0.9 47.3 3613 Switchgear and switchboard apparatus ............. 75.1 2,455.1 4,054.6 2.7 109.5 0.9 41.5 3621 Motors and generators ............................ 106.1 2,963.4 5,185.5 8.3 387.2 4.1 205.9 3622 Industrial controls .............................. 62.7 1,944.5 3,117.3 1.8 64.1 0.4 10.6 3643 Current-carrying wiring devices .................. 44.7 1,109.9 1,893.4 (S) (S) (S) (S) 3644 Noncurrent-carrying wiring devices ............... 27.3 896.0 1,719.8 (S) (S) (S) (S) 3661 Telephone and telegraph apparatus ................ 130.6 4,747.7 8,833.9 2.7 149:0 1.8 117.5 3662 Radio and TV communication equipment ............. 372.9 11,426.9 16,863.0 200.7 9;030.5 142.1 6,534.1 3671 Electron tubes, receiving type .................. 3672 Cathode ray television picture tubes ............. 36.2 984.4 1,698.1 4.5 147.8 2.3 81.7 3673 Electron tubes, transmitting ..................... 3674 Semiconductors and related devices ............... 130.8 4,203.1 6,435.4 13.1 572.0 4.2 236.0 3675 Electronic capacitors ............................ 30.9 523.9 830.1 2.1 54.7 0.2 4.3 3676 Electronic resistors ............................. 21.5 411.9 591.1 1.6 36.5 0.2 5.0 3677 Electronic coils and transformers ................ 21.3 323.1 542.5 (S) (S) (S) (S) Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Government Shipments, by Industry and Agency: 1978 Revised Government shipments--Continued Standard error of Subcontracts To DOD To NASA To DOE To other agencies estimate (percent) Code for total Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of Government h shipments shipments shipments shipments shipments s ipments 281.0 13,388.1 718.3 39,382.8 38.2 2,441.0 58.8 2,492.4 143.4 7,403.3 1 4.0 163.3 5.3 221.1 0.3 125.3 22.9 1,454.0 1.3 73.7 7 28 0.2 15.5 - - 0.3 125.0 - - 0.2 15.5 19 2813 3.2 119.7 0.2 8.6 - (A) 22.9 1,451.8 0.7 43.0 1 2819 (8) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (X) 2873 (S) (S) (8) (S) (S) (S) (8) (S) (S) (S) (X) 2874 0.6 25.5 5.0 207.3 (A) (B) (A) (B) 0.4 12.6 5 2892 0.3 148.0 1.2 1,520.3 (A) 8.3 - 0.1 0.6 464.3 16 29 0.2 136.4 1.2 1,519.6 (A) (G) - (B) 0.5 452.7 17 2911 (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (8) (S) (S) (S) (X) 2992 2.5 99.0 3.6 191.6 (A) (E) - (B) 1.8 61.2 5 30 0.3 9.3 0.5 14.8 - - - - 0.5 16.1 4 3041 2.2 89.7 3.1 176.8 (A) (E) - (B) 1.3 45.1 6 3069 (8) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (8) (S) (S) (S) (X) 3293 13.6 860.8 6.3 405.4 (A) 3.2 0.8 54.9 7.5 537.8 5 33 0.9 39.8 0.4 29.8 (A) 0.2 - - 0.5 9.9 17 3324 3.7 156.8 1.7 78.0 - (A) - (A) 2.3 90.2 15 3325 0.9 61.2 0.2 11.7 (A) 0.2 0.7 45.6 (A) 7.0 4 3339 0.5 25.5 0.1 9.9 (A) (B) (A) (F) 0.6 64.3 3 3351 0.5 93.3 0.5 97.5 - - - - (A) 4.6 3 3353 0.9 67.9 0.6 39.5 (A) 0.2 - - 0.3 30.6 9 3354 (8) (S) (8) (S) (S) (8) (S) (8) (S) (S) (x) 3355 1.5 169.5 (A) 0.2 - (A) - (A) 1.5 174.0 1 3356 1.5 80.6 1.2 58.7 (A) (E) 0.1 (F) 0.7 72.7 16 3357 2.4 123.5 1.1 53.4 - 0.1 (A) 1.1 1.3 69.0 19 3361 0.7 24.6 0.4 13.8 (A) 0.9 (A) 2.1 0.3 9.8 19 3369 33.6 1,730.1 42.4 1,899.9 1.3 60.4 10.7 397.0 22.0 1,112.6 7 34 2.8 150.2 1.5 60.7 - - (B) (F) (F) (K) 19 3441 4.5 294.5 2.1 162.7 0.3 19.0 1.0 52.9 2.2 133.1 11 3443 (8) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (x) 3451 2.8 128.4 1.3 56.0 (A) 1.9 2.1 101.4 3 3452 3.0 202.9 0.8 68.1 - - (B) (G) (F) (K) 5 3462 0.9 97.6 0.8 85.5 (A) 0.6 (A) 0.2 0.1 11.4 12 3463 0.2 5.3 2.7 124.8 - - - 0.1 4.2 1 3482 2.8 106.1 14.9 529.8 0.7 25.2 (A) 0.7 0.4 11.1 3 3483 0.9 47.8 3.3 181.1 - - 0.1 1.5 1 3484 2.0 63.4 7.9 290.4 (A) 0.1 9.2 312.7 (B) 5.4 3 3489 (S) (S) (8) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (X) 3494 1.5 85.3 1.7 67.0 (A) 0.6 0.3 18.5 1.8 95.7 18 3499 31.5 1,506.5 26.0 1,700.2 0.6 54.1 2.4 138.6 27.2 1,434.5 4 35 1.6 90.3 3.4 208.9 (B) (E) (B) (H) 0.8 39.0 1 3511 1.2 96.4 3.5 372.0 (A) (B) (B) (G) 0.2 12.5 9 3519 1.3 84.4 2.2 167.1 - (A) 0.1 0.3 0.8 55.6 9 3531 (S) (S) (8) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (x) 3536 0.2 11.9 0.3 30.2 - (A) (A) 0.3 0.2 14.9 19 3537 1.2 52.6 0.3 14.6 - (A) 0.2 7.5 0.9 42.9 19 3541 (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (8) (S) (S) (S) (x) 3542 1.5 92.0 1.7 102.8 (A) 0.1 9.3 0.6 36.2 8 3561 1.6 64.6 0.6 23.3 (A) 0.1 - - 1.6 66.3 8 3562 0.4 33.6 0.5 30.5 - (A) (A) 0.5 0.2 21.3 17 3563 0.7 30.1 (A) 2.0 (A) 0.4 - - 0.7 27.1 19 3566 (8) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (x) 3568 (8) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (X) 3569 3.6 195.6 8.9 518.6 0.4 37.8 0.4 34.9 6.3 503.7 2 3573 0.2 8.1 0.2 14.2 (A) 0.3 (A) 0.1 0.2 8.4 7 3574 1.0 42.3 0.4 19.9 (A) 0.2 (A) 0.2 1.7 81.7 19 3579 (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) 3 3592 14.1 583.3 2.5 124.0 0.2 12.4 1.1 54.1 10.8 434.9 16 3599 103.0 4,094.0 216.8 9,398.1 7.8 311.1 2.7 100.2 41.3 1,875.6 1 36 1.5 54.4 1.8 69.5 (A) 0.2 0.1 3.1 0.5 28.9 18 3612 1.8 68.0 1.6 61.9 (A) 0.4 0.1 1.6 1.0 45.6 16 3613 4.2 181.3 6.6 307.1 0.1 4.0 (A) 1.5 1.6 74.6 16 3621 1.4 53.5 0.9 28.2 0.1 1.2 (A) 1.5 0.8 33.2 15 3622 (S) (8) (8) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (X) 3643 (8) (S) (8) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (X) 3644 0.9 31.5 1.6 76.9 (A) 1.0 - - 1.1 71.1 7 3661 58.6 2,496.4 178.1 7,820.2 5.9 249.8 0.3 12.0 16.4 948.5 1 3662 3671 2.2 66.1 3.8 127.9 0.1 1.7 0.1 2.1 0.5 16.1 6 3672 3673 8.9 336.0 7.7 338.9 0.9 27.4 0.2 4.1 4.3 201.6 7 3674 1.9 50.4 0.4 9.3 - (A) (A) 0.6 1.7 44.8 10 3675 1.4 31.5 0.4 10.0 0.1 1.8 (A) 0.2 1.1 24.5 6 3676 (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (X) 3677 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Table 4. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments,. and Government shipments Number Value added Total value Total Prime contracts Code Industry of by of shipments employees manufacture and receipts Employees Value of Employees Value of shipments shipments 36 Electrical and electronic equipment--Continued 3678 Electronic connectors ............................ 30.2 996.6 1,417.1 3.9 143.3 0.9 31.7 3679 Electronic components, n.e.c ..................... 141.4 3,538.1 6,397.4 13.7 519.4 3.5 144.5 3691 Storage batteries...............:................ , 27.2 1,043.7 2,269.6 1.3 64.7 0.8 40.2 3692 Primary batteries, dry .n; nd wet ................... 11.4 337.1 677.2 0.9 37.9 0.4 21.4 3693 X-ray apparatus and tubes ........................ 34.1 1,286.1 2,066.3 2.5 72.8 1.9 44.3 3694 Engine electrical equipment ...................... 70.1 2,251.7 4,097.9 1.5 68.4 0.5 15.7 3699 Electrical equipment and supplies, n.e.c......... 22.3 457.9 883.7 (S) (S) (8) (8) 37 Transportation equipment ........................... 842.8 28,717.1 50,341.0 439.1 25,613.5 367.0 21,731.5 3713 Truck and bus bodies ............................. 36.4 996.1 2,292.5 0.7 35.7 0.4 18.9 3715 Truck trailers ................................... 32.0 939.4 2,498.0 (8) (8) (6) (8) 3721 Aircraft ......................................... 237.7 9,120.5 17,052.1 121.9 8,224.2 114.7 7,708.4 3724 Aircraft engines and engine parts ................ 115.7 4,438.9 7,510.1 49.4 3,535.6 25.1 2,181.0 3728 Aircraft equipment, n.e.c ........................ 110.2 3,540.2 5,414.5 45.6 2,321.6 23.8 1,262.3 3731 Shipbuilding and repairing ....................... 175.3 4,135.6 7,006.7 100.7 3,721.3 96.8 3,581.9 3761 Guided missiles and space vehicles ............... 93.8 4,176.6 5,990.2 85.9 5,623.9 78.8 5,223.9 3764 Space propulsion units and parts ................. 20.1 764.2 1,113.8 17.3 975.8 12.4 717.9 3769 Space vehicle equipment, n.e.c ................... 8.2 225.7 370.6 6.7 320.6 5.2 255.1 3795 Tanks and tank components ........................ 13.4 379.9 1,092.5 10.6 839.1 9.8 781.8 38 Instruments and related products ................... 514.3 19,561.0 30,178.8 53.4 1,936.9 34.5 1,092.6. 3811 Engineering and scientific instruments........... 46.2 1,517.8 2,244.9 12.0 502.9 5.1 243.2 3823 Process control instruments ...................... 50.6 1,609.6 2,328.5 2.0 70.1 1.2 42.3 3824 Fluid meters and counting devices ................ 17.0 489.4 749.9 (B) (8) (8) (S) 3825 Instruments to measure electricity ............... 76.6 2,162.1 3,368.6 18.2 363.9 16.5 230.9 3829 Measuring and controlling devices, n.e.c......... 35.6 865.4 1,369.4 5.3 170.9 2.7 91.4 3832 Optical instruments and lenses ................... 34.3 1,226.2 1,802.4 4.8 236.8 2.9 178.2 3842 Surgical appliances and supplies ................. 58.6 1,803.5 2,934.4 4.4 236.6 1.7 67.4 3843 Dental equipment and supplies .................... 17.4 491.6 909.4 0.5 20.1 0.3 11.8 3851 Ophthalmic goods ................................. 31.1 769.6 1,132.5 0.9 22.3 0.8 18.7 3861 Photographic equipment and supplies .............. 112.0 7,837.8 11,535.9 3.8 248.2 2.9 176.7 3873 Watches, clocks, and watchcases .................. 34.9 788.0 1,802.9 1.4 59.9 1.0 32.0 38 Miscellaneous industries2 .......................... 34.7 1,479.1 1,618.5 12.5 530.7 11.7 495.1 Note: In some instances, data are withheld to avoid disclosing the operations of individual companies. The data of the symbols and ranges shown below. In all instances, where the data are less than 0.1, the symbol (A) 1s used. Symbol Range (A) ....... Less than 0.1 (B) ....... 0.2 to 0.4 (C)....... 0.5 to 0.9 (E)....... 1.0 to 1.9 (F)....... 2.0 to 4.9 Symbol Range (G) ....... 5.0 to 9.9 (H) ....... 10.0 to 24.9 (I) ....... 25.0 to 49.9 (J)....... 50.0 to 99.9 Symbol Range (K) ....... 100.0 to 249.9 (L)....... 250.0 to 499.9 (M)....... 500.0 to 999.9 (N) ....... 1,000.0 and over - Represents zero. N.e.c. Not elsewhere classified. (8) Data suppressed because they did not meet publication standards. This includes cells where the total value of Government shipments is less than $20.0 million or the standard error is 20 or greater. (X) Not applicable. 1The standard error estimates are those for the unadjusted (reciprocal) Government shipments that were reported on the MA-175. No adjustment has been made to the standard errors for the ratio estimation to ASM levels (See appendix C.) 2Represents nonmanufacturing facilities of the manufacturing companies canvassed, in addition to selected nonprofit research corporations working on Government contracts. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Government Shipments, by Industry and Agency: 1978 Revised-Continued Government shipments--Continued Standard error of estimate Subcontracts To DOD To NASA To DOE To other agencies (percent) Code for total Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of Government shipments' shipments shipments shipments shipments shipments 3.0 111.6 1.9 66.5 (B) (F) (B) (F) 1.8 71.2 11 3678 10.2 374.9 6.9 280.2 0.3 14.1 1.6 62.7 4.9 162.4 10 3679 0.5 24.5 1.0 47.5 (A) (C) (B) (F) 0.2 14.2 19 3691 0.5 16.5 0.6 24.2 (A) (B) (B) (F) 0.2 (H) 18 3692 0.6 28.5 1.4 61.8 (B) (F) (A) (E) 1.0 6.5 13 3693 1.0 52.7 0.9 40.1 0.1 3.3 (A) 0.2 0.5 24.8 5 3694 (B) (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (B) (X) 3699 72.1 3,882.0 383.3 22,509.9 25.6 1,788.6 4.7 175.9 25.5 1,139.1 1 37 0.3 16.8 0.4 34.2 - (A) - - 0.3 1.5 12 3713 (8) (B) (B) (B) (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (X) 3715 7.2 515.8 116.6 7,937.5 1.3 128.8 1.0 0.7 3,0 157.2 1 3721 24'.3 1,354.6 45.1 3,341.0 0.8 50.1 0.4 26.1 3.1 118.4 1 3724 21.8 1,059.3 39.7 2,055.4 2.1 100.4 1.2 64.9 2.6 100.9 3 3728 3.9 139.4 89.5 3,307.5 - 0.6 17.1 10.6 396.7 4 3731 7.1 400.0 63.9 4,081.3 16.2 1,179.2 0.2 9.9 5.6 353.5 1 3761 4.9 257.9 12.3 651.9 4.6 305.4 0.3 14.9 0.1 3.6 1 3764 1.5 65.5 5.0 249.8 0.6 24.7 1.0 42.3 0.1 3.8 1 3769 0.8 57.3 10.6 839.1 - - - - 3 3795 8.9 844.3 25.5 1,194.7 2.4 81.6 1.4 147.2 11.5 513.4 3 38 6.9 259.7 8.4 366.0 0.3 14.8 0.5 29.6 2.8 92.5 9 3811 0.8 27.8 0.3 12.7 (B) (E) (B) (F) 1.5 52.8 7 3823 (8) (8) (B) (8) (8) (B) (8) (8) (8) (B) (X) 3824 1.7 133.0 4.5 243.9 0.5 15.3 12.0 12.8 1.2 91.9 1 3825 2.6 79.5 3.0 99.9 1.2 34.8 0.2 5.5 0.9 30.7 3 3829 1.9 58.6 3.2 179.9 (B) (0) (A) (C) 1.4 47.1 9 3832 2.7 169.2 1.4 56.5 (B) (0) (E) (J) 1.7 80.3 4 3842 0.2 8.3 0.1 2.7 - - - - 0.4 17.4 14 3843 0.1 3.6 0.8 17.8 (A) 0.1 (A) 0.1 0.1 4.3 19 3851 1.5 71.5 2.7 166.1 (A) 0.7 (A) 0.7 1.1 80.7 4 3861 0.4 27.9 1.1 49.2 - (B) (A) (B) 0.3 10.5 3 3873 0.8 35.6 7.6 329.0 (B) (J) (C) (I) 4.1 170.0 1 88 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 16 Table 5. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, and T t l Government shipments o a Line Division State and standard Number f Value added b value of h Total Prime contracts no , , metropolitan statistical areal o employees y manufacture s ipments and receipts Employees Value of shipments Employees Value of shipments 1. United States ................................ 6,033.6 235,040.0 534,942.0 998.5 58,713.2 691.4 42,908.7 2 New England ........................................ 578.2 20,527.0 36,273.8 122.9 6,718.1 77.0 4,099.0 3 Maine ............................................. 15.5 467.3 828.5 4.9 236.5 4.3 216.0 4 New Hampshire .................................... 35.1 1,260.0 1,951.0 7.9 366.0 4.3 242.1 5 Nashua ................ ......................... 10.7 324.4 571.9 (G) (K) (F) (K) 6 Vermont .......................................... 18.9 665.8 1,200.0 5.1 255.1 2.0 120.0 7 Massachusetts .................................... 256.4 9,839.5 16,949.7 45.8 2,724.7 29.0 1,803.9 8 Boston .............. ...............'............ 130.9 4;811.5 8,361.1 28.2 1,644.5 17.0 1,092.4 9 Fall 'fiver, Mass.-R.1 .......................... 2.8 105.3 193.3 (E) (J) (E) (J) 10 Fitchburg-Leominister .......................... 2.4 550.1 621.4 0.4 36.8 0.3 (I) 11 Lawerence-Haverhill, Mass.-N.H ................. 17.5 860.1 1,548.8 4.1 269.2 3.1 (K) 12 Lowell, Mass.-N.H .............................. 16.0 585.0 116.8 3.3 225.0 2.5 179.7 13 Pittsfield ..................................... (G) (L) (L) (F) (K) (F) (K) 14 Worcester ...................................... 17.7 764.2 1,537.0 1.3 146.1 (B) (H) 15 Rhode Island ..................................... 42.2 1,371.0 2,451.1 5.8 263.7 5.3 236.2 16 Providence-Pawtucket-Warwick, R.I.-Mass........ 47.2 1,505.8 3,675.7 4.1 186.4 3.6 158.8 17 Connecticut ...................................... 210.1 6,923.4 12,893.5 53.4 2,872.1 32.1 1,480.8 18 Bridgeport ..................................... 34.5 1,224.6 2,324.2 8.7 461.5 7.5 405.7 19 Danbury ........................................ 9.0 393.2 679.0 1.5 118.2 1.3 109.9 20 Hartford ....................................... 53.4 1,924.5 3,918.1 14.2 958.6 2.7 141.2 21 New Haven-Went Haven ........................... 20.4 616.8 1,240.0 2.5 160.0 0.3 8.5 22 New London-Groton-Norwich, Conn.-R.I........... 19.6 489.4 870.0 (H) (M) (H) (M) 23 Norwalk ........................................ 6.1 282.1 451.7 1.6 87.8 1.1 59.4 24 Middle Atlantic .................................... 1,038.8 42,044.2 82,269.8 138.5 8,663.8 88.4 6,047.1 25 New York ......................................... 412.0 18,163.1 31,993.6 65.9 4,482.2 48.5 3,127.0 26 Albany-Schenectady-Troy ........................ (H) (M) (N) (C) (J) (C) (I) 27 Binghamton, N.Y.-Pa ............................ 29.8 1,026.2 2,380.7 7.6 386.3 4.9 255.3 28 Buffalo ........................................ 26.9 1,027.8 2,344.5 2.8 127.5 2.6 43.3 29 Elmira ......................................... 4.5 163.8 247.2 0.5 19.1 0.3 8.9 30 Nassau-Suffolk ................................. 78.7 2,640.0 4,716.6 35.5 2,133.4 31.0 1,927.8 31 New York, N.Y.-N.J ............................. 94.1 2,662.5 5,822.4 10.6 557.7 6.2 316.0 32 Rochester ...................................... 95.3 7,254.0 10,635.5 (F) (M) (F) (L) 33 Syracuse ........................................ 13.6 387.2 1,341.9 (F) (K) (E) (J) 34 Utica-Rome ..................................... 16.1 743.4 1,417.0 (F) 136.4 (E) (J) 35 New Jersey ....................................... 258.3 8,883.6 17,334.1 42.3 2,485.3 22.1 1,891.3 36 Paterson-Clifton-Passaic ....................... 70.1 1,303.6 2,023.7 14.1 233.8 4.3 126.0 37 Trenton ........................................ 7.8 257.7 479.5 1.6 95.6 1.4 78.0 38 Pennsylvania ..................................... 368.5 14,997.5 32,942.1 30.3 1,696.3 17.8 1,028.8 39 Erie ........................................... 13.7 51.3 922.4 1.2 58.3 0.6 25.4 40 Harrisburg ..................................... 6.5 247.4 537.5 0.6 38.5 0.2 12.1 41 Lancaster ...................................... 12.5 398.9 923.4 1.6 63.9 0.7 25.9 42 Northeast Pennsylvania ......................... 17.3 534.5 1,232.5 1.9 106.9 1.3 83.3 43 Philadelphia, Pa.-N.J .......................... 147.3 6,658.2 18,321.7 20.7 1,296.4 14.8 964.2 44 Pittsburgh ..................................... 70.0 2,632.4 5,351.6 2.4 113.4 0.7 39.4 45 East North Central ................................. 1,392.3 53,386.0 121,231.9 93.2 7,002.9 52.0 4,252.0 46 Ohio ............................................. 356.6 13,820.1 32,671.1 31.0 2,732.0 18.7 1,904.2 47 Akron ........................................... 21.8 569.9 1,195.1 2.5 137.5 1.8 1.00.5 48 Canton ......................................... 28.6 834.9 2,212.2 1.0 47.8 0.2 14.0 49 Cincinnati, Ohio-Ky.-Ind ....................... 52.9 2,090.6 4,345.2 6.6 535.1 4.6 397.3 50 Cleveland ...................................... 72.2 2,917.8 5,754.0 8.6 554.9 4.7 309.4 51 Dayton ......................................... 28.4 784.4 1,572.3 3.5 123.2 2.0 77.3 52 Hamilton-Middletown ............................ 5.3 186.9 405.5 0.4 21.5 0.2 10.2 53 Lima ........................................... 14.3 638.5 2,617.7 1.7 93.8 0.8 54.7 54 Toledo, Ohio-Mich .............................. 25.1 1,362.3 4,775.8 0.8 59.3 0.6 41.3 55 Youngstown-Warren .............................. 11.2 453.0 1,139.0 0.9 98.2 - (A) 56 Indiana .......................................... 198.8 7,809.5 19,114.4 18.5 1,220.4 10.3 674.2 57 Anderson ....................................... 13.3 63.7 1,140.3 0.5 (1) (F) (A) 58 Fort Wayne ..................................... 20.1 615.2 1,559.0 3.7 178.1 (F) (K) 59 Gary-Hammond-East Chicago ...................... 13.6 1,091.7 4,647.7 1.5 133.0 (A) (H) 50 Indianapolis ................................... 46.5 1,658.6 3,796.4 (F) (L) (F) (L) 51 Lafayette-West Lafayette ....................... 5.0 205.2 447.9 0.3 21.0 (A) (C) Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Government Shipments, by Geographic Area and Agency: 1979 Government shipments--Continued Standard error of Subcontracts To DOD To NASA To DOE To other agencies estimate Line Value of Value of Value of Value of Value of (percent) for total. no. Employees shipments Employees shipments Employees shipments Employees shipments Employees shipments Government shipments 307.1 15,804.5 719.8 43,047.4 46.2 3,002.6 39.6 3,065.9 192.9 9,597.3 2 1 45.9 2,619.1 100.2 5,639.2 2.1 121.7 2.0 116.6 18.6 840.6 1 2 0.6 20.5 4.7 230.0 - - - - 0.2 6.5 6 3 3.6 123.9 5.2 277.2 0.1 2.8 0.2 9.3 2.4 76.7 14 4 (E) (I) (F) (K) - - - (C) (H) 18 5 3.1 135.1 4.2 243.1 0.1 (E) - (A) (C) (H) 12 6 16.8 920.8 36.3 2,244.3 0.5 29.3 0.4 20.5 8.6 430.6 3 7 11.2 552.1 21.8 1,372.0 0.4 23.1 0.3 17.6 5.7 231.8 4 8 (B) (F) (E) (J) (A) (B) (A) (C) 1 9 0.1 (F) 0.3 (H) - - - - 0.1 (H) 1 10 1.0 (J) 3.9 (K) (A) (F) (A) (G) 0.2 (H) 5 11 0.8 45.3 2.9 211.4 - - - - 0.4 13.6 5 12 (C) (I) (F) (K) (A) (A) (A) (E) (B) (F) 1 13 (E) (K) (C) (J) (A) (E) - - (B) (J) 13 14 0.5 27.5 5.5 247.8 (A) (B) (A) -(B) 0.3 15.5 5 15 0.5 27.6 3.8 167.5 (A) (B) (A) (E) 0.3 17.0 7 16 21.3 1,391.3 44.3 2,396.8 1.4 B7.8 1.4 86.5 6.3 301.0 3 17 1.2 55.8 7.6 404.9 0.2 5.6 - - 0.9 51.0 4 18 0.2 8.3 0.9 73.0 0.3 22.6 - 0.3 22.6 6 19 11.5 817.4 11.8 823.0 0.8 47.2 (A) 1.2 1.6 87.2 3 20 2.2 151.5 1.5 116.5 0.1 3.0 - - 0.9 40.5 9 21 (E) (J) (H) (M) (A) (C) (E) (J) (B) (I) 3 22 0.5 28.4 1.2 69.9 0.1 (F) (A) (B) 0.3 (H) 4 23 50.1 2,616.7 96.6 5,616.5 3.7 836.3 2.0 134.7 37.2 2,076.3 1 24 17.4 1,355.2 57.9 3,378.2 1.1 630.2 0.4 32.9 7.5 440.9 2 25 (B) (H) (B) (G) (A) (B) (B) (H) (C) (I) 8 26 2.7 131.0 7.0 355.0 0.4 22.7 (A) 1.0 0.2 7.6 1 27 0.2 84.2 2.0 87.8 0.2 5.3 (A) 0.4 0.6 34.0 1 28 0.2 10.2 0.2 8.4 (A) 0.1 (A) 0.2 0.3 10.4 6 29 4.5 205.6 32.2 2,011.7 0.5 27.4 0.1 4.4 2.7 89.9 2 30 4.4 241.7 7.8 430.8 0.3 15.8 0.2 15.8 2.3 95.3 8 31 (E) (J) (F) (L) (A) (F) (A) (G) (C) (K) 3 32 (E) (J) (F) (K) - (A) - (B) (B) (G) 14 33 (E) (J) (F) (K) (A) (B) (A) (B) (B) (H) 1 34 20.2 594.0 21.7 1,205.7 1.2 119.0 0.3 40.0 19.1 1,120.6 19 35 9.8 107.8 (F) (K) (B) (F) - - (G) (I) 18 36 0.2 17.6 0.8 49.8 0.6 37.4 - (A) 0.2 8.4 11 37 12.5 667.5 17.0 1,032.6 1.4 87.1 1.3 61.8 10.6 514.8 6 38 0.6 32.9 0.9 43.3 (A) 0.2 - - 0.3 14.8 19 39 0.4 26.4 0.5 31.2 - (A) (A) 0.1 7.3 5 40 0.9 38.0 (C) (I) (A) (B) (B) 3.5 0.6 26.7 18 41 0.6 23.6 1.7 99.8 - - 0.1 2.7 0.1 4.4 3 42 5.9 332.2 12.3 842.8 1.4 88.1 0.3 18.8 6.7 346.7 5 43 1.7 74.0 1.0 64.1 - (A) 0.8 26.7 0.6 22.6 12 44 41.2 2,750.9 60.7 4,310.8 0.8 60.9 4.0 892.7 27.7 1,738.5 2 45 12.3 827.8 18.9 1,344.9 0.4 29.4 3.6 869.3 8.1 488.4 4 46 0.7 37.0 2.3 127.0 (A) 0.9 0.1 6.1 0.1 3.5 1 47 0.8 33.9 0.5 41.4 (A) (A) - - 0.5 6.4 6 48 2.0 137.8 (G) (L) (B) (H) (B) (I) (C) (I) 5 49 3.9 245.5 5.0 327.3 (A) 1.3 0.1 2.6 3.5 223.7 18 50 1.5 45.9 1.3 51.5 (A) 0.8 1.5 53.3 0.7 17.6 17 51 0.2 11.3 0.2 7.9 (A) 0.1 - - 0.2 13.5 3 52 0.9 39.1 (E) (J) (A) (E)' (A) (C) (C) (G) 9 53 0.2 18.0 0.6 47.5 (A) 0.5 (A) 2.9 0.2 8.4 3 54 0.9 98.2 0.3 34.4 - - - - 0.6 63.8 1 55 8.2 546.2 14.7 983.3 0.2 15.9 (A) 2.3 3.6 218.9 5 56 0.5 (I) 0.4 (H) - - - - 0.1 (F) 1 57 (C) (H) (F) (K) (B) (F) - - (B) (H) 6 58 (E) (K) (E) (J) - - - - (B) (I) 1 59 (C) (J) (F) (L) (B) (H) (A) (E) (B) (H) 1 60 (B) (H) (B) (H) - - - - (B) (G) 5 61 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 18 Table 5. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments and T l t Government shipments a o Lists Division, State, and standard Number Value added b value of hi t Total Prime contracts no. metropolitan statistical areal of y pmen s s employees manufacture and Value of Value of receipts Employees shipments Employees shipments East North Central--Continued 62 Illinois ......................................... 413.8 17,332.1 41,607.1 16.9 1,302.3 7.8 538.0 63 Chicago ........................................ 286.8 11,761.5 27,085.9 11.5 878.8 5.3 355.0 64 Davenport-Rock Island-Moline, Iowa-Ill......... 12.4 449.4 1,658.3 0.4 48.1 (A) 1.1 65 Peoria ......................................... (I) (N) (N) (B) (I) (B) (0) 66 Rockford ....................................... 22.1 662.9 1,343.4 2.3 142.3 0.5 25.1 67 Michigan ........................................... 257.3 8,981.4 19,112.5 18.2 1,289.2 9.7 824.6 68 Detroit ........................................ 103.0 3,949.6 9,332.0 9.2 769.3 5.6 568.6 69 Grand Rapids ................................... 25.9 733.2 1,496.1 3.6 163.7 1.8 71.1 70 Jackson ........................................ 5.4 188.9 375.7 0.9 61.3 0.7 49.6 71 Kalamazoo-Portage .............................. 18.7 544.1 1,122.7 (C) 41.3 (B) (H) 72 Muskegon-Muskegon Heights ...................... 8.2 318.9 620.1 1.4 125.0 0.9 91.5 73 Wisconsin ........................................ 165.8 5,442.9 10,824.0 8.6 459.0 5.5 311.0 74 Milwaukee ...................................... 88.9 3,009.0 5,973.3 4.7 214.3 2.4 117.5 75 West North Central ................................. 492.8 16,434.8 36,281.2 73.3 5,023.9 59.2 4,323.5 76 Minnesota ........................................ 159.4 4,169.4 7,836.4 19.9 1,020.7 13.4 766.0 77 Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.-Wisc ............... 86.0 3,262.0 6,200.0 19.6 996.8 13.2 754.2 78 Iowa ............................................. 82.7 3,397.1 7,134.2 6.4 322.7 4.4 195.9 79 Cedar Rapids ................................... 17.4 604.8 1,167.8 3.3 155.2 2.4 112.5 80 Waterloo-Cedar Falls ........................... 4.2 150.0 431.4 0.5 25.7 (C) 25.2 81 Missouri ......................................... 151.7 5,562.1 11,848.1 38.1 3,189.9 34.7 2,995.1 82 Kansas City, Mo.-Kansas ........................ 62.2 2,384.0 6,053.1 8.0 391.7 7.7 374.0 83 St. Louis, Mo.-I11 ............................. 85.0 3,300.7 10,619.1 28.9 2,796.8 26.3 2,621.8 34 North Dakota ..................................... 1.8 199.4 584.6 (8) (8) (8) (8) 35 South Dakota ..................................... 3.4 116.9 247.7 (e) (S) (9) (8) 36 Nebraska ......................................... 18.1 649.3 1,321.2 (S) (8) (8) (8) 37 Kansas ............................................ 75.7 2,340.6 7,309.0 7.3 392.1 6.3 339.4 38 Wichita ........................................ 45.4 1,569.4 4,714.6 (G) (L) (0) (L) 39 South Atlantic ...................................... 503.4 17,071.5 35,857.0 116.6 6,415.3 89.8 5,197.6 30 Delaware ............................................. 9.3 626.2 1,881.3 0.3 90.6 0.2 87.9 31 Wilmington, Del.-N.J.-Md ....................... 9.4 654.6 2,044.5 0.2 88.2 0.1 85.3 32 Maryland ............................................ 73.0 2,308.2 4,132.4 25.9 1,208.8 18.9 907.9 33 Baltimore ...................................... , 47.7 1,490.8 2,903.2 19.5 886.0 14.6 658.2 4 District of Columbia ............................. 1.2 37.6 49.2 (8) (8) (8) (8) 5 Washington, D.C.-Md.-Va ........................ 29.7 970.7 1,608.6 9.5 478.4 6.9 364.6 6 Virginia .......................................... 88.5 2,806.5 5,545.8 33.6 1,349.0 30.4 1,185.0 7 Lynchburg ........................................ 4.9 214.0 368.9 0.4 (H) 0.4 (H) 8 Newport News-Hampton .............................. 20.6 413.0 1,200.5 (H) (M) (H) (M) 9 Norfolk-Virginia Beach-Portsmouth ................. 6.9 213.2 382.5 2.1 99.7 2.1 99.2 00 Roanoke ........................................ 4.7 213.4 344.0 0.5 34.3 0.4 31.4 01 West Virginia .................................... 12.9 585.4 1,818.0 1.1 88.7 0.2 11.4 02 Huntington-Ashland, W.Va.-Ky.-Chio.....,.......... (F) (K) (N) (B) (I) (A) (H) 03 Steubenville-Weirton, W.Va.-Ohio.................. 1.3 116.8 414.4 (B) (J) - - 04 Wheeling ....................................... 0.9 34.0 52.4 0.7 35.3 - - 05 North Carolina....................................... 86.5 3,603.1 7,168.4 6.4 255.5 2.3 173.2 06 Burlington........ ............................. . (F) (K) (L) (B) (I) (B) (I) 07 Wilmington ................... ................. 2.4 340.8 613.2 0.4 68.8 0.4 68.4 08 South Carolina ................................... 63.7 1,750.0 3,364.2 8.2 435.3 7.0 381.3 09 Georgia....... ...................................... 58.0 1,826.1 4,769.6 5.9 355.5 4.7 294.1 10 Atlanta ........................................ . 27.4 989.6 2,610.8 (F) (L) (F) (L)1 11 Augusta, Oa.-S.C .............. ................. (0) 1 (L) (M) (0) (L) (0) 9 (L) 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Government Shipments, by Geographic Area and Agency: 1979-Continued Government shipments--Continued Standard error of Subcontracts To DOD To NASA To DOE To other agencies estimate Line (percent) Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of Employee. f Value o for total Government no. shipments shipments shipments shipments shipments ehipmente2 9.1 764.3 8.5 594.9 0.2 14.8 0.2 11.6 8.0 681.0 8 62 6.2 523.8 6.0 420.2 0.1 5.9 0.1 9.4 5.3 443.3 6 63 0.4 47.0 0.3 45.7 - - - - 0.1 2.4 1 64 (B) (H) (B) (I) - (A) - (A) (B) (G) 1 65 1.8 117.2 1.5 90.7 0.2 8.7 (A) 2.3 0.6 40.6 19 66 8.5 464.6 12.2 1,051.5 (A) (C) (A) (B) 6.0 236.8 5 67 3.6 200.7 6.9 703.6 (A) 0.4 - - 2.3 65.3 7 68 1.8 92.6 3.0 (K) - (A) - (A) 0.6 (I) 17 69 0.2 11.7 0.7 48.6 - - - - 0.2 12.7 9 70 (B) (I) (C) (I) - - - - (A) (C) 1 71 0.5 33.5 (C) (J) (A) (B) - - (C) (I) 5 72 3.1 148.0 6.4 336.2 (A) (B) 0.2 (G) 2.0 113.4 12 73 2.3 96.8 3.6 152.7 (A) (B) (A) (B) 1.1 61.2 7 74 14.1 700.4 58.1 4,310.1 0.9 76.5 5.6 265.2 8.7 372.1 1 75 6.5 254.7 15.7 846.1 (B) (I) (B) (H) 3.6 133.2 2 76 6.4 242.6 15.6 834.2 (B) (I) (B) (H) 3.4 121.2 2 77 2.0 126.8 4.9 253.8 (A) 0.8 - - 1.5 68.1 4 78 0.9 42.7 (F) (K) (A) (C) - - (C) (I) 1 79 (A) 0.5 (C) (I) - - - - (A) (C) 1 80 3.4 194.8 30.5 2,827.6 0.3 (I) 5.4 (L) 1.9 73.9 1 81 0.3 17.7 2.1 115.5 - - 5.3 248.4 0.6 27.8 1 82 2.6 175.0 27.1 2,675.6 0.3 (I) (A) (F) 1.5 84.9 1 83 (8) (8) (8) (s) (s) (8) (8) (S) (S) (s) (x) 84 (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (s) (S) (S) (s) (S) (x) 85 (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (s) (8) (x) 86 1.0 52.7 (0) (L) (B) (0) (A) (B) (C) (I) 2 87 (C) (I) (G) (L) (B) (G) (A) (B) (B) (H) 1 88 26.8 1,217.7 84.7 4,939.8 2.4 144.1 8.1 438.2 21.4 893.2 1 89 0.1 2.7 0.2 80.7 - (B) - (B) 0.1 9.8 2 90 0.1 2.9 0.1 78.4 (A) (B) (A) (B) 0.1 9.7 1 91 7.0 300.9 18.9 936.3 0.5 29.0 0.2 6.2 6.3 237.3 2 92 4.9 227.8 14.2 679.7 0.2 9.1 0.1 4.9 5.0 192.3 3 93 (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (8) (S) (8) (8) (8) (x) 94 2.6 113.8 7.1 375.4 0.4 22.9 0.4 30.0 1.6 50.1 8 95 3.2 164.0 28.9 1,157.7 0.1 4.3 0.4 28.9 4.2 158.1 3 96 (A) (F) 0.1 (G) (A) (B) (A) (B) 0.3 (H) 1 97 (B) (H) (H) (H) - - - - (F) (J) 1 98 (A) 0.5 (F) 98.8 - - - (A) 0.9 19 99 0.1 2.9 0.5 32.7 (A) 0.2 - (A) 1.4 1 100 0.9 77.3 0.8 47.1 - - - - 0.3 41.6 5 101 (B) (I) (A) (H) - - - - (B) (I) 1 102 (B) (J) - - - - - (B) (J) 1 103 0.7 35.3 0.7 35.3 - - - - - - 1 104 4.1 82.3 1.6 85.7 (A) 0.6 (A) 1.7 4.8 167.5 17 105 (A) (B) (B) (I) - - - (A) (B) 1 106 (A) 0.4 - - - - - 0.4 68.8 10 107 1.2 54.0 (C) 32.8 - - (G) (L) (F) (J) 6 108 1.2 61.4 4.7 297.8 0.1 2.7 - - 1.1 55.0 4 109 (B) (I) (F) (L) (B) (F) - - (C) (I) 1 110 (A) (E) (A) (F) - - (G) (L) (A) (C) 1 111 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 20 Table 5. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, and Government shipments Total vi and standard Division State Number Value added value of Total Prime contracts ne , , l of by shipment s no. metropolitan statistical area employees manufacture and Value of Value of receipts Employees shipments Employees shipments South Atlantic--Continued 112 Florida .......................................... 110.3 3,528.4 7,128.1 35.1 2,631.9 26.1 2,156.8 113 Daytona Beach .................................. 1.2 45.7 62.3 1.0 45.2 0.4 14.9 114 Jagksonville ................................... 3.3 77.1 158.5 0.7 22.5 0.7 22.5 115 Melbourne-Titusville-Cocoa ..................... 13.8 405.6 643.4 6.4 314.3 3.8 192.1 116 Orlando... ..................................... 13.5 403.3 670.3 (G) (L) (G) (L) 117 Tampa-St. Petersburg ........................... 22.3 610.5 1,117.0 5.9 278.5 3.7 186.2 118 West Palm Beach-Boca Raton ..................... 12.0 346.6 1,846.8 (G) (N) (G) (N) 119 East South Central ................................. 250.2 8,902.8 22,277.8 26.6 1,570.2 18.3 1,049.6 120 Kentucky ......................................... 46.5 2,020.0 5,932.1 2.9 466.5 2.1 307.2 121 Owensboro ...................................... 3.2 99.4 263.6 0.3 20.2 0.2 12.5 122 Tennessee ........................................ 87.3 2,589.5 5,830.3 15.5 704.6 10.7 490.1 123 Knoxville ...................................... 11.7 459.5 1,136.2 (F) (K) (F) (K) 124 Nashville-Davidson ............................. 10.6 325.7 674.5 0.8 32.5 0.4 13.9 125 Alabama .......................................... 72.9 2,441.2 6,016.4 6.7 304.2 4.9 212.0 126 Birmingham ..................................... 21.4 59.8 1,359.2 (E) (I) (E) (I) 127 Huntsville ..................................... 10.4 317.0 602.8 2.7 99.7 1.9 70.6 128 Mobile ......................................... 11.2 446.8 1,244.8 (C) (J) (B) (I) 129 Mississippi ...................................... 43.5 1,852.1 4,499.0 1.5 94.9 0.6 40.3 130 Jackson ........................................ 3.9 137.4 289.8 0.5 25.0 0.3 17.0 131 ............................. West South Central.... 504.5 25,759.0 92,672.5 66.5 4,368.1 51.4 3,654.3 132 . Arkansas ......................................... 39.2 1,505.4 3,316.3 0.4 23.2 0.1 11.0 133 Louisiana ........................................ 55.9 4,789.9 20,531.8 6.2 529.3 6.0 493.2 134 Baton Rouge .................................... 6.2 951.6 4,839.8 (B) (J) (B) (J) 135 Lake Charles ................................... 3.2 722.7 3,915.0 (A) (I) (A) (I) 136 New Orleans .................................... 15.2 686.5 2,603.2 5.0 310.6 4.9 299.0 137 Shreveport ..................................... 15.5 550.8 1,572.5 1.0 61.1 0.9 57.3 138 Oklahoma ......................................... 79.8 3,170.1 9,328.1 5.3 260.6 2.0 144.5 139 Tulsa .......................................... 29.7 847.0 3,026.5 4.0 174.8 2.0 79.6 140 Texas ............................................ 329.6 16,293.6 59,496.3 54.6 3,555.0 43.3 3,005.6 141 Abilene ........................................ 0.5 33.5 480.4 (A) 23.2 (A) 23.2 142 Austin ......................................... 12.3 534.1 727.5 1.7 53.0 1.3 31.2 143 Beaumont-Port Arthur-Orange .................... 22.1 2,600.5 13,109.7 (B) (J) (B) (J) 144 Corpus Christi ................................. 5.2 788.3 4,383.0 0.1 198.3 0.1 195.4 145 Dallas-Fort Worth .............................. 114.2 3,456.5 7,556.9 42.6 2,598.1 34.6 2,286.9 146 Galveston-Texas City ........................... 4.4 317.0 5,080.3 (A) 67.7 (A) 40.1 147 Houston ........................................ 90.8 5,454.4 21,732.9 0.8 101.1 0.1 42.3 148 Texarkana, Texas-Ark ........................... (K) (I) (J) (E) (I) (E) (I) 149 Mountain ........................................... 194.0 7,346.3 17,470.8 38.5 2,373.7 20.8 1,441.8 150 Montana .......................................... 1.7 176.5 1,179.5 0.4 28.0 0.1 25.7 151 Idaho ............................................ 7.2 393.4 691.9 (S) (S) (S) (S) 152 Wyoming .......................................... 1.3 26.6 1,437.5 (S) (S) (S) (S) 153 ? Colorado ......................................... 56.3 2,184.6 4,814.3 10.4 778.5 8.1 627.4 154 Denver-Boulder ................................. 36.7 1,310.3 3,305.2 8.2 647.9 (G) (M) 155 New Mexico ....................................... 17.8 489.2 1,624.5 3.2 132.4 0.1 0.5 156 - Arizona .......................................... 74.0 2,772.3 4,734.5 16.3 880.7 9.2 554.6 157 Phoenix ........................................ 60.7 2,146.0 3,931.2 11.5 632.4 5.5 343.7 158 Tucson ......................................... (G) (K) (M) (F) (K) (F) (K) 159 Utah ............................................. 29.9 1,116.8 2,546.4 7.5 489.8 3.2 224.7 160 Salt lake City-Ogden ........................... 22.9 886.1 2,264.1 3.7 287.3 1.0 111.0 161 Nevada ........................................... 5.8 186.9 442.2 (C) (I) (A) (B) 162 las Vegas ...................................... 1.9 71.9 190.3 (C) (I) (A) (B) See footnotes at end of table. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Government Shipments, by Geographic Area and Agency: 1979-Continued Government shipments--Continued Standard Subcontracts To DOD To NASA To DOE To other agencies error of estimate Line (percent) Employees Value of shipments Employees Value of h Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of for total Government no. s ipments shipments shipments shipments shipmentsi 9.0 475.1 29.0 2,301.7 1.7 107.5 1.2 58.5 3.2 164.2 4 112 0.6 30.3 0.9 43.8 (A) 0.2 - - 0.1 1.2 1 113 - - 0.6 19.3 0.1 3.2 1 114 2.6 122.2 4.3 200.0 1.1 78.2 (A) 1.0 1.0 35.1 19 115 (E) (J) (G) (L) - (A) - (A) (B) (E) 15 116 2.2 92.3 4.0 192.1 0.6 24.6 1.2 56.9 0.1 4.9 1 117 (B) (I) (G) (N) (A) (F) - (A) (E) 2 118 8.3 520.6 13.6 707.7 0.9 48.6 9.1 595.9 4.0 218.0 1 119 0.8 159.3 0.7 (K) (A) 7.5 1.8 266.9 0.4 48.5 19 120 0.1 7.7 0.2 14.2 - (A) 0.1 5.9 - 0.1 1.9 121 4.8 214.5 6.0 284.4 0.1 6.1 7.3 328.6 2.1 85.5 6 122 (C) (I) (B) (H) (A) (B) (F) (K) (B) (H) 4 123 0.4 18.6 0.6 26.9 0.1 2.6 - - 0.1 3.0 19 124 1.8 92.2 5.2 230.9 0.8 35.6 (A) 0.1 0.7 38.2 8 125 (B) (G) (E) (I) (A) (B) - - (B) (F) 7 126 0.8 29.1 1.9 70.1 0.7 28.1 (A) 0.1 0.1 1.4 19 127 (B) (H) (C) (J) (A) (B) - - (A) (E) 10 128 0.9 54.6 0.7 48.8 - - (A) 0.3 0.8 45.8 1.9 129 0.2 8.0 0.5 23.9 - - (A) 0.3 (A) 0.8 1 130 15.1 713.8 49.1 3,544.0 3.2 193.2 1.8 64.7 12.4 566.2 1 131 0.3 12.2 0.1 10.6 - - - - 0.3 12.6 18 132 0.2 36.1 3.3 343.7 2.4 153.6 (A) 1.6 0.5 30.4 2 133 (A) (E) (B) (3) - - - - - (B) 1 134 (B) (A) (I) - - - - - (B) 1 135 0.1 11.6 (F) 143.6 (F) 153.6 - - (B) 13.4 2 136 0.1 3.8 0.9 57.1 - - (A) 1.1 0.1 2.9 1 137 3.3 116.1 3.1 196.6 0.1 2.8 (A) 0.1 2.1 61.1 9 138 2.0 95.2 3.1 134.5 0.1 2.8 (A) 0.1 0.8 37.4 13 139 11.3 549.4 42.6 2,993.1 0.7 36.8 1.8 63.0 9.5 462.1 3 140 - - (A) 23.2 - - - - - - 1 141 0.4 21.8 1.1 27.9 - (A) - (A) 0.6 25.1 16 142 (B) (H) (A) (H) - (A) - (A) (B) (J) 1 143 (A) 2.9 0.1 194.3 - - - - (A) 4.0 1 144 8.0 311.2 36.5 2,419.3 0.7 36.3 (A) 1.2 5.4 141.3 3 145 (A) 27.6 (A) 31.7 - - - - (A) 36.0 1 146 0.7 58.8 0.2 58.3 (A) 0.1 0.1 3.7 0.7 39.0 7 147 - (B) - (I) - - - - (E) (B) 1 148 17.7 931.9 22.5 1,542.8 5.2 349.6 0.6 22.7 10.2 458.6 1 149' 0.3 2.3 (A) 25.6 - - - - 0.4 2.4 3 150 (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (X) 152 (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (X) 152 2.3 151.1 6.0 441.3 (F) (K) (B) (G) 1.5 113.2 8 153 (E) (K) (F) (L) (F) (K) (B) (G) (E) (J) 6 154 3.1 131.9 0.9 74.1 - - 0.3 6.8 2.0 51.5 19 155 7.1 326.1 10.3 626.9 0.9 50.2 0.2 9.2 4.9 194.4 4 156 6.0 288.7 6.6 421.6 0.8 47.9 0.2 7.9 3.9 155.0 5 157 (B) (G) (F) (K) (B) (F) (A) (E) (B) (H) 3 158 4.3 265.1 5.2 364.8 1.5 80.4 (A) 1.2 0.8 43.4 4 159 2.7 176.3 3.1 253.9 0.1 4.9 - - 0.5 28.5 4 160 (C) (I) (A) (B) - - - - (C) (I) 2 161 (C) (I) (A) (B) - - - - (C) (I) 2 162 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Government shipments Total d d Number Value added value of Total Prime contracts Line ar Division, State, and stan of by shipments no. metropolitan statistical areal employees manufacture and Value of Value of receipts Employees shipments Employees shipments 163 Pacific ............................................ 1,109.3 43,568.4 90,607.2 321.5 16,577.2 233.6 12,843.8 164 Washington ....................................... 111.1 4,603.5 13,469.5 29.2 1,911.5 24.6 1,606.3 (K) 165 Richland-Kennewick ............................. 5.1 165.3 348.9 (E) (I) (K) (N) (C) (H) (N) 166 Seattle-Everett ................................. 91.9 6.0 3,462.0 254.2 9,939.9 592.0 0.4 23.9 0.1 3.5 167 168 Spokane ........................................ Tacoma .................. ....................... 3.4 104.1 300.5 0.8 77.2 0.8 77.1 169 Oregon ........................................... 56.7 1,994.0 3,372.7 4.9 275.7 2.6 133.9 170 Portland, Ore.-Wash ............................ 44.3 1,619.9 2,932.5 3.4 169.0 2.2 112.7 171 California ....................................... 938.7 36,685.4 72,584.5 286.9 14,186.4 206.1 10,907.9 172 Anaheim-Santa Ana-Garden Grove ................. 161.9 4,295.6 7,476.5 36.0 1,828.1 23.6 1,228.0 173 Los Angeles-Long Beach ......................... 399.9 16,529.3 38,581.7 90.6 7,805.0 68.6 5,836.3 174 Oxnard-Simi Valley-Ventura ..................... 7.8 286.3 492.5 2.8 161.5 1.9 113.6 175 Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario ............... 15.3 525.7 959.8 3.7 164.1 1.5 57.5 176 Sacramento ..................................... 3.8 147.1 276.6 2.1 120.3 1.5 83.7 177 San Diego ...................................... 59.7 1,738.0 3,126.3 21.8 1,084.4 16.2 854.0 178 San Francisco-Oakland .......................... 48.5 4,138.4 7,712.5 8.1 526.6 4.9 339.5 179 San Jose ....................................... 202.9 7,594.6 14,137.2 37.4 2,640.8 27.9 2,134.5 180 Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Lompoc ............... 9.7 173.2 498.2 5.2 266.4 2.5 159.2 181 Santa Ross ..................................... 3.4 126.1 203.0 0.6 38.2 0.2 17.4 182 Alaska ........................................... 1.7 38.7 200.0 (B) (H) (A) (H) 183 Hawaii ........................................... 1.1 246.8 980.5 (B) (K) ' (B) (K) 184 Honolulu ....................................... 1.1 246.8 980.5 (B) (K) (B) (K) Note: In some Instances, data are withheld to avoid disclosing the operations of individual companies. The data withheld are of symbols and ranges shown below. in all'instances, where the data are less than 0.1, the symbol (A) is used. Table 5. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, and Symbol Range (K)....... 100.0 to 249.9 (L)....... 250.0 to 499.9 (M)....... 500.0 to 999.9 (N) ....... 1,000.0 and over (A) ....... less than 0.1 (0) ....... 5.0 to 9.9 (B) ....... 0.1 to 0.4 (H)....... 10.0 to 24.9 (C) ....... 0.5 to 0.9 (I)....... 25.0 to 49.9 (E)....... 1.0 to 1.9 (J) ....... 50.0 to 99.9 (F)....... 2.0 to 4.9 See text for a description of the methodology. - Represents zero. N.e.c. Not elsewhere classified. (S) Data suppressed because they did not meet publication standards. This includes =cells where the total value of Government shipments is less than $20.0 million or the standard error is 20 or greater. (X) Not applicable. 'Standard metropolitan statistical areas in more than one State are listed only one time under their principal State. This total includes the activities in all States for that SMSA. See appendix A for a definition of the SMSA's. 2The standard error estimates are those for the unadjusted (reciprocal) Government shipments that were reported on the MA-175. No adjustment .has been made to the standard errors for the ratio estimation to ASM levels (See appendix C.) Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-R DP84B00049R001002540002-3 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Government Shipments, by Geographic Area and Agency: 1979-Continued Government shipments--Continued Standard Subcontracts To DOD To NASA To DOE To other agencies error of estimate Line (percent) no Employees Value of shipments Employees Value of shipments Employees Value of shipments Employees Value of shi ments Employees Value of hi for total. Government . p s pments shipments2 87.9 3,733.4 235.3 12,436.5 27.0 1,171.7 6.4 535.2 52.8 2,433.8 1 163 4.6 305.2 24.5 1,599.6 (C) (I) (C) (K) 3.2 166.5 2 164 (B) (G) (A) (E) - - (C) (K) (B) (H) 4 165 (F) (K) (I) (N) (C) (I) (B), (F) (F) (C) 2 166 0.3 20.4 0.1 19.4 - - - - 0.3 4.5 1 167 - 0.1 0.3 37.1 - - - 0.5 40.1 1 168 2.3 141.8 2.6 137.9 0.1 3.6 0.6 49.0 1.6 85.2 13 169 1.2 56.3 2.0 90.8 0.1 3.5 0.1 6.7 1.2 68.0 19 170 80.8 3,278.5 207.9 10,508.3 26.3 1,129.4 4.9 379.5 47.8 2,169.2 15 171 12.4 600.1 26.6 1,412.7 1.8 107.8 0.3 20.7 7.3 286.9 8 172 22.0 1,968.7 49.8 4,979.4 16.5 1,344.7 3.0 250.7 21.3 1,230.2 19 173 0.9 47.9 2.2 127.2 0.4 25.6 (A) 0.7 0.2 8.0 13 174 2.2 106.6 2.5 124.2 0.2 7.7 - 1.0 32.2 18 175 0.6 36.6 1.7 103.7 0.3 12.2 0.1 2.7 (A) 1.7 1 176 5.6 230.4 15.2 805.6 1.3 75.3 1.5 78.7 3.8 124.8 4 177 3.2 187.1 4.8 337.5 0.1 6.3 0.1 5.9 3.1 176.9 12 178 9.5 506.3 30.2 2,247.2 1.1 90.6 0.3 20.2 5.8 282.8 2 179 2.7 107.2 3.5 208.5 0.4 24.2 - 1.3 33.7 16 180 0.4 20.8 0.5 34.0 (A) 0.4 (A) 0.3 0.1 3.5 1 181 (B) (0) (A) (H) - - - (B) (H) 1 182 (A) (C) (8) (K) - - - - (A) (E) 6 183 (A) (C) (B) (K) - - - - (A) (E) 6 184 Aooroved For Release 2007/04/17: IA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 24 Table 6. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, and Government Government shipments Total Line Division, State, and standard tical area' ti t Number of Value added by value of shipments Total Prime contracts no. a s metropolitan s employees manufacture and receipts Employees Value of shipments Employees Value of shipments 1 United States ................................ 5,591.1 197,023.4 431,212.4 958.7 51,719.5 677.7 38,331.4 2 New England ........................................ M 581.6 18,355.8 30,897.8 117.4 5,561.5 69.5 3,358.0 3 aine ............................................ 14.4 362.1 649.3 4.1 177.3 3.6 161.7 4 New Hampshire .................................... 34.4 1,356.5 2,002.3 5.1 216.4 2.5 132.6 5 Manchester ..................................... 4.4 84.3 134.8 0.9 31.1 0.1 6.8 6 Nashua ......................................... 5.7 178.2 259.2 (F) (J) (F) (J) 7 Vermont ......................................... 18.2 604.7 1,039.2 4.2 218.7 1.9 126.8 8 Massachusetts .................................... 271.1 8,787.6 14,446.9 42.8 2,201.8 26.1 1,486.3 9 Boston.; ........................................ 121.0 4,064.3 6,207.4 26.6 1,312.6 15.2 854.1 10 Fall River, Mass.-R.I .......................... 3.1 98.3 143.0 (E) (J) (E) 0 (J) (I) 11 Fitchburg-Leominister ........................... 5.1 677.0 688.5 0.5 38.5 .4 2 3 (K) 12 Lawerence-Haverhill, Mass.-N.H ................. 21.8 1,154.7 1,610.6 4.1 270.5 . 2 2 0 148 13 Mass.-N.H .............................. Lowell 9.9 307.6 499.2 3.2 189.4 . . 14 , New Bedford .................................... 4.7 137.2 268.9 0.8 42.0 0.8 41.5 15 Pittsfield ..................................... (G) (K) (L) 3.9 160.1 3.3 136.2 16 Springfield, Chicopee-Holyoke, Mass.-Conn...... 20.5 525.4 931.9 (E) (I) (C) 0 1 (I) (E) 17 Worcester ...................................... 27.3 660.7 1,326.6 1.0 81.7 . 18 Rhode Island ..................................... 29.4 713.3 1,440.4 2.4 98.0 2.0 81.9 19 Providence-Pawtucket-Warwick, R.I.-Mass........ 36.6 934.9 2,023.1 0.8 38.1 0.4 23.3 20 Connecticut ...................................... 214.1 6,531.6 11,319.7 58.8 2,649.3 33.4 1,368.7 21 Bridgeport ..................................... 36.8 1,184.3 2,012.2 6.3 318.5 5.7 287.5 22 Danbury ........................................ 8.7 375.2 573.5 1.2 80.4 1.0 72.9 23 Hartford ...................................... 60.3 1,896.5 3,183.4 17.0 933.8 2.0 164.3 24 New Britain .................................... 14.7 462.4 774.5 1.9 98.2 0.7 30.6 25 New Haven-West Haven ........................... 14.1 465.5 795.8 2.2 130.7 0.4 15.5 (M) 26 New London-Groton-Norwich, Conn.-R.I........... 30.8 747.0 1,038.8 (H) (M) (H) 1 3 0 64 27 Norwalk ........................................ 7.4 332.8 443.1 1.6 79.5 . . 28 Stamford ....................................... 8.3 240.7 369.7 0.7 30.2 0.6 24.9 29 Waterbury ...................................... 13.6 438.8 921.6 0.6 40.8 0.1 2.5 30 Middle Atlantic .......... I 910.7 34,804.3 67,590.7 132.0 6,692.5 80.4 4,620.4 31 New York ......................................... 403.7 16,778.4 27,508.5 73.7 3,756.4 49.1 2,813.0 32 Albany-Schenectady-Troy ....................... (G) (L) (M) (E) (J) (C) (I) 33 N.Y.-Pa ...................... :..... Binghamton 30.7 1,039.2 194.9 9.1 415.1 5.7 272.9 34 , Buffalo ........................................ 26.9 1,079.3 2,205.8 2.0 93.8 0.4 28.8 35 Nassau-Suffolk ................................. 75.2 2,665.5 3,840.6 39.6 2,218.1 31.6 1,889.0 36 New York, N.Y.-N.J ............................. 87.8 2,742.3 4,584.3 10.3 491.6 5.8 304.5 37 Rochester ....................................... 88.8 6,897.6 8,270.7 (F) (L) (F) (K) 38 Syracuse ....................................... 21.0 600.0 1,370.5 (F) (K) (E) (J) (J) 39 Utica-Rome ...................................... 14.1 542.6 893.6 3.3 (K) (E) 40 New Jersey ....................................... 198.3 6,609.6 16,679.2 28.0 1,285.9 14.6 793.5 41 Jersey City .................................... 19.9 818.3 2,383.9 0.8 53.9 0.3 22.5 42 Long Branch-Asbury Park ........................ 6.6 202.8 296.8 1.4 57.8 323 6 0.7 5 3 32.5 170.9 43 Newark ......................................... 68.3 17 1 2,003.6 407 6 5,485.6 609.4 8.5 4.5 . 154.8 . 2.6 94.1 44 Paterson-Clifton-Passaic ....................... . 8 3 . 294 2 461 3 2.1 99.9 1.0 94.1 45' Trenton ........................................ . . . 46 Pennsylvania ..................................... 308.7 11,416.3 23,403.0 30.3 1,650.2 16.7 1,013.9 47 Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, Pa.-N.J............ 33.8 1,721.3 2,595.6 0.7 53.6 0.3 27.9 17 8 48 Erie ........................................... 15.1 517.3 851.6 3.2 172.6 0.4 . 49 Harrisburg ..................................... 9.4 295.3 569.8 0.6 26.5 0.1 8.3 50 Lancaster ...................................... 14.1 459.4 856.2 1.5 52.3 0.7 24.7 51 Northeast Pennsylvania ......................... 11.6 375.4 641.1 2.4 126.2 1.8 9 13 103.9 7 774 52 Philadelphia, Pa.-N.J .......................... 119.5 4,632.9 11,400.5 18.5 972.2 . . 40 5 53 Pittsburgh ..................................... 46.4 1,988.8 3,121.3 2.0 121.6 0.4 . 54 York ........................................... 15.6 591.1 1,143.7 3.9 240.7 2.9 187.6 55 East North Central ................................. 1,384.7 49,304.2 106,457.7 88.4 5,892.9 46.8 3,806.3 350.3 11,950.1 25,737.6 30.2 2,314.6 16.2 1,603.7 56 Ohio ............................................. 26 3 723.8 1,481.3 4.0 207.8 2.0 90.9 57 Akron .......................................... . 18 4 728.8 1,768.9 0.9 58.5 0.4 29.0 58 59 Canton ......................................... Ohio-Ky.-Ind ....................... Cincinnati . 57.5 1,895.4 3,008.1 4.9 412.8 4.1 360.8 60 , Cleveland ...................................... 79.2 2,925.5 5,129.3 6.6 353.9 2.1 139.5 61 Hamilton-Middletown ............................ 3.7 135.4 255.2 0.5 20.9 0.2 0 4 7.8 2 31 62 .......................................... Lima 13.9 532.3 1,882.3 1.1 66.4 . . 63 . Ohio-Mich .............................. Toledo 15.1 882.0 3,051.0 0.8 57.6 0.6 40.3 64 , Youngstown-Warren ............. ................. 10.1 376.1 897.7 0.8 57.3 - (A) 65 Indiana .......................................... 207.7 7,317.4 16,213.4 19.7 1,069.8 11.8 680.6 66 Anderson ....................................... 16.7 775.7 1,192.0 (C) (I) (A) (B) 67 Fort Wayne ..................................... 22.7 758.5 1,460.6 4.7 173.3 (F) (K) 68 Gary-Hammond-East Chicago ...................... 14.5 781.2 2,843.2 2.2 135.8 (A) (F) (H) (L) 69 Indianapolis ................................... 50.6 1,663.0 3,177.7 (G) 9 (L) 95 3 0 5 6 30 70 South Bend ..................................... 9.5 314.9 520.7 1. . . . 71 ..................................... . Illinois 456.0 17,008.9 38,367.0 13.5 814.0 5.3 378.6 72 .. . Chicago ........................................ 324.4 12,129.2 24,059.6 9.5 573.3 3.9 270.5 73 Davenport-Rock Island-Moline, Iowa-Ill......... 15.4 542.4 1,466.5 0.6 50.4 0.3 (B) 15.6 (H) 74 75 Peoria ......................................... Rockford ....................................... (I) 31.1 (N) 946.2 (N) 1,510.0 (B) 2.2 (H) 104.0 0.3 21.9 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Shipments, by Geographic Area and Agency: 1978 Revised Government shipments--Continued Standard error of Subcontracts To DOD To NASA To DOE To other agencies estimate (percent) Line for total no. Em to ees p y Value of Employees Value of hi t Employees Value of ments shi Employees Value of shipments Employees Value of shipments Government shipments' shipments s pmen s p 281.0 13,388.1 718.3 39,382.8 38.2 2,441.0 58.8 2,492.4 143.4 7,403.3 1 1 47.9 2,203.5 98.4 4,693.7 1.8 88.5 2.1 118.3 15.1 661.0 1 2 0.5 15.6 4.0 171.9 - - - - 0.1 5.4 1 3 2.6 83.8 3.5 147.5 (B) (F) (B) 8.7 1.4 (J) 6 4 0.8 24.3 0.8 26.1 (A) 1.1 - - 0.1 3.9 1 5 (B) (G) (F) (J) (A) (B) - - (B) (F) 1 6 2.3 91.9 3.8 209.6 0.1 (E) - (A) 0.3 (G) 2 7 16.7 715.5 33.8 1,793.3 0.5 21.5 0.5 23.2 8.0 363.8 2 8 11.4 458.5 20.0 1,031.1 0.5 20.3 0.4 19.2 5.7 242.0 3 9 (B) (F) (E) (J) - - - - (A) (E) 1 10 0.1 (F) 0.4 (H) - - - - 0.1 (H) 1 11 0.9 (I) 3.9 (K) (A) (F) (A) (G) 0.2 (H) 3 12 1.0 41.4 2.6 175.0 - - - - 0.6 14.4 5 13 (A) 0.5 0.8 42.0 - - - - (A) 0.5 1 14 0.6 23.9 3.7 155.7 - (A) 0.1 2.2 0.1 2.2 1 15 (C) (H) (C) (I) - - - - (B) (G) 18 16 0.9 (J) (C) (J) (A) (C) (A) (B) (B) (H) 1 17 0.4 16.1 2.1 89.5 (A) 0.1 - - 0.3 8.4 7 18 0.4 14.8 0.5 28.4 (A) 0.1 0.1 1.6 0.2 8.0 17 19 25.4 1,280.6 51.2 2,281.9 1.1 61.6 1.5 86.4 5.0 219.4 2 20 0.6 31.0 5.9 304.5 0.1 3.9 0.1 0.5 0.2 9.6 6 21 0.2 7.5 0.8 59.4 0.1 7.2 - - 0.3 13.8 2 22 15.0 769.5 13.5 790.3 0.8 40.7 (A) 1.6 2.7 101.2 4 23 1.2 67.6 (E) (J) (A) (E) - - (B) 13.4 6 24 1.8 115.2 2.1 122.2 (A) 2.4 - - 0.!. 6.1 3 25 (F) (J) (H) (M) (A) (B) 1.4 (J) (B) (H) 2 26 0.3 15.5 1.3 65.5 0.1 (F) (A) (B) 0.2 11.2 4 27 0.1 5.3 (C) (H) (A) (C) - - (B) (G) 3 28 0.5 38.3 0.2 19.5 - (A) (A) 0.1 0.4 21.2 18 29 51.6 2,072.1 104.1 5,384.4 2.9 146.5 3.5 233.2 21.:i 928.4 1 30 24.6 - 943.4 63.0 3,318.6 0.9 44.1 0.5 34.0 9.3 359.7 2 31 (B) (H) (C) (I) - (B) (B) (G) (B) (G) 6 32 3.4 142.2 8.4 379.9 0.5 23.5 (A) 1.1 0.2 10.6 2 33 1.6 65.0 1.3 58.1 0.1 3.2 - - 0.', 32.5 10 34 8.0 329.1 35.8 2,080.9 0.3 13.6 - (A) 3.3 123.6 3 35 4.5 187.1 7.2 353.1 0.3 17.9 0.5 36.0 2.3 84.6 7 36 (E) (J) (F) (K) (A) (B) (A) (B) (EI (J) 4 37 (F) (J) (F) (K) - (A) (A) (C) (BI (G) 12 38 (E) (J) (F) (K) (A) (B) (A) (B) (BI (H) 1 39 13.4 492.4 20.3 937.8 1.1 59.6 0.4 18.6 6.2 269.9 4 40 0.5 31.4 0.5 29.1 - (A) - - 0.3 24.8 1 (C) 25.3 (E) (I) (A) (E) (A) 0.1 (B) 13.8 8 5.0 152.7 5.9 238.6 0.2 6.0 0.2 2.4 2..) 76.6 9 1.9 60.7 (F) (K) (B) (G) - - (B) 6.0 4 1.1 5.8 0.7 42.4 0.4 25.8 (A) (A) 1.) 31.7 9 13.6 636.3 20.8 1,128.0 0.9 42.8 2.6 180.6 6.) 298.8 4 0.4 25.7 0.5 27.7 - (A) - - 0.) 25.9 15 2.8 154.8 1.4 52.4 0.1 1.8 1.3 103.1 0.?i 15.3 10 0.5 18.2 0.3 16.7 (A) (B) (A) (B) 0.3 9.6 5 0.8 27.6 (E) (I) (A) (C) (B) (E) 0.3 13.1 6 0.6 22.3 2.3 121.2 (A) (A) 0.1 2.8 (A) 2.2 19 4.6 197.5 13.6 747.9 0.9 45.0 0.4 16.9 3.5 162.4 3 1.6 81.1 1.1 72.1 - - 0.5 27.0 0.i 22.5 18 1.0 53.1 3.3 205.5 - (A) 0.1 5.9 0.5 29.3 2 41.6 2,086.6 59.5 3,842.5 0.6 38.5 4.6 716.4 23.7 1,295.5 1 14.0 710.9 19.4 1,253.1 0.3 22.8 4.2 688.1 6.3 350.6 3 2.0 116.9 3.3 180.4 (A) 0.5 0.1 6.9 0.5 20.0 2 0.5 29.5 0.6 43.3 - 0.1 - - 0.3 15.1 5 0.8 52.0 (F) (L) (B) (H) (C) (J) (B) (H) 1 4.5 214.4 5.2 277.9 (A) 1.1 0.1 7.9 1.3 67.0 5 0.3 13.1 0.3 (H) (A) (B) - - 0.2 10.2 5 61 0.7 35.2 1.0 60.7 - - - - 0.1 5.7 6 0.2 17.3 0.7 50.8 (A) 0.4 (A) 1.7 0.1 4.7 1 0.8 57.3 0.2 15.8 - - - - 0.6 41.5 1 61 7.9 389.2 14.7 811.8 0.1 4.6 0.1 7.4 4.8 246.0 2 (C) (I) (B) (H) - - - - (B) (G) 19 61 (C) (I) (F) (K) (B) (F) - - (C) (H) 12 (F) (K) (B) (H) - - - - (F) (K) 1 61 (E) (J) (G) (L) (A) (C) (B) (G) (C) (I) 2 1.4 64.7 1.9 94.4 - - - - (A) 0.9 1 8.2 435.4 6.6 387.3 0.2 10.4 0.2 13.4 6.5 402.9 9 7 5.6 302.8 3.9 238.2 0.1 3.2 0.1, 6.2 5.4 325.7 13 7 0.3 34.8 0.6 47.3 (A) 0.1 - - (A) 3.0 1 7 (A) (G) (B) (H) - (A) - - (B) (G) 1 7 1.9 82.1 1.5 73.3 0.2 7.4 0.1 7.3 0.4 16.0 1 7 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Table 6. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, and Government T t l Government shipments o a Line Division, State, and standard Number Value added value of Total Prime contracts no. metropolitan statistical area' of es m lo by manufactu shipments d p ye e re an receipts Employees Value of oyeee Employees of shipments shipments East North Central--Continued 76 Michigan ......................................... 182.7 6,454.9 13,405.7 17.3 1,283.9 9.9 908.7 77 Detroit ........................................ 78.0 3,189.2 6,723.4 9.3 807.6 5.7 601.7 78 Grand Rapids ................................... 15.3 479.9 850.5 3.0 112.4 2.1 74.3 79 Jackson ........................................ 5.5 188.1 349.0 0.6 45.2 0.4 34.8 30 Kalamazoo-Portage .............................. 11.4 305.8 524.7 0.5 (I) (B) (H) 31 Muskegon-Muskegon Heights ...................... 10.5 380.9 643.0 1.9 183.9 1.2 150.5 32 Wisconsin ........................................ 188.0 6,572.9 12,734.0 7.7 410.6 3.6 234.7 33 Appleton-Oshkosh ............................... 5.8 212.9 477.4 0.4 41.1 0.3 (I) 34 Milwaukee ...................................... 98.7 3,320.8 5,448.7 4.9 233.4 1.8 102.8 West North Central ................................. 389.6 12,979.2 28,525.5 67.8 4,386.9 53.3 3,736.5 6 Minnesota ........................................ 97.0 3,417.4 7,474.7 14.2 598.0 8.4 386.4 7 Minneaoplis-St. Paul, Minn.-Wisc ............... 76.4 2,966.3 6,031.5 14.0 577.2 8.3 371.2 8 Iowa ............................................. 77.0 2,771.9 5,685.4 6.8 301.4 4.2 182.1 9 Cedar Rapids ................................... 16.0 573.1 907.9 3.0 136.4 (E) 87.5 0 Waterloo-Cedar Falls ........................... 2.9 69.7 98.7 0.8 35.6 (C) (I) Missouri ......................................... 119.5 3,633.7 7,814.3 38.0 3,046.7 33.7 2,804.3 2 Kansas City, Mo,-Kansas ........................ 39.3 934.3 2,327.1 7.6 335.2 7.0 312.1 3 St. Louis, Mo.-Ill ............................. 79.2 3,085.2 8,705.8 30.1 2,734.7 26.8 2,508.9 4 North Dakota ..................................... 3.0 212.3 699.4 (8) (S) (8) (8) 5 South Dakota ..................................... 3.6 81.5 140.0 (8) (8) (8) (8) 6 Nebraska ......................................... 23.2 743.9 1,396.5 1.0 30.4 0.3 7.9 7 Kansas ........................................... 66.3 2,118.5 5,315.2 7.7 382.7 6.7 339.4 8 Wichita ........................................ 40.1 1,397.3 3,032.2 (G) (L) (G) (L) 9 South Atlantic ..................................... 475.5 15,624.8 31,399.6 112.2 5,636.9 89.2 4,695.1 00 Delaware ......................................... 10.0 584.9 1,759.5 0.5 62.9 0.3 51.8 01 Wilmington, Del.-N.J.-Md ....................... 8.4 555.2 1,468.3 0.5 63.5 0,2 50.8 02 Maryland ......................................... 65.1 2,162.8 3,645.1 24.8 1,034.0 17.8 772.0 03 Baltimore ...................................... 45.6 1,597.6 2,654.3 18.9 772.0 13.6 566.0 04 District of Columbia ............................. 1.3 39.2 51.9 (8) (8) (S) (8) 05 Washington, D.C.-Md.-Va ........................ 20.0 688.2 873.4 10.3 496.4 8.3 415.8 06 Virginia ......................................... 88.2 2,485.7 4,580.0 34.0 1,179.6 31.9 1,084.7 07 Lynchburg ...................................... 8.0 357.2 643.5 (B) (H) (B) (H) 08 Newport News-Hampton ........................... 25.5 500.1 769.5 (H) (M) (H) (M) 09 Norfolk-Virginia Beach-Portsmouth .............. 6.9 140.8 254.7 1.7 52.7 1.4 46.0 10 West Virginia .................................... 17.8 755.0 1,921.7 1.2 69.5 0.6 27.6 11 Huntington-Ashland, W.Va.-Ky.-Ohio ............. (F) (K) (N) (B) (I) (B) (H) 12 Steubenville-Weirton, W.Va.-Ohio ............... 1.1 61.3 311.0 0.3 (I) - - 13 North Carolina ................................... 73.4 2,838.2 5,512.9 (S) (8) (8) (8) 14 Burlington ..................................... (C) (H) (I) (C) (H) (C) (H) 15 South Carolina ................................... 55.5 1,606.9 2,852.5 7.4 378.6 7.0 359.7 16 Georgia .......................................... 49.0 1,613.1 3,579.4 7.3 385.3 6.4 354.3 17 Atlanta ........................................ 22.6 774.8 1,490.7 (G) (L) (G) (L) 18 Augusta, Ga.-S.C ............................... (G) (L) (L) (G) (L) (G) (L) 9 Florida .......................................... 115.2 3,539.0 7,496.6 33.6 2,367.5 23.4 1,952.9 0 Daytona Beach .................................. 1.7 53.9 77.3 1.3 51.0 0.2 8.2 1 Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood ...................... 111.0 455.3 628.9 1.8 85.8 0.6 40.3 2 Jacksonville ................................... 5.9 137.8 247.5 1.0 39.6 0.8 34.7 3 Orlando ........................................ 15.2 415.9 566.7 (0) (L) (0) (L) 4 Tampa-St. Petersburg ........................... 21.5 707.9 1,329.0 6.9 251.1 4.3 171.3 5 West Palm Beach-Boca Raton ..................... 12.7 417.7 1,553.2 (0) (N) (G) (N) 6 East South Central ................................. 258.9 8,604.2 20,890.0 46.2 2,008.7 38.3 1,650.2 7 Kentucky ......................................... 54.4 2,018.6 4,950.5 2.5 289.6 2.3 270.5 8 Louisville, Ky.-Ind ............................ 18.7 457.6 1,248.6 (E) (J) (E) (J) 9 Tennessee ........................................ 85.0 2,479.1 5,653.4 14.8 667.1 9.5 437.6 0 Knoxville ...................................... 12.9 362.7 919.5 (F) (K) (F) (K) 1 Nashville-Davidson ............................. 10.0 276.8 538.0 0.8 42.2 (A) 2.4 2 Alabama .......................................... 63.8 2,034.0 5,483.5 6.9 292.0 4.9 202.7 3 Birmingham ..................................... 19.9 615.9 1,086.9 (E) (J) (E) (I) 4 Gadsden ........................................ 1.3 28.3 52.0 (B) (H) (B) (H) 5 Huntsville ..................................... 13.0 436.7 1,245.7 2.7 92.6 1.6 57.4 6 Mississippi ...................................... 55.7 2,072.5 4,802.6 22.0 760.0 21.6 739.4 7 Jackson ........................................ 3.3 98.6 214.0 0.6 24.9 0.4 15.1 8 W est South Central ................................. 420.2 19,046.3 58,773.6 60.8 3,592.4 47.0 2,989.4 9 Arkansas ......................................... 40.1 1,147.2 2,676.6 0.7 21.2 0.3 11.8 0 Louisiana ........................................ 53.4 3,855.9 14,901.5 2.4 253.6 2.0 226.6 1 Baton Rouge .................................... 5.6 928.8 3,862.7 (B) (J) (B) (I) 2 Lake Charles ................................... 5.0 567.9 3,062.1 (B) (H) (B) (H) 3 New Orleans .................................... 12.1 477.3 1,934.5 2.0 96.2 1.8 89.4 12 12 12 12 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 14 14 14 L 4 1 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 27 Shipments, by Geographic Area and Agency: 1978 Revised-Continued Government shipments--Continued Standard error of Subcontracts To DOD To NASA To DOE To other agencies estimate Line (percent) no. for total Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of Employees Value of Government shipments shipments shipments shipments shipments shipments2 7.4 375.2 13.4 1,091.3 (A) 0.6 - (A) 3.9 192.0 4 76 3.6 205.9 (G) 698.6 (A) 0.4 - (A) (F) 108.6 4 77 0.9 38.1 2.9 (K) - (A) - - 0.1 (E) 18 78 0.2 10.4 0.4 34.7 - - 0.2 10.5 1 79 (B) (H) (B) (I) - - - - (B) (F) 3 80 0.7 33.4 (E) (K) (A) (B) - (A) (C) (I) 9 81 4.1 175.9 5.4 299.0 (A) (B) (B) (0) 2.2 104.0 2 82 0.1 (F) 0.4 (I) - - - - (A) (C) 1 83 3.1 130.6 3.2 150.1 (A) 0.1 (A) 0.2 1.7 83.0 2 84 14.5 650.4 56.4 3,832.3 1.2 77.4 4.8 204.1 5.4 273.1 1 85 5.8 211.6 11.1 432.0 (C) (I) (B) (0) 2.4 127.6 2 86 5.7 206.0 11.1 420.6 0.6 (I) 0.1 (G) 2.2 118.2 2 87 2.6 119.3 5.9 264.7 (A) 1.3 (A) 0.1 0.9 35.4 3 88 (E) 48.9 (F) (K) (A) (C) - - (B) (H) 1 89 (B) (F) (C) (H) - - - - (B) (H) 9 90 4.3 242.4 32.0 2,756.9 (B) (I) (F) (K) 0.9 56.8 1 91 0.6 23.1 2.3 103.9 - - 4.7 190.8 0.6 40.5 1 92 3.3 225.8 29.2 2,650.0 (B) (I) (A) (E) 0.5 45.4 1 93 (S) (s) (S) (B) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (8) (X) 94 (B) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (s) (X) 95 0.7 22.5 (B) (H) (A) (B) (A) (A) (C) (H) 6 96 1.0 43.3 (G) (L) (B) (0) - - (C) (I) 5 97 (C) (I) (G) (L) (B) (G) - - (B) (H) 6 98 23.0 941.8 83.7 4,300.2 3.2 256.4 7.2 340.8 18.1 739.5 1 99 0.2 11.1 0.2 45.1 0.1 3.8 (A) 0.1 0.2 13.9 6 100 0.3 12.7 0.3 48.1 (A) (E) (A) (B) 0.2 13.3 6 101 7.0 262.0 18.4 800.0 0.4 20.2 0.3 16.2 5.7 197.6 2 102 5.3 206.0 13.7 574.7 0.2 8.9 0.3 15.2 4.7 173.2 2 103 (S) (S) (s) (s) (B) (s) (S) (8) (8) (S) (X) 104 2.0 80.6 8.9 444.1 0.2 (G) (A) (F) 1.2 37.8 4 105 2.1 94.9 27.6 965.6 (A) (C) 0.1 (F) 6.3 209.3 3 106 (B) (G) (B) (G) (A) - (A) (B) (B) (H) 1 107 (B) (G) (H) (M) - - - - (F) (K) 1 108 0.3 6.7 (E) (I) - - - - (B) (G) L1 109 0.6 41.9 0.5 20.4 (A) 0.3 - (A) 0.7 48.8 14 110 (B) (I) (A) (H) (B) (I) 1 111- 0.3 (I) - - - - 0.3 (I) 1 112 (S) (s) (S) (S) (S) (S) (s) (S) (B) (B) (X) 113 - - (C) (H) - - - - - 1 114 0.4 18.9 (E) (J) - - (G) (L) (B) (I) 15 115 0.9 31.0 6.4 355.0 0.1 2.7 (A) 2.6 0.8 25.0 2 116 (B) (H) (G) (L) (B) (F) - - (B) (H) 1 117 (A) (F) (A) (E) - - (G) (L) (A) (F) 2 118 10.2 414.6 27.1 1,946.8 2.6 225.9 1.0 43.0 2.9 151.8 6 119 1.1 42.8 1.3 50.1 - - - - (A) 0.9 14 120 1.2 45.5 1.2 45.5 (A) 1.4 (A) 0.7 0.6 38.2 18 121 0.2 4.9 0.8 31.9 - - - 0.2 7.7 9 122 (E) (J) (G) (L) - - - - (B) (H) 2 123 2.6 79.8 4.6 159.9 0.5 16.8 1.0 42.1 0.8 32.3 5 124 (B) (J) (G) (N) (A) (F) - - (B) (H) 1 125 7.9 358.5 33.4 1,268.5 1.1 45.2 9.1 510.0 2.6 185.0 1 126 0.2 19.1 0.4 43.9 - 0.1 1.9 228.2 0.2 17.4 2 127 (B) (G) (E) (J) - - - - (B) (F) 6 128 5.3 229.5 6.1 (L) 0.1 (0) 7.1 (L) 1.5 (K) 4 129 (C) (I) (B) (H) (A) (B) (F) (K) (B) (G) 1 130 0.8 39.8 0.6 28.3 (A) 1.5 - - 0.2 11.4 3 131 2.0 89.3 5.1 211.4 1.0 39.1 0.1 6.4 0.7 35.1 13 132 (B) (G) (E) (I) - - (A) (G) (A) (E) 1 133 - (G) (B) (H) - - - - (A) (G) 1 134 1.1 35.2 1.5 53.8 0.9 28.3 (A) 0.3 0.3 10.2 4 135 0.4 20.6 21.8 751.3 - - - - 0.2 8.7 1 136 0.2 9.8 0.5 22.9 - - - - 0.1 2.0 1 137 13.8 603.0 48.8 2,744.5 1.0 46.9 1.7 57.8 9.3 743.2 1 138 0.4 9.4 0.3 11.1 - - - - 0.4 10.1 17 139 0.4 27.0 2.0 229.8 0.1 4.0 (A) 0.5 0.3 19.3 16 140 (A) (F) (B) (J) - - - - - (B) 1 141 (B) (H) - - - - - - 1 142 0.2 6.8 1.8 87.4 0.1 4.0 - - 0.1 4.8 2 143 001002540002-3 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 28 Table 6. Total Employment, Value Added, Value of Shipments, and Government Government shipments Total Line and standard State Division Number Value added value of Total Prime contracts no , , metropolitan statistical area' of by shipments . employees manufacture and receipts Employees Value of Employees Value of shipments shipments West South Central--Continued 144 Oklahoma .......................:.................. 56.9 2,187.7 623.0 (S) (S) (s) (S) 145 Tulsa .......................................... 25.4 894.0 2,208.6 2.4 116.0 0.9 53.4 146 Texas ............................................ 269.8 11,855.5 40,572.5 51.0 3,025.5 41.6 2,583.2 147 AUStin ......................................... 6.9 208.9 443.6 2.5 61.3 2.4 57.7 148 Beaumont-Port Arthur-orange .................... 25.0 1,840.0 8,076.7 (B) (J) (B) (J) 149 Corpus Ohrieti ................................. 2.8 457.6 3,268.4 0.2 165.5 0.1 158.3 150 Dallas-Fort Worth .............................. 107.5 3,729.4 5,913.4 39.8 1,970.0 31.8 1,628.3 151 Galveston-Texas City ........................... 4.7 418.2 3,954.9 (A) 43.3 (A) 41.2 152 Houston ........................................ 56.9 3,598.4 12,565.8 1.1 371.4 0.6 321.9 153 Texarkana, Texas-Ark ........................... (F) (I) (J) (E) (I) (E) (I) 154 Mountain ........................................... 174.1 6,179.9 13,790.6 30.5 1,886.5 16.7 1,262.0 155 Montana .......................................... 1.7 86.2 1,119.4 (S) (S) (S) (S) 156 Idaho ............................................ 6.0 266.8 437.7 (A) (B) - - 157 Wyoming .......................................... 3.3 103.1 1,288.9 (S) (S) (S) (S) 158 Colorado ......................................... 54.7 1,975.3 4,316.1 7.7 569.2 5.6 478.0 159 Denver-Boulder ................................. 40.5 1,403.7 3,176.3 6.7 529.0 (G) (L) 160 New Mexico ....................................... 11.1 250.8 397.6 1.2 36.7 (A) 1.1 161 Albuquerque .................................... 9.7 202.8 307.4 1.2 36.7 (A) 1.1 162 Arizona .......................................... 67.3 2,330.4 3,723.4 13.7 757.4 7.6 503.7 163 Phoenix ........................................ 58.1 2,139.4 3,199.7 10.3 543.5 4.5 303.5 164 Tucson ......................................... (G) (K) (L) (F) (K) (F) (K) 165 Utah ............................................. 28.1 1,118.9 2,409.6 7.2 437.1 3.3 229.0 166 Salt Lake City-Ogden ........................... 19.9 932.1 ?,008.1 3.6 232.0 1.2 95.8 167 Nevada ........................................... 1.9 48.4 97.9 (C) (I) (B) (F) 168 Las Vegas ....................................... 0.8 26.9 27.3 (B) (I) - - 169 Pacific ............................................ 995.8 32,124.7 72,886.9 303.4 16,061.2 236.5 12,213.5 170 Washington ....................................... 99.2 3,580.3 9,857.8 27.8 1,791.0 23.2 1,511.2 171 Seattle-Everett ................................ 84.7 3,034.6 6,655.3 (1) (N) (H) (N) 172 Tacoma ......................................... 2.6 68.7 165.6 0.5 41.0 0.5 40.6 173 Oregon ........................................... 40.0 1,181.1 2,141.0 4.0 212.2 1.6 125.7 174 Portland, Ore.-Wash ............................ 32.2 938.1 1,739.9 2.9 130.3 1.5 59.1 175 California ....................................... 853.8 26,754.7 58,482.2 271.0 13,610.0 211.1 3,438.6 176 Anaheim-Santa Ana-Garden Grove ................. 119.0 3,810.0 5,637.7 38.7 1,667.5 22.3 627.7 177 Los Angeles-Long Beach ......................... 336.2 13,328.9 24,982.5 128.2 7,459.0 88.7 1,795.1 178 Oxnard-Simi Valley-Ventura ..................... 8.5 286.2 428.9 3.2 165.8 1.5 76.9 179 Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario ............... 15.2 545.3 930.0 3.5 188.1 2.1 43.6 180 Sacramento ..................................... 9.2 284.3 495.3 4.8 226.9 1.8 119.1 181 San Diego ...................................... 55.5 2,196.5 3,295.9 19.2 966.0 13.6 234.3 182 San Francisco-Oakland .......................... 40.6 2,075.9 5,162.2 8.8 494.3 6.8 86.6 183 San Jose ....................................... 241.2 4,559.0 8,004.5 62.6 2,282.4 53.5 386.0 184 Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Lompoc ............... 4.1 102.3 186.3 1.1 48.5 1.0 4.3 185 Santa Rosa ..................................... 3.8 152.3 215.1 0.6 22.6 0.1 20.6 186 Vallejo-Fairfield-Napa ......................... 0.7 40.1 615.2 (A) 47.7 (A) 1.8 187 Alaska ........................................... 1.2 408.3 1,447.1 (S) (S) (S) (S) 188 Hawaii ........................................... 1.6 200.3 958.5 (C) (K) (C) (F) 189 Honolulu ................... :................... 1.6 200.3 958.5 (C) (K) (C) (F) Symbol Range (A) ....... Less than 0.1 (B) ....... 0.1 to 0.4 (C)....... 0.5 to 0.9 (E)....... 1.0 to 1.9 (F) ....... 2.0 to 4.9 See text for a description of the methodology. Symbol Rage (G)....... 5.0 to 9.9 (H) ....... 10.0 to 24.9 (I)....... 25.0 to 49.9 (J)....... 50.0 to 99.9 Symbol Range (x)....... 100.0 to 249.9 (L) ....... 250.0 to 499.9 (M)....... 500.0 to 999.9 (N) ....... 1,000.0 and over - Represents zero. N.e.c. Not elsewhere classified. (S) Data suppressed because they did not meet publication standards. This includes cells where the total value of Government shipments is less than $20.0 million or the standard error is 20 or greater. (X) Not applicable. 'Standard metropolitan statistical areas in more than one State are listed only one time under their principal State. This total includes the activities in all States for that SMSA. See appendix A for a description of the SMSA's. 'The standard error estimates are those for the unadjusted (reciprocal) Government shipments that were reported on the MA-175. No adjustment has been made to the standard errors for the ratio estimation to ASM levels.(See appendix C.) Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-R?P84RnnnAgRnn1nn9Fannn9-' Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Shipments, by Geographic Area and Agency: 1978 Revised-Continued Government shipments--Continued Standard error of Subcontracts To DOD To NASA To DOE To other agencies estimate (percent) f l Line no or tota Em to ees p 9 Value of hi t Employees Value of hi Employees Value of h Employees Value of h Employees Value of h Government ' pmen s s s pments s ipments s ipments s ipments shipments (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (x) 144 1.5 62.6 1.9 95.4 0.2 6.9 (A) 0.1 0.3 13.7 7 145 9.4 442.3 42.6 2,303.5 0.7 36.0 1.7 57.2 6.0 628.8 4 146 0.1 3.6 2.4 57.1 - - 0.1 4.2 2 147 (A) (G) (A) (F) - (A) - (A) (B) (J) 1 148 0.1 7.2 0.1 158.5 - - - 0.1 7.0 19 149 8.0 341.7 34.7 1,734.4 0.7 35.9 (A) 1.6 4.4 189.1 1 150 (A) 2.1 - 0.4 - - - - (A) 42.9 1 151 0.5 49.5 0.5 74.9 (A) (B) 0.1 (G) 0.5 287.7 16 152 (A) (B) (E) (I) - - - - (A) (B) 1 153 13.8 624.5 20.5 1,282.3 3.9 248.1 0.7 27.0 5.4 329.1 1 154 (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (x) 155 (A) (B) - - - - - (A) (B) 1 156 (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (X) 157 2.1 91.2 3.8 284.3 (F) (K) (B) (F) 1.7 123.4 2 158 (E) (J) (F) (L) (F) (K) (A) (F) (E) (K) 2 159 1.2 35.6 0.9 30.6 (B) (E) (B) (F) (A) 1.5 16 160 1.2 35.6 0.9 30.6 0.1 (E) 0.2 (F) (A) 1.5 16 161 6.1 253.7 10.4 591.9 0.7 31.2 0.2 9.9 2.4 124.4 2 162 5.8 240.0 7.1 384.3 0.7 29.8 0.2 8.9 2.3 120.5 3 163 (B) (G) (F) (K) (B) (E) (A) (C) (B) (F) 1 164 3.9 208.1 5.3 329.9 1.0 57.2 0.2 10.7 0.7 39.3 8 165 2.4 136.2 3.4 216.7 (A) 2.3 (A) 0.5 0.2 12.5 7 166 (B) (I) - - - - - - (C) (I) 1 167 (B) - (I) - - - - - - (B) (I) 1 168 66.9 3,847.7 213.5 12,034.4 22.5 1,493.5 25.1 284.8 42.3 2,248.5 1 169 4.6 279.8 25.8 1,596.5 0.5 40.1 (A) 1.5 1.5 152.9 2 170 (F) (L) (I) (N) (C) (I) (A) (E) (C) (J) 1 171 (A) 0.4 0.1 5.5 - - - - 0.4 35.5 1 172 2.4 125.7 1.8 88.1 0.1 3.2 0.4 39.3 1.7 81.6 9 173 1.4 59.1 1.4 52.6 0.1 3.1 (A) 4.4 1.4 70.2 6 174 59.9 3,438.6 185.4 9,961.3 21.9 1,450.2 24.7 244.0 39.0 1,954.5 2 175 16.4 627.7 27.3 1,174.1 2.1 111.3 0.5 30.7 8.8 351.4 14 176 39.5 1,795.1 91.4 514.6 15.7 1,112.1 2.8 189.4 18.3 1,007.9 1 177 1.7 76.9 2.5 130.4 0.4 24.1 (A) 0.5 0.3 10.8 8 178 1.4 43.6 2.8 168.8 (A) 1.1 (A) 0.1 0.7 18.1 IL 179 3.0 119.1 4.5 209.4 0.2 10.9 (A) 1.5 0.1 5.1 2 180 5.6 234.3 15.4 770.3 1.3 74.6 0.1 4.5 2.4 116.6 6 181 2.0 86.6 6.6 386.8 0.1 7.2 0.1 6.7 2.0 93.6 18 182 9.1 386.0 33.0 1,835.7 2.2 104.1 21.3 30.7 6.1 311.9 1 183 0.1 4.3 1.0 45.0 (A) 1.5 - - 0.1 2.0 16 184 0.5 20.6 0.4 17.6 (A) 0.4 (A) 0.5 0.2 4.1 19 185 (A) 1.8 (A) 47.7 - - - - - - 1 186 (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (S) (x) 187 (A) (F) (B) (K) - - - (B) (F) 18 188 (A) (F) (B) (K) - - - - (B) (F) 18 189 . Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Table 7. Employment, Costs, Value Added, and Value of Shipments, by All employees (wage board and graded) Production workers (wage board) Costs Line Item Materials, Contractual no. Number Number Hours supplies services Payroll Wages and parts and other (1,000) (1,000) (millions) used costs 1 United States ....................................... 240.4 5,171.9 137.1 251.6 2,818.2 1,927.2 3,042.7 INDUSTRY GROUP 2 23 Apparel and other textile products ................... 1.4 19.2 1.3 2.1 17.4 1.9 1.5 3 Chemicals and allied products ........................ 28 3.2 66.6 1.3 2.6 27.6 30.8 34.4 4 1 281 Industrial chemicals ................................. 0.3 7.5 0.1 0.2 2.1 1.0 3.8 5 286 Industrial organic chemicals ......................... 2.0 40.4 0.8 1.6 16.1 23.0 26.4 6 289 Miscellaneous chemical products ...................... 0.9 18.7 0.4 0.8 9.4 6.8 4.2 7 348 Small arms ammunition; ordnance and accessories...... 29.2 611.7 14.0 27.6 280.7 188.8 305.0 8 366 Communication equipment ............................. 14.5 335.5 5.2 9.3 106.4 85.4 137.9 9 37 Transportation equipment ............................. 140.0 2,932.5 93.5 171.5 1,922.4 1,161.8 1,254.4 10 372 Aircraft and parts ................................... 50.3 1,066.9 33.4 62.4 705.8 643.5 538.4 11 373 Ship and boat building and repairing ................. 69.1 1,398.0 52.6 95.3 1,076.4 383.4 471.6 12 376 Space vehicles, missiles, etc ........................ 18.8 435.3 6.0 11.2 114.0 119.7 230.0 13 379 Miscellaneous transportation.. ....................... 1.9 32.3 1.5 2.6 26.2 15.2 14.4 14 --- Research and development ............................. 52.1 1,206.4 21.9 38.5 463.7 458.6 1,309.5 GEOGRAPHIC DIVISION, STATE, AND STANDARD METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREA1 15 New England Division ...................................... 11.8 253.3 5.8 10.9 105.5 54.2 249.9 16 New Hampshire ........................................... 7.8 142.5 5.5 10.3 98.3 24.3 39.8 17 Massachusetts ..........................................? 1.1 30.1 0.1 0.3 3.0 4.5 42.5 18 Boston SMSA ........................................... 1.1 30.1 0.1 0.3 3.0 4.5 42.5 19 Rhode Island ............................................ 2.9 80.8 0.2 0.3 4.2 25.5 167.6 20 Middle Atlantic Division .................................. 33.0 712.1 16.2 30.2 313.3 205.5 419.6 21 New York ................................................ 3.3 71.3 1.6 4.1 32.5 40.2 5.5 22 Albany-Schenectady-Troy SMSA.......................... 2.2 46.4 1.5 4.0 31.3 38.4 4.6 23 New Jersey .............................................. 10.4 252.9 1.7 3.2 33.7 38.6 166.0 24 Newark SMSA ............................................ 7.8 193.8 1.0 1.8 20.2 26.9 104.6 25 Pennsylvania ............................................ 19.3 387.9 13.0 22.9 247.0 126.8 248.1 26 Philadelphia, PA.-N.J. SMSA ........................... 13.8 279.4 8.5 15.2 158.5 76.9 226.2 27 East North Central Division ............................... 12.5 278.8 5.4 10.3 118.7 92.7 399.6 28 Ohio .................................................... 4.0 100.8 1.2 2.1 26.2 25.1 323.2 29 Dayton SMSA ........................................... 2.4 66.6 0.1 0.3 3.4 12.3 318.8 30 Indiana ................................................. 5.8 121.3 2.5 5.0 52.6 47.2 64.1 31 Indianapolis SMSA ..................................... 2.3 50.2 1.0 1.9 21.4 28.4 15.7 32 Illinois ................................................ 2.7 56.7 1.8 3.1 39.8 20.4 12.3 33 Davenport-Rock Island-Moline, Iowa-I11., SMSA......... 2.6 56.4 1.8 3.1 39.6 20.4 11.9 34 South Atlantic Division ................................... 65.5 1,376.8 36.9 67.9 732.1 564.0 718.6 35 Maryland ................................................ 10.3 212.1 3.3 5.8 63.8 91.9 127.3 36 District of Columbia .................................... 4.6 119.6 0.7 1.3 14.7 18.8 136.8 37 Virginia ................................................ 23.4 463.4 14.4 26.5 257.4 152.9 236.1 38 Norfolk-Virginia Beach-Portsmouth, SMSA ............... 16.4 293.4 12.6 22.9 220.9 129.1 114.2 39 North Carolina .......................................... 2.5 51.4 1.9 3.7 39.2 53.2 4.7 40 South Carolina .......................................... 8.5 169.0 6.3 11.7 127.9 49.1 55.3 41 Georgia ................................................. 6.2 138.6 5.0 8.2 112.1 76.0 17.7 42 Macon SMSA ............................................ 6.2 138.6 5.0 8.2 112.1 76.0 17.7 43 Florida ................................................. 10.0 222.7 5.2 10.8 117.0 122.2 140.9 44 Jacksonville SMSA ............................:........ 2.6 55.8 1.8 3.7 40.4 41.8 13.5 45 Pensacola SMSA ........................................ 3.5 76.5 2.6 5.3 58.3 43.2 14.8 46 East South Central Division ............................... 13.5 307.8 5.0 9.4 92.9 105.5 237.5 47 Kentucky ................................................ 2.4 46.1 1.7 3.5 31.9 12.1 14.6 48 Louisville, Ky.-Ind. SMSA ............................. 2.4 46.1 1.7 3.5 31.9 12.1 14.6 49 Tennessee ............................................... 0.2 3.8 (Z) (2) 0.1 16.1 134.4 50 Alabama.. .............. I ................................ 10.7 252.3 3.3 5.8 60.9 75.4 63.4 51 Huntsville SMSA ....................................... 7.6 195.5 06. 1.0 10.8 16.9 57.4 52 Mississippi ............................................. 0.2 5.5 - - - 2.0 25.0 53 West South Central Division ............................... 22.5 449.4 16.6 28.9 331.6 311.3 77.8 54 Arkansas ................................................ 0.9 18.7 0.4 0.8 9.4 6.8 4.2 55 Oklahoma ................................................ 8.4 172.3 6.4 11.1 134.0 115.9 21.4 56 Oklahoma City SMSA .................................... 7.6 157.4 5.9 10.2 124.4 113.0 17.8 57 Texas ................................................... 13.1 258.4 9.7 17.0 188.3 188.6 52.1 58 Ban Antonio SMSA ...................................... 7.8 151.1 5.6 10.0 108.7 113.0 26.7 59 Texarkana, Tex.-Texarkana, Ark. SMSA .................. 2.2 40.8 1.9 3.3 33.2 24.5 14.8 60 Mountain Division ......................................... 10.7 204.1 7.2 12.5 136.4 86.4 213.9 61 Colorado ................................................ 0.5 11.8 0.2 0.4 4.8 3.1 8.0 62 New Mexico .............................................. 0.5 9.7 (Z) (Z) 0.1 4.3 154.0 63 Utah .................................................... 9.1 169.5 6.5 11.4 123.3 75.5 48.3 64 Nevada .................................................. 0.7 131. 0.4 0.7 8.2 3.6 3.7 65 Pacific Division .......................................... 71.0 1,589.6 44.0 81.5 987.6 507.4 725.8 66 Washington .............................................. 13.5 287.7 9.4 17.6 207.4 97.0 85.7 67 California .............................................. ? 51.4 1,161.7 30.0 55.4 669.7 372.2 602.0 68 Bakersfield SMSA ...................................... 6.5 158.9 1.5 2.7 34.8 42.0 192.0 69 Los Angeles-Long Beach SMSA ........................... 7.2 144.9 5.8 10.2 118.2 49.0 58.6 70 San Diego SMSA ........................................ 8.6 196.9 4.4 8.6 91.5 77.2 119.9 71 San Francisco-Oakland SMSA ............................ 5.8 135.5 4.2 8.3 104.2 65.0 33.6 72 Vallejo-Fairfield-Napa SMSA ........................... 9.1 210.1 6.8 12.5 161.9 34.6 62.8 73 Hawaii ................................................... 6.1 140.1 4.7 8.5 110.5 38.2 38.1 Note: See appendix B, "Explanation of Terms for MA-171 Survey." Detail may not add to totals due to independent rounding. Value added A repre- sents total revenue less cost of materials, while value added B is total revenue less cost of materials, contractual services, and other costs. - Represents zero. (Z) Lee. than 0.05. 'See appendix A for a description of each SMSA. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Industry and Geographic Area for Department of Defense Facilities: 1979 Value of shipments or receipts for service by type of activity Value added by manufacture Line Manufacture Construction Research Other Total Total no. and assembly and conversion and billings billings revenue A B development 423.8 103.7 2,936.3 6,087.5 9,551.2 9,860.4 7,933.2 4,890.5 1 22.0 - 0,4 0.1 22.6 23.7 21.8 20.3 2 47.0 - 4.9 82.3 134.2 133.8 103.0 68 6 3 0.2 - 1.0 10.2 11.4 11.6 10.6 , 6.8 4 29.5 - 3.9 58.8 92.2 90.7 67.7 41.3 5 17.3 - (Z) 13.3 30.6 31.5 24.7 20.5 6 193.8 5.8 299.9 576.1 1,075.5 1,103.7 914.9 609.9 7 86.3 0.3 220.2 247.0 553.6 563.9 478.5 340.6 8 70.2 88.7 723.6 4,082.0 4,964.5 5,221.3 4,059.5 2,805.1 9 56.1 3.8 362.9 1,663.6 2,086.3 2,108,7 1,465.3 926.8 10 3.3 71.6 46.1 1,889.0 2,010.0 2,245.6 1,862.2 1,390.6 11 9.9 12.9 314.5 468.9 806.3 805.0 685.3 455.3 12 0.9 0.4 - 60.5 61.9 61.9 46.7 32.3 13 4.5 8.9 1,687.3 1,100.0 2,800.7 2,814.1 2,355.5 1,046.0 14 3.0 - 237.6 370.1 610.7 579.5 525.3 275.4 15 0.3 - 0.6 260.1 261.0 227.9 203.7 163.9 16 2.7 - 69.1 5.9 77.7 77.7 73.2 30.7 17 2.7 - 69.1 5.9 77.7 77.7 73.2 30.7 18 - - 167.9 104.2 272.1 273.9 248.4 80.8 19 126.0 8.9 492.6 616.5 1,244.0 1,335.4 1,129.9 710.2 20 71.4 - 26.1 19.8 117.3 120.4 80.2 74.7 21 71.4 - 0.2 14.0 85.6 88.6 50.2 45.6 22 1.9 - 285.1 176.3 463.3 462.5 423.9 257.9 23 1.3 - 187.3 146.7 335.4 335.4 308.5 203.8 24 52.7 8.9 181.4 420.4 663.4 752.5 625.7 377.6 25 34.2 - 181.4 269.9 485.4 574.7 497.8 271.7 26 127.7 1.9 343.2 284.9 757.6 770.9 678.2 278 6 27 0.4 0.1 320.3 126.3 447.2 448.1 422.9 . 99 7 28 0.2 0.1 320.3 77.1 397.7 397.7 385.5 . 66 6 29 83.8 0.2 22.9 120.8 227.6 234.9 187.7 . 123.6 30 57.2 - 18.8 10.2 86.2 95.6 67.2 51.5 31 43.4 1.6 0.1 37.8 82.9 88.0 67.6 55.3 32 43.4 1.6 0.1 37.5 82.6 87.9 67.5 55.7 33 48.1 38.7 887.6 1,482.0 2,456.3 2,589.8 2,025.8 1,307.1 34 36.2 - 242.0 163.2 441.3 443.9 352.0 224.7 35 - - 252.6 15.7 268.3 266.6 247.8 111.0 36 6.9 38.7 260.2 403.7 709.4 866.8 714.0 477.9 37 4.5 38.7 5.9 341.0 390.0 545.3 416.2 0 302 38 0.5 - 3.0 111.7 115.2 109.0 55.9 . 51 2 39 0.7 - - 307.4 308.0 288.0 238.9 . 183.6 40 - - - 230.4 230.4 236.5 160.6 142.8 41 - - - 230.4 230.4 236.5 160.6 142.8 42 3.9 - 129.9 249.9 383.7 378.9 256.7 115.8 43 1.4 110.3 111.7 109.4 67.6 54.1 44 2.5 - (Z) 129.5 132.1 129.5 86.3 71.5 45 27.4 12.9 145.6 374.3 560.2 562.7 457.2 219 7 46 20.7 - 0.2 51.3 72.2 74.7 62.6 . 48.0 47 20.7 - 0.2 51.3 72.2 74.7 62.6 48.0 48 - 6.7 - 12.9 39.3 73.6 - 323.0 39.3 416.3 39.3 416 3 23.2 340 9 -111.3 49 - - 73.6 190.8 264.4 . 264.4 . 247.5 277.5 190.0 50 51 - - 32.5 - 32.4 32.4 30.5 5.5 52 33.6 3.6 21.5 707.6 829.3 840.2 528.9 451.1 53 17.3 (z) 13.3 30.6 31.5 24.7 20.5 54 13.3 0.4 - 295.2 308.9 315.3 199.4 178.0 55 4.5 - - 282.1 286.6 293.0 180.0 162 1 56 3.0 3.2 21.5 462.1 489.8 493.4 304.8 . 252.6 57 - 21.5 276.6 298.1 298.1 185.1 158.3 58 1.5 3.2 - 67.9 72.6 72.8 48.2 33.4 59 3.1 0.8 182.8 305.4 492.1 497.2 410.7 196.8 60 0.2 0.1 1.6 20.1 22.0 22.2 19.1 11.1 61 - - 167.9 - 167.9 167.9 163.7 9.7 62 1.4 0.4 13.2 268.5 283.6 288.5 213.0 164.7 63 1.4 0.3 - 16.8 18.5 18.5 15.0 11.3 64 54.9 36.8 625.4 1,883.6 2,600.8 2,684.7 2,177.2 1 451.4 65 13.7 (Z) 2.3 401.7 417.7 452.5 355.5 , 269.7 66 41.2 26.1 623.1 1,320.9 2,011.3 2,031.5 1,659.3 1,057.3 67 - - 266.7 36.2 302.8 300.4 258.5 66.5 68 - 22.2 17.3 184.2 223.6 240.2 191.2 132.6 69 19.8 10 4 - 3 8 172.0 (Z) 202.7 394.5 398.4 321.2 201.3 70 . 0 6 . - 195.4 209.6 224.4 159.4 125.8 71 . 20.1 302.8 323.5 307.7 273.1 210.3 72 10.8 (Z) 161.0 171.8 200.6 162.5 124.3 73 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Table 8. Employment, Costs, Value Added, and Value of Shipments, by Industry All employees (wage board and graded) Production workers (wage board) Costs LIM Item Materials, Contractual no. Number Payroll Number Hours Wages supplies, and parts services and other (1,000) (1,000) (millions) used costs 240 3 4,775,4 140.4 253.9 2,706.8 1,803.9 2,634.4 United States ....................................... , INDUSTRY GROUP 2 23 Apparel and other textile products ................... 1,4 17.9 1.3 1 2.1 2 7 16.2 26 8 1.6 30 3 1.5 31.4 3 28 Chemicals and allied products ........................ 3.3 0 4 63.5 '7 8 .4 1 0 . 2 0 . 2.0 . 1.0 2.9 4 281 Industrial inorganic chemicals ....................... . 2 0 . 38 0 . 0.8 . 1.7 15.7 25.4 24.4 5 286 Industrial organic chemicals ......................... . 1 0 . 17 7 0.5 0,9 9.1 3.9 4.2 6 289 Miscellaneous chemical products ...................... i . 29 8 . 603 2 14 3 28,3 279.2 186.8 270,5 7 es...... 348 Small arms ammunition; ordnance and accessor , 14 5 . 1 293 . 5 3 6 9 103.1 76.6 130.2 8 366 Communications equipment ............................. . 1 137 . 2 653.2 . 95.2 . 170.5 1,831.0 1,085.6 971.1 9 37 Transportation equipment ............................. . 52 7 , 1 035.3 35.5 63.5 696.4 622.3 525.7 10 372 Aircraft and parts ................................... i i . 68 6 , 1 305.4 52.5 93.9 1,009.2 348.1 277.7 11 ng ................. r 373 Ship and boat building and repa . 13 9 , 5 279 5.7 10.6 .98.5 102.3 157.0 12 376 Space vehicles, missiles, etc ........................ . 1 9 . 33 0 1.5 2.6 26.9 12.9 10.8 13 379 Miscellaneous transportation ......................... . 1 54 . 144.5 1 22.9 40.7 450.5 423.0 1,229.6 14 --- Research and development ............................. , , GEOGRAPHIC DIVISION, STATE, AND STANDARD METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREA' 13 1 256.3 6.0 10.9 99.6 57.8 200.9 15 New England Division ...................................... . 7 7 130 3 4 5 9.8 89.7 31.7 22.7 16 New Hampshire ........................................... . 2 4 . 55.2 . 0.3 0.6 6.0 6.0 53.3 17 Massachusetts ........................................... . 2 4 2 55 0.3 0.6 6.0 6.0 53.3 18 Boston SMSA ........................................... . 0 3 . 8 70 0.2 0.4 3.9 20.2 124.9 19 Rhode Island ............................................ . . 32 4 621.8 16.3 29.6 294.6 186.2 362.8 20 Middle Atlantic Division .................................. . 4 3 69.8 1.6 3.9 33.0 41.5 4.7 21 New York ................................................ . 2 3 46 2 1.6 3.8 31.8 38.6 3.9 22 Albany-Schenectady-Troy SMSA .......................... . 9 9 . 193.9 1.8 3.5 32.5 25.4 161.3 23 New Jersey .............................................. . 7 7 157.1 1.1 2.1 19.0 15.8 95.0 24 Newark SMSA ........................................... . 19 2 358.1 12.8 22.3 229.1 119.2 196.8 25 Pennsylvania ............................................ . 13 4 249 7 8.2 14.3 140.2 64.6 176.1 26 Philadelphia, Pa.-N.J. SMSA ........................... . . 27 East North Central Division ............................... 12.8 267.3 5.8 10.7 2 2 116.7 8 25 89.6 20 2 376.0 306 9 28 Ohio .................................................... 4.1 2 5 96.2 62.8 1.3 0.2 . 0.3 . 3.5 . 8.8 . 303.2 29 Dayton SMSA ........................................... . 6 0 117.3 2.7 5.4 53.9 47.2 59.3 30 Indiana ................................................. . 2 4 49 4 1.1 2.0 21.7 28.8 19.8 31 Indianapolis SMSA ..................................... . 2 6 . 53.8 1.7 3.1 37.0 22.2 9.8 32 Illinois ........................................ ..... M A . 2 6 8 53 1.7 3.1 37.0 22.2 9.8 33 S ......, Davenport-Rock Island-Moline, Iowa-Ill., S . . 2 67 320.2 1 38.2 69.6 703.0 526.3 666.2 34 South Atlantic Division ................................... . 8 10 , 231.1 3.4 6.6 67.0 102.8 144.0 35 Maryland ................................................ . 4 7 114.5 0.7 1.4 13.8 16.4 121.6 36 District of Columbia .................................... . 23 7 422.7 14.8 26.6 243.4 140.1 191.5 37 Virginia ................................................ A . 16 6 276 2 12.9 22.8 210.1 119.0 78.6 38 ............... Norfolk-Virginia Beach-Portsmouth, SMS . 2 5 . 49 3 1 9 3.6 38.6 45.1 9.8 39 North Carolina .......................................... . 8 5 . 159.4 . 6.4 11.8 120.5 38.8 38.6 40 South Carolina .......................................... . 6 4 131.2 5.2 9.0 106.2 72.9 14.9 41 Georgia ................................................. . 6 4 131.2 5.2 9.0 106.2 72.9 14.9 42 Macon SMSA ............................................ . 10 5 212.1 5.7 10.6 113.4 110.2 145.7 43 Florida ................................................. . 0 3 59.4 2.2 4.0 44.9 42.5 17.1 44 Jacksonville SMSA ..................................... . 3 7 69 4 2.7 4.8 51.7 43.5 22.1 45 Pensacola SMSA ........................................ . . 6 8 169.1 4.6 8.5 78.8 86.8 147.7 46 East South Central Division ............................... . 2 4 43.2 1.7 3.4 29.5 11.8 7.8 47 Kentucky ................................................ . 2 4 43.2 1.7 3.4 29,5 11.8 7.8 48 Louisville, Ky.-Ind. SMSA ............................. , 2 0 3.5 (Z) (Z) 0.1 11.0 107.3 49 Tennessee ............................................... . 5 7 116.8 2.9 5.0 49.1 62.2 17.4 50 Alabama ................................................. . 2 6 63.2 (Z) (Z) 0.4 6.6 8.8 51 Huntsville SMSA ....................................... . 0 2 5.6 - - - 1.9 15.2 52 Mississippi ............................................. . 23 1 438.3 17.3 29.9 328,7 296.8 65.8 53 west South Central Division ............................... . 1 0 17.7 0.5 0.9 9.1 3.9 4.2 54 Arkansas ................................................ . 8 6 169.0 6.7 11.5 131.9 116.6 19.1 55 Oklahoma ................................................ . 8 7 151 8 6.1 10.6 120.4 113.9 15.9 56 Oklahoma City SMSA .................................... . 13.6 . 251.6 10.1 17.5 187.7 176.3 42.6 57 Texas ................................................... 8 0 145.3 5.9 10.2 106.0 97.9 30.6 58 59 San Antonio SMSA ...................................... Texarkana, Tex.-Texarkana, Ark. SMSA .................. . 2.3 39.9 2.0 3.3 33.7 23.5 2.0 11 0 201.8 7.4 13.0 135.0 78.5 184.3 60 Mountain Division ......................................... , 6 0 12.0 0.2 0.4 4.8 2.8 6.2 61 Colorado ................................................ . 0 5 9.4 (Z) (Z) 0.1 5.2 129.4 62 Now Mexico .............................................. . 9 3 167.4 6.7 11.8 120.9 67.7 46.0 63 Utah .................................................... . 0 7 13.1 0.5 0.8 9.2 2.8 2.7 64 Nevada .................................................. . 72 1 1 500.5 44.9 81.7 950.3 481.8 630.7 65 Pacific Division .......................................... . 1 13 , 260.2 9.2 17.1 188.3 77.7 47.6 66 Washington .............................................. . 0 53 113.7 1 31.1 56.3 662.0 362.9 562.6 67 California .............................................. . 6 6 , 139 7 1.5 2.7 31.2 45.2 158.7 68 Bakersfield SMSA ...................................... . . 7 4 . 142 9 5.9 10.5 117.4 42.5 45.1 69 ................. ........ Los Angeles-Long Beach SMSA.. . 9 0 , 186 0 4.6 8.5 90.8 80.9 145.5 70 San Diego SMSA ........................................ . 6 0 . 131 5 4.4 8.2 102.7 67.5 37.6 71 San Francisco-Oakland SMSA ............................ . 6 9 . 212 9 7.2 12.9 165.7 28.6 41.5 72 Vallejo-Fairfield-Napa SMSA ........................... . 6 0 . 126.6 4.6 8.3 100.1 41.3 20.6 73 Hawaii .................................................. . n?yn..- .. represents total revenue. less cost of materials, while value added B is total revenue less cost of materials, contractual services, and other costs. - Represents zero. (Z) Less than 0.5. 'See appendix A for a description of each SMSA. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049Rnn1nn7F4nnn9_a Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 and Geographic Area for Department of Defense Facilities: 1978 Revised Value of shipments or receipts for service by type of activity Value added by manufacture Lin Manufacture Construction Research e no. and and and Other Total Total A B assembly conversion development billings billings revenue 407.9 86.0 2,692.8 5,921.7 9,108.4 9,140.6 7,336.8 4,702.4 1 21.8 - (1) (Z) 21.8 21.5 19.9 18.4 2 40.9 - 6.5 82.2 129.6 126.2 95.9 64.4 3 0.3 - 0.9 10.5 11.7 11.7 10.7 7.7 4 29.2 - 5.6 56.7 91.4 88.4 63.0 38.6 5 11.5 - - 15.0 26.5 26.2 22.3 18.1 6 196.0 1.6 318.2 569.9 1,085.7 1,078.4 891.6 621.1 7 90.0 0.5 163.8 238.7 492.9 504.0 427.4 297.2 8 55.3 79.4 657.8 3,962.6 4,755.2 4,782.9 3,697.3 2,726.2 9 45.9 0.9 325.1 1,741.8 2,113.8 2,209.3 1,587.1 1,061.4 10 1.4 60.6 27.1 1,911.4 2,000.5 1,925.6 1,577.5 1,299.8 11 7.2 17.5 305.6 253.7 584.1 591.3 489.0 332.0 12 0.7 0.3 - 55.6 56.7 56.7 43.8 33.2 13 3.9 4.5 1,546.5 1,068.3 2,623.2 2,627.2 2,204.7 975.1 14 1.9 1.7 225.6 266.6 495.8 504.7 446.8 245.9 15 0.1 1.7 0.4 198.7 200.9 207.8 176.1 153.5 16 1.7 - 66.7 4.6 73.1 73.1 67.1 13.8 17 1.7 - 66.7 4.6 73.1 73.1 67.1 13.8 18 - - 158.5 63.3 221.8 223.8 203.6 78.6 19 120.4 4.7 417.9 575.4 1,118.4 1,028.5 842.4 479.6 20 70.3 - 28.1 22.7 121.1 116.4 74.9 70.2 21 70.3 - 2.5 17.0 89.9 85.2 46.7 42.8 22 4.3 - 227.6 163.3 395.2 394.2 368.8 207.4 23 3.5 - 134.0 133.3 270.9 270.9 255.1 160.2 24 45.8 4.7 162.2 389.4 602.1 517.9 398.7 201.9 25 30.9 - 162.2 223.1 416.1 326.4 261.9 85.7 26 127.1 0.8 299.6 295.4 723.0 735.1 645.5 269.5 27 0.6 (Z) 281.6 143.0 425.2 425.0 404.8 97.9 28 0.2 (Z) 281.6 93.0 374.8 374.8 366.0 62.8 29 89.1 0.1 17.8 115.3 222.3 225.5 178.3 119.0 30 65.4 - 15.1 11.0 91.5 98.2 69.4 49.6 31 37.4 0.8 0.3 37.1 75.5 84.7 62.5 52.7 32 37.4 0.8 0.3 37.1 75.5 84.7 62.5 52.7 33 47.9 29.3 861.7 1,558.6 2,497.5 2,524.4 1,998.0 1,331.8 34 37.4 - 277.7 167.0 482.1 478.0 375.1 231.1 35 - - 240.1 13.5 253.6 254.4 238.0 116.4 36 7.4 29.1 236.9 551.2 824.6 838.3 698.2 506.8 37 3.9 29.1 3.7 486.8 523.5 537.4 418.5 339.9 38 0.7 3.0 85.5 89.2 106.3 61.2 51.4 39 0.5 0.2 (Z) 241.4 242.1 226.8 188.0 149.4 40 - - - 227.4 227.4 224.5 151.5 136.6 41 - - - 227.4 227.4 224.5 151.5 136.6 42 2.0 - 104.0 272.6 378.6 396.1 285.9 140.2 43 1.4 - - 129.6 131.1 133.7 91.2 74.1 44 0.6 - - 132.0 132.6 147.2 103.7 81.6 45 17.9 17.5 123.4 172.0 330.7 329.6 242.8 95.1 46 15.3 - 1.0 53.3 69.5 68.4 56.6 48.8 47 15.3 - 1.0 53.3 69.5 68.4 56.6 48.8 48 - - 27.1 - 27.1 27.1 16.2 -91.1 49 2.6 17.5 72.5 118.7 211.3 211.3 149.1 131.7 50 - - 72.5 - 72.5 72.5 65.9 57.1 51 - - 22.8 - 22.8 22.8 20.9 5.6 52 31.7 0.1 23.2 774.2 829.2 834.8 538.0 472.2 53 11.5 - - 15.0 26.5 26.2 22.3 18.1 54 11.0 0.1 - 314.0 325.1 328.5 211.9 192.8 55 3.7 - - 298.5 302.3 305.6 191.7 175.8 56 9.2 (Z) 23.2 445.2 477.6 480.1 303.8 261.2 57 - 23.1 256.7 279.8 279.8 181.9 151.3 58 5.3 - 0.1 62.8 68.2 65.4 41.9 39.9 59 5.7 1.0 145.6 318.6 470.8 467.8 389.3 205.1 60 0.4 0.1 1.6 18.9 21.0 21.0 18.2 12.0 61 - - 143.9 - 143.9 143.9 138.7 9.4 62 2.3 0.3 - 283.7 286.3 283.4 215.7 169.7 63 3.0 0.6 - 16.0 19.6 19.5 16.7 14.0 64 55.4 30.8 595.9 1,961.0 2,643.2 2,715.9 2,234.1 1,603.3 65 25.1 - 3.5 339.0 367.6 310.2 232.5 185.0 66 30.3 30.8 592.4 1,382.5 2,036.1 2,131.1 1,765.4 1,205.6 67 - - 248.0 28.0 276.0 281.6 236.4 77.7 68 - 29.7 3.1 239.9 272.7 305.4 262.9 217.8 69 14.8 - 188.5 229.7 433.1 459.5 378.6 233.0 70 8.2 0.9 (Z) 202.0 211.2 239.9 172.5 134.9 71 (Z) 18.4 285.5 303.8 303.8 275.2 233.7 72 - - (Z) 239.5 239.5 274.6 233.2 212.7 73 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Appendix A. Standard Consolidated Statistical Areas and Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas (Titles and definitions of the SMSA's in the State established by the Department of Commerce, Office of Federal Statistical Policy and Standards, as of December 1979) Standard Consolidated Statistical Areas Boston-Lawrence-Lowell, Mass.-N.H. ...... . Chicago-Gary, Ill.-Ind. . . . .............. Cincinnati-Hamilton, Ohio-Ky.-Ind. ....... . Cleveland-Akron-Lorain, Ohio ........... . Detroit-Ann Arbor, Mich . .............. . Houston-Galveston, Tex . .............. . Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, Calif ..... Miami-Fort Lauderdale, Fla .............. Milwaukee-Racine, Wis ................. New York-Newark-Jersey City, N.Y.-N.J.-Conn. Philadelphia-Wilmington-Trenton, Pa.-Del.-N.J.-Md ..................... San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose, Calif. ... . Seattle-Tacoma, Wash .................. Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas Abilene, Tex ........................ Akron, Ohio ...................... . Albany, Ga ......................... Albany-Schenectady-Troy, N.Y........... Albuquerque, N. Mex ................. . Alexandria, La . .................... . Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, Pa.-N.J....... Altoona, Pa . ....................... Amarillo, Tex . ..................... . Anaheim-Santa Ana-Garden Grove, Calif. ... . Anchorage, Alaska .................... Anderson, Ind ....................... Consists of Boston, Mass., SMSA; Lawrence-Haverhill, Mass.-N.H., SMSA; Lowell, Mass.-N.H., SMSA; and Brockton, Mass., SMSA Consists of Chicago, Ill., SMSA, and Gary-Hammond-East Chicago, Ind., SMSA Consists of Cincinnati, Ohio-Ky.-Ind., SMSA, and Hamilton-Middletown, Ohio, SMSA Consists of Cleveland, Ohio, SMSA; Akron, Ohio, SMSA; and Lorain-Elyria, Ohio, SMSA Consists of Detroit, Mich., SMSA,and Ann Arbor, Mich., SMSA Consists of Houston, Tex.,SMSA, and Galveston-Texas City, Tex., SMSA Consists of Los Angeles-Long Beach, Calif., SMSA; Anaheim-Santa Ana-Garden Grove, Calif., SMSA; Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif., SMSA; and Oxnard-Simi Valley-Ventura, Calif., SMSA Consists of Miami, Fla., SMSA, and Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood, Fla,, SMSA Consists of Milwaukee, Wis., SMSA, and Racine, Wis., SMSA Consists of NewYork, N.Y.-N.J., SMSA;Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y., SMSA; Newark, N.J., SMSA; Jersey City, N.J., SMSA; New Brunswick-Perth Amboy-Sayreville, N.J., SMSA; Paterson-Clifton-Passaic, N.J., SMSA; Long Branch-Asbury Park, N.J., SMSA; Stamford, Conn., SMSA; and Norwalk, Conn., SMSA Consists of Philadelphia, Pa.-N.J., SMSA; Wilmington, Del.-N.J.-Md., SMSA; and Trenton, N.J., SMSA Consists of San Francisco-Oakland, Calif., SMSA; San Jose, Calif., SMSA; and Vallejo-Fairfield-Napa, Calif., SMSA Consists of Seattle-Everett, Wash., SMSA, and Tacoma, Wash., SMSA Consists of Callahan, Jones, and Taylor Counties, Tex. Consists of Portage and Summit Counties, Ohio Consists of Dougherty and Lee Counties, Ga. Consists of Albany, Montgomery, Rensselaer, Saratoga, and Schenectady Counties, N.Y. Consists of Bernalillo and Sandoval Counties, N. Mex. Consists of Grant and Rapides Parishes, La. Consists of Carbon, Lehigh, and Northampton Counties, Pa.; and Warren County, N.J. Coextensive with Blair County, Pa. Consists of Potter and Randall Counties, Tex. Coextensive with Orange County, Calif. Coextensive with Anchorage Division, Alaska Coextensive with Madison County, Ind. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Ann Arbor, Mich ..................... Coextensive with Washtenaw County, Mich. Anniston, Ala ....................... Coextensive with Calhoun County, Ala. Appleton-Oshkosh, Wis ................. Consists of Calumet, Outagamie, and Winnebago Counties, Wis. Asheville, N.C ....................... Consists of Buncombe and Madison Counties, N.C. Atlanta, Ga . ....................... Consists of Butts, Cherokee, Clayton, Cobb, De Kalb, Douglas, Fayette, Forsyth, Fulton, Gwinnett, Henry, Newton, Paulding, Rockdale, and Walton Counties, Ga. Atlantic City, N.J . ................... Coextensive with Atlantic County, N.J. Augusta, Ga.-S.C ..................... Consists of Columbia and Richmond Counties, Ga., and Aiken County, S.C. Austin, Tex . ....................... Consists of Hays, Travis, and Williamson Counties, Tex. Bakersfield, Calif ..................... Coextensive with Kern County, Calif. Baltimore, Md ....................... Consists of Baltimore city and Anne Arundel, Baltimore, Carroll, Harford, and Howard Counties, Md. Baton Rouge, La ..................... Consists of Ascension, East Baton Rouge, Livingston, and West Baton Rouge Parishes, La. Battle Creek, Mich .................... Consists of Barry and Calhoun Counties, Mich. Bay City, Mich . ..................... Coextensive with Bay County, Mich. Beaumont-Port Arthur-Orange, Tex. ....... Consists of Hardin, Jefferson, and Orange Counties, Tex. Billings, Mont ....................... Coextensive with Yellowstone County, Mont. Biloxi-Gulfport, Miss . ................. Consists of Hancock, Harrison, and Stone Counties, Miss. Binghamton, N.Y.-Pa .................. Consists of Broome and Tioga Counties, N.Y., and Susquehanna County, Pa. Birmingham, Ala ..................... Consists of Jefferson, St. Clair, Shelby, and Walker Counties, Ala. Bismarck, N. Dak ..................... Consists of Burleigh and Morton Counties, N.Dak. Bloomington, Ind . ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . Coextensive with Monroe County, Ind. Bloomington-Normal, III ................ Coextensive with McLean County, III. Boise City, Idaho .................... Coextensive with Ada County, Idaho Boston, Mass . ....................... Consists of Beverly, Lynn, Peabody, and Salem cities, and Boxford, Danvers, Hamilton, Lynnfield, Manchester, Marblehead, Middleton, Nahant, Saugus, Swampscott, Topsfield, and Wenham towns in Essex County; Cambridge, Everett, Maiden, Medford, Melrose, Newton, Somerville, Waltham, and Woburn cities, and Acton, Arlington, Ashland, Bedford, Belmont, Boxborough, Burlington, Carlisle, Concord, Framingham, Holliston, Lexington, Lincoln, Natick, North Reading, Reading, Sherborn, Stoneham, Sudbury, Wakefield, Watertown, Wayland, Weston; Wilmington, and Winchester towns in Middlesex County; Quincy city, and Bellingham, Braintree, Brookline, Canton, Cohasset, Dedham, Dover, Foxborough, Franklin, Holbrook, Medfield, Medway, Millis, Milton, Needham, Norfolk, Norwood, Randolph, Sharon, Stoughton, Walpole, Wellesley, Westwood, Weymouth, and Wrentham towns in Norfolk County; Abington, Duxbury, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Hull, Kingston, Marshfield, Norwell, Pembroke, Rockland, Scituate towns in Plymouth County; and Boston, Chelsea, and Revere cities, and Winthrop town in Suffolk County, Mass. Bradenton, Fla . ..................... Coextensive with Manatee County, Fla. Bridgeport, Conn ..................... Consists of Bridgeport and Shelton cities, and Easton, Fairfield, Monroe, Stratford, and Trumbull towns in Fairfield County; and Derby and Milford cities in New Haven County, Conn. Bristol, Conn . ...................... Consists of Bristol city and Burlington town in Hartford County, and Plymouth town in Litchfield County, Conn. Brockton, Mass . ..................... Consists of Easton town in Bristol County; Avon town in Norfolk County; and Brockton city, and Bridgewater, East Bridgewater, Halifax, West Bridgewater, and Whitman towns in Plymouth County, Mass. Brownsville-Harlingen-San Benito, Tex. ..... Coextensive with Cameron County, Tex. Bryan-College Station, Tex . ............. Coextensive with Brazos County, Tex. Buffalo, N.Y ........................ Consists of Erie and Niagara Counties, N.Y. Burlington, N.C ...................... Coextensive with Alamance County, N.C. Caguas, P. R . ....................... Consists of Caguas, Guarabo, and San Lorenzo Municipios, P.R. Canton, Ohio ....................... Consists of Carroll and Stark Counties, Ohio Cedar Rapids, Iowa ................... Coextensive with Linn County, Iowa Champaign-Urbana-Rantoul, III............ Coextensive with Champaign County, Ill. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R00100254nnn2-:3 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 APPENDIX A A-3 Charleston-North Charleston, S.C. ......... Consists of Berkeley, Charleston, and Dorchester Counties, S.C. Charleston, W. Va . ................... Consists of Kanawha and Putnam Counties, W. Va. Charlotte-Gastonia, N.C . ............... Consists of Gaston, Mecklenburg, and Union Counties, N.C. Chattanooga, Tenn.-Ga ................. Consists of Hamilton, Marion, and Sequatchie Counties,Tenn.; and Catoosa, Dade, and Walker Counties, Ga. Chicago, III ......................... Consists of Cook, Du Page, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will Counties, III. Cincinnati, Ohio-Ky.-Ind ................ Consists of Clermont, Hamilton, and Warren Counties, Ohio; Boone, Campbell, and Kenton Counties, Ky.; and Dearborn County, Ind. Clarksville-Hopkinsville, Tenn.-Ky. ........ Consists of Montgomery County, Tenn. and Christian County, Ky. Cleveland, Ohio ..................... Consists of Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, and Medina Counties, Ohio Colorado Springs, Colo ................. Consists of El Paso and Teller Counties, Colo. Columbia, Mo ....................... Coextensive with Boone County, Mo. Columbia, S.C ....................... Consists of Lexington and Richland Counties, S.C. Columbus, Ga.-Ala .................... Consists of Chattahoochee County and Columbus (consolidated government), Ga., and Russell County, Ala. Columbus, Ohio ..................... Consists of Delaware, Fairfield, Franklin, Madison, and Pickaway Counties, Ohio Corpus Christi, Tex . .................. Consists of Nueces and San Patrico Counties, Tex. Dallas-Fort Worth, Tex ................. Consists of Collin, Dallas, Denton, Ellis, Hood, Johnson, Kaufman, Parker, Rockwall, Tarrant, and Wise Counties, Tex. Danbury, Conn ...................... Consists of Danbury city and Bethel, Brookfield, New Fairfield, Newtown, and Redding towns in Fairfield County; and New Milford town in Litchfield County, Conn. Davenport-Rock Island-Moline, Iowa-Ill...... Consists of Scott County, Iowa and Henry and Rock Island Counties, Ill. Dayton, Ohio ...................... Consists of Greene, Miami, Montgomery, and Preble Counties, Ohio Daytona Beach, Fla ................... Coextensive with Volusia County, Fla. Decatur, Ill ......................... Coextensive with Macon County, Ill. Denver-Boulder, Colo .................. Consists of Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Denver, Douglas, Gilpin, and Jefferson Counties, Colo. Des Moines, Iowa .................... Consists of Polk and Warren Counties, Iowa Detroit, Mich . ...................... Consists of Lapeer, Livingston, Macomb, Oakland, St. Clair, and Wayne Counties, Mich. Dubuque, Iowa ..................... Coextensive with Dubuque County, Iowa Duluth-Superior, Minn.-Wis .............. Consists of St. Louis County, Minn. and Douglas County, Wis.' Eau Claire, Wis . ..................... Consists of Chippewa and Eau Claire Counties, Wis. El Paso, Tex ........................ Coextensive with El Paso County, Tex. Elkhart, Ind ......................... Coextensive with Elkhart County, Ind. Elmira, N.Y ......................... Coextensive with Chemung County, N.Y. Enid, Okla .......................... Coextensivewith Garfield County, Okla. Erie, Pa ........................... Coextensive with Erie County, Pa. Eugene-Springfield, Oreg ................ Coextensive with Lane County, Oreg. Evansville, Ind.-Ky .................... Consists of Gibson, Posey, Vanderburgh, and Warrick Counties, Ind. and Henderson County, Ky. Fall River, Mass.-R.1 ................... Consists of Fall River city and Dighton, Somerset, Swansea, and Westport towns in Bristol County, Mass.; and Little Compton, Portsmouth, and Tiverton towns in Newport County, R.I. Fargo-Moorhead, N. Dak.-Minn. .......... Consists of Cass County, N. Dak. and Clay County, Minn. Fayetteville, N.C ..................... Coextensive with Cumberland County, N.C. Fayetteville-Springdale, Ark . ............ Consists of Benton and Washington Counties, Ark. Fitchburg-Leominster, Mass .............. Consists of Shirley and Townsend towns in Middlesex County, and Fitchburg and Leominster cities and Lunenburg and Westminster towns in Worcester County, Mass. Flint, Mich ......................... Consists of Genesee and Shiawassee Counties, Mich. Florence, Ala . ...................... Consists of Colbert and Lauderdale Counties, Ala. Fort Collins, Colo . ................... Coextensive with Larimer County, Colo. Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood, Fla. ......... Coextensive with Broward County, Fla. Fort Myers-Cape Coral, Fla ............... Coextensive with Lee County, Fla. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 A-4 APPENDIX A Fort Smith, Ark.-Okla . ................ Consists of Crawford and Sebastian Counties, Ark. and Le Flore and Sequoyah Counties, Okla. Fort Wayne, Ind . .................... Consists of Adams, Allen, De Kalb, and Wells Counties, Ind. Fresno, Calif ........................ Coextensive with Fresno County, Calif. Gadsden, Ala . ...................... Coextensive with Etowah County, Ala. Gainesville, Fla ...................... Coextensive with Alachua County, Fla. Galveston-Texas City, Tex ............... Coextensive with Galveston County, Tex. Gary-Hammond-East Chicago, Ind. ........ Consists of Lake and Porter Counties, Ind. Grand Forks, N. Dak.-Minn .............. Consists of Grand Forks County, N. Dak. and Polk County, Minn. Grand Rapids, Mich ................... Consists of Kent and Ottawa Counties, Mich. Great Falls, Mont . ................... Coextensive with Cascade County, Mont. Greeley, Colo. ..:................... Coextensive with Weld County, Colo. Green Bay, Wis . ..................... Coextensive with Brown County, Wis. Greensboro-Winston-Salem-High Point, N.C. . Consists of Davidson, Forsyth, Guilford, Randolph, Stokes, and Yadkin Counties, N. C. Greenville -Spartan burg, S.C. Consists of Greenville, Pickens, and Spartanburg Counties, S.C. Hamilton-Middletown, Ohio ............. Coextensive with Butler County, Ohio Harrisburg, Pa ....................... Consists of Cumberland, Dauphin,and Perry Counties, Pa. Hartford, Conn . ..................... Consists of Hartford city and Avon, Bloomfield, Canton, East Granby, East Hartford, East Windsor, Enfield, Farmington, Glastonbury, Granby, Manchester, Marlborough, Newington, Rocky Hill, Simsbury, South Windsor, Suffield, West Hartford, Wethersfield, Windsor, and Windsor Locks towns in Hartford County; New Hartford town in Litchfield County; Cromwell, East Hampton, and Portland towns in Middlesex County; Colchester town in New London County; and Andover, Bolton, Columbia, Coventry, Ellington, Hebron, Stafford, Tolland, Vernon, and Willington towns in Tolland County, Conn. Honolulu, Hawaii .................... Coextensive with Honolulu County, Hawaii Houston, Tex . ...................... Consists of Brazoria, Fort Bend, Harris, Liberty, Montgomery, and Waller Counties, Tex. Huntington-Ashland, W. Va.-Ky.-Ohio ...... Consists of Cabell and Wayne Counties, W. Va.; Boyd and Greenup Counties, Ky.; and Lawrence County, Ohio Huntsville, Ala . ..................... Consists of Limestone, Madison, and Marshall Counties, Ala. Indianapolis, Ind . .................... Consists of Boone, Hamilton, Hancock, Hendricks, Johnson, Marion, Morgan, and Shelby Counties, Ind. Iowa City, Iowa ..................... Coextensive with Johnson County, Iowa Jackson, Mich ....................... Coextensive with Jackson County, Mich. Jackson, Miss . ...................... Consists of Hinds and Rankin Counties, Miss. Jacksonville, Fla . .................... Consists of Baker, Clay, Duval, Nassau, and St. Johns Counties, Fla. Janesville-Beloit, Wis ................... Coextensive with Rock County, Wis. Jersey City, N.J......... ........... Coextensive with Hudson County, N.J. Johnson City-Kingsport-Bristol, Tenn.-Va. ... Consists of Carter, Hawkins, Sullivan, Unicoi, and Washington Counties, Tenn., and Bristol city and Scott and Washington Counties, Va. Johnstown, Pa . ..................... Consists of Cambria and Somerset Counties, Pa. Kalamazoo-Portage, Mich . .............. Consists of Kalamazoo and Van Buren Counties, Mich. Kankakee, III . ...................... Coextensive with Kankakee County, Ill. Kansas City, Mo.-Kans .................. Consists of Cass, Clay, Jackson, Platte, and Ray Counties, Mo., and Johnson and Wyandotte Counties, Kans. Kenosha, Wis . ...................... Coextensive with Kenosha County, Wis. Killeen-Temple, Tex ................... Consists of Bell and Coryell Counties, Tex. Knoxville, Tenn . .................... Consists of Anderson, Blount, Knox, and Union Counties, Tenn. Kokomo, Ind . ...................... Consists of Howard and Tipton Counties, Ind. La Crosse, Wis ....................... Coextensive with La Crosse County, Wisc. Lafayette, La . ...................... Coextensive with Lafayette Parish, La. Lafayette-West Lafayette, Ind. ........... Coextensive with Tippecanoe County, Ind. Lake Charles, La. Coextensive with Calcasieu Parish, La. Lakeland-Winter Haven, Fla .............. Coextensive with Polk County, Fla. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84BOOO4gROO1nn754nnn2-~ Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Lancaster, Pa . ..................... . Lansing-East Lansing, Mich . ............ . Laredo, Tex ......................... Las Cruces, N. Max .................... Las Vegas, Nev . ..................... Lawrence, Kans . ..................... Lawrence-Haverhill, Mass.-N.H............ Lawton, Okla. ... ................ . Lewiston-Auburn, Maine ............... Lexington-Fayette, Ky . ............... Lima, Ohio ........................ Lincoln, Nebr . ..................... . Little Rock-North Little Rock, Ark. ....... Long Branch-Asbury Park, N.J........... . Longview-Marshall, Tex ................. Lorain-Elyria, Ohio ................... Los Angeles-Long Beach, Calif. .......... . Louisville, Ky-Ind . ................... Lubbock, Tex ....................... Lynchburg, Va . ..................... Macon, Ga . ....................... . Madison, Wis ........................ Manchester, N.H . ................... . Mansfield, Ohio ..................... Mayaguez, P. R . .................... . McAllen-Pharr-Edinburg, Tex ............. Melbourne-Titusville-Cocoa, Fla. ......... . Memphis, Tenn.-Ark.-Miss ............... Meriden, Conn . ..................... Miami, Fla . ....................... . Midland, Tex . ...................... Milwaukee, Wis...................... Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.-Wis. .......... Mobile, Ala . ....................... Modesto, Calif . ..................... Monroe, La . ....................... Montgomery, Ala . ................... Muncie, Ind . ....................... Muskegon-Norton Shores-Muskegon Heights, Mich ............................ Nashua, N.H . ...................... . APPENDIX A A-5 Coextensive with Lancaster County, Pa. Consists of Clinton, Eaton, Ingham, and Ionia Counties, Mich. Coextensive with Webb County, Tex. Coextensive with Dona Ana County, N.Mex. Coextensive with Clark County, Nev. Coextensive with Douglas County, Kans. Consists of Haverhill and Lawrence cities and Amesbury, Andover, Georgetown, Groveland, Merrimac, Methuen, North Andover, Salisbury, and West Newbury towns in Essex County, Mass. and Atkinson, Hampstead, Kingston, Newton, Plaistow, Salem, and Windham towns in Rockingham County, N.H. Coextensive with Comanche County, Okla. Consists of Auburn and Lewiston cities and Lisbon town in Androscoggin County, Maine Consists of Bourbon, Clark, Fayette, Jessamine, Scott, and Woodford Counties, Ky. Consists of Allen, Auglaize, Putnam, and Van Wert Counties, Ohio Coextensive with Lancaster County, Nebr. Consists of Pulaski and Saline Counties, Ark. Coextensive with Monmouth County, N.J. Consists of Gregg and Harrison Counties, Tex. Coextensive with Lorain County, Ohio Coextensive with Los Angeles County, Calif. Consists of Bullitt, Jefferson, and Oldham Counties, Ky. and Clark and Floyd Counties, Ind. Consists of Lowell city and Billerica, Chelmsford, Dracut, Tewksbury, Tyngsborough, and Westford towns in Middlesex County, Mass.; and Pelham town in Hillsborough County, N.H. Coextensive with Lubbock County, Tex. Consists of Lynchburg city and Amherst, Appomattox, and Campbell Counties, Va. Consists of Bibb, Houston, Jones, and Twiggs Counties, Ga. Coextensive with Dane County, Wis. Consists of Manchester city and Bedford and Goffstown towns in Hillsborough ,. County; Allenstown, Hooksett, and Pembroke towns in Merrimach County; and Derry and Londonderry towns in Rockingham County, N.H. Coextensive with Richland County, Ohio Consists of Anasco, Hormigueros, and Mayaguez Municipios, P. Coextensive with Hidalgo County, Tex. Coextensive with Brevard County, Fla. Consists of Shelby and Tipton Counties, Tenn.; Crittenden County, Ark.; and De Soto County, Miss. Coextensive with Meriden city in New Haven County, Conn. Coextensive with Dade County, Fla. Coextensive with Midland County, Tex. Consists of Milwaukee, Ozaukee, Washington, and Waukesha Counties, Wis. Consists of Anoka, Carver, Chisago, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, Washington, and Wright Counties, Minn. and St. Croix County, Wis. Consists of Baldwin and Mobile Counties, Ala. Coextensive with Stanislaus County, Calif. Coextensive with Ouachita Parish, La. Consists of Autauga, Elmore, and Montgomery Counties, Ala. Coextensive with Delaware County, Ind. Consists of Muskegon and Oceana Counties, Mich. Consists of Nashua city and Amherst, Hudson, Merrimack, and Milford towns in Hillsborough County, N.H. Consists of Cheatham, Davidson, Dickson, Robertson, Rutherford, Sumner, Williamson, and Wilson Counties, Tenn. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 A-6 APPENDIX A Nassau-Suffolk, N.Y ................... Consists of Nassau and Suffolk Counties, N.Y. New Bedford, Mass . .................. Consists of New Bedford city and Acushnet, Dartmouth, Fairhaven, and Freetown towns in Bristol County; and Lakeville, Marion, and Mattapoisett towns in Plymouth County, Mass. New Britain, Conn .................... . Consists of New Britain city and Berlin, Plainville, and Southington towns in Hartford County, Conn. New Brunswick-Perth Amboy-Sayreville, N.J. . Coextensive with Middlesex County, N.J. New Haven-West Haven, Conn. .......... Consists of Clinton town in Middlesex County; and New Haven and West Haven cities and Bethany, Branford, East Haven, Guilford, Hamden, Madison, North Branford, North Haven, Orange, Wallingford, and Woodbridge towns in New Haven County, Conn. New London-Norwich, Conn.-R.I. ......... Consists of Old Saybrook town in Middlesex County; New London and Norwich cities and Bozrah, East Lyme, Griswold, Groton, Ledyard, Lisbon, Montville, Old Lyme, Preston, Sprague, Stonington, and Waterford towns in New London County, Conn.; and Hopkinton and Westerly towns in Washington County, R.I. New Orleans, La . .................... Consists of Jefferson, Orleans, St. Bernard, and St. Tammany Parishes, La. New York, N.Y.-N.J ................... Consists of Bronx, Kings, New York, Putnam, Queens, Richmond, Rockland, and Westchester Counties, N.Y. and Bergen County, N.J. Newark, N.J. . . . . . . . . . . ............ Consists of Essex, Morris, Somerset, and Union Counties, N.J. Newport News-Hampton, Va. ........... Consists of Hampton, Newport News, Poquoson, and Williamsburg cities and Gloucester, James City, and York Counties, Va. Norfolk-Virginia Beach-Portsmouth, Va.-N.C. . Consists of Chesapeake, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Suffolk, and Virginia Beach cities, Va. and Currituck County, N.C. Northeast. Pennsylvania ................ Consists of Lackawanna, Luzerne, and Monroe Counties, Pa. Norwalk, Conn ...................... Consists of Norwalk city and Weston, Westport, and Wilton towns in Fairfield County, Conn. Odessa, Tex . ....................... Coextensive with Ector County, Tex. Oklahoma City, Okla .................. Consists of Canadian, Cleveland, McClain, Oklahoma, and Pottawatomie Counties, Okla. Omaha, Nebr.-Iowa ................... Consists of Douglas and Sarpy Counties, Nebr. and Pottawattamie County, Iowa Orlando, Fla ........................ Consists of Orange, Osceola, and Seminole Counties, Fla. Owensboro, Ky ...................... Coextensive with Daviess County, Ky. Oxnard-Simi Valley-Ventura, Calif. ........ Coextensive with Ventura County, Calif. Panama City, Fla ..................... Coextensive with Bay County, Fla. Parkersburg-Marietta, W. Va.-Ohio ......... Consists of Wirt and Wood Counties, W. Va. and Washington County, Ohio Pascagoula-Moss Point, Miss . ............ Coextensive with Jackson County, Miss. Paterson-Clifton-Passaic, N.J . ............ Coextensive with Passaic County, N.J. Pensacola, Fla ....................... Consists of Escambia and Santa Rosa Counties, Fla. Peoria, Ill .......................... Consists of Peoria, Tazewell, and Woodford Counties, Ill. Petersburg-Colonial Heights-Hopewell, Va. ... Consists of Colonial Heights, Hopewell, and Petersburg cities and Dinwiddie and Prince George Counties, Va. Philadelphia, Pa.-N.J ................... Consists of Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Montgomery, and Philadelphia Counites, Pa.; and Burlington, Camden, and Gloucester Counties, N.J. Phoenix, Ariz ........................ Coextensive with Maricopa County, Ariz. Pine Bluff, Ark ...................... Coextensive with Jefferson County, Ark. Pittsburgh, Pa ....................... Consists of Allegheny, Beaver, Washington, and Westmoreland Counties, Pa. Pittsfield, Mass . ...................... Consists of Pittsfield city and Adams, Cheshire, Dalton, Lanesborough, Lee, Lenox, and Stockbridge towns in Berkshire County, Mass. Ponce, P.R ......................... Consists of Juan Diaz, Ponce, and Villaba Municipios, P.R. Portland, Maine ..................... Consists of Portland, South Portland, and Westbrook cities and Cape Elizabeth, Cumberland, Falmouth, Freeport, Gorham, Scarborough, Windham, and Yarmouth towns in Cumberland County; and Saco city and Old Orchard Beach town in York County, Maine Portland, Oreg.-Wash . ................. Consists of Clackamas, Multnomah, and Washington Counties, Oreg. and Clark County, Wash. Poughkeepsie, N.Y .................... Coextensive with Dutchess County, N.Y. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R00I0025400023 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Providence-Warwick-Pawtucket, R.I.-Mass. . Provo-Orem, Utah ................... Pueblo, Colo ........................ Racine, Wis . ....................... Raleigh-Durham, N.C . ................ . Rapid City, S. Dak .................... Reading, Pa . ....................... Reno, Nev . ........................ Richland-Kennewick-Pasco, Wash .......... Richmond, Va. .................... Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, Calif..... . Roanoke, Va ........................ Rochester, Minn ...................... Rochester, N.Y . .................... . Rockford, III ........................ Sacramento, Calif ..................... Saginaw, Mich ....................... St. Cloud, Minn ...................... St. Joseph, Mo ....................... St. Louis, Mo.-111 . ................... . Salem, Oreg ......................... Salinas-Seaside-Monterey, Calif........... . Salt Lake City-Ogden, Utah .............. San Angelo, Tex ...................... San Antonio, Tex ..................... San Diego, Calif ...................... San Francisco-Oakland, Calif . ........... . San Jose, Calif ....................... San Juan, P.R . ..................... . Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Lompoc, Calif.... . Santa Cruz, Calif . ................... . Santa Rosa, Calif ..................... Sarasota, Fla ........................ Savannah, Ga ........................ Seattle-Everett, Wash ................... Sherman-Denison, Tex . ................ Shreveport, La . ..................... Sioux City, Iowa-Nebr . ................ Sioux Falls, S. Dak .................... South Bend, Ind . .................... Spokane, Wash . ..................... Springfield, III ....................... APPENDIX A A-7 Consists of Barrington, Bristol, and Warren towns in Bristol County; Warwick city and Coventry, East Greenwich, and West Warwick towns in Kent County; Jamestown town in Newport County; Central Falls, Cranston, East Providence, Pawtucket, Providence, and Woonsocket cities and Burrillville, Cumberland, Johnston, Lincoln, North Providence, North Smithfield, Scituate, and Smithfield towns in Providence County; and Narragansett, North Kingstown, and South Kingstown towns in Washington County, R.I.; Attleboro city and North Attleborough, Norton, Rehoboth, and Seekonk towns in Bristol County; Plainville town in Norfolk County; and Blackstone and Millville towns in Worcester County, Mass. Coextensive with Utah County, Utah Coextensive with Pueblo County, Colo. Coextensive with Racine County, Wis. Consists of Durham, Orange, and Wake Counties, N.C. Consists of Pennington and Meade Counties, S. Dak. Coextensive with Berks County, Pa. Coextensive with Washoe County, Nev. Consists of Benton and Franklin Counties, Wash. Consists of Richmond city and Charles City, Chesterfield, Goochland, Hanover, Henrico, New Kent, and Powhatan Counties, Va. Consists of Riverside and San Bernardino Counties, Calif. Consists of Roanoke and Salem cities and Botetourt, Craig, and Roanoke Counties, Va. Coextensive with Olmsted County, Minn. Consists of Livingston, Monroe, Ontario, Orleans, and Wayne Counties, N.Y. Consists of Boone and Winnebago Counties, III. Consists of Placer, Sacramento, and Yolo Counties, Calif. Coextensive with Saginaw County, Mich. Consists of Benton, Sherburne, and Stearns Counties, Minn. Consists of Andrew and Buchanan Counties, Mo. Consists of St. Louis city and Franklin, Jefferson, St. Charles, and St. Louis Counties, Mo.; and Clinton, Madison, Monroe, and St. Clair Counties, III. Consists of Marion and Polk Counties, Oreg. Coextensive with Monterey County, Calif. Consists of Davis, Salt Lake, Tooele, and Weber Counties, Utah Coextensive with Tom Green County, Tex. Consists of Bexar, Comal, and Guadalupe Counties, Tex. Coextensive with San Diego County, Calif. Consists of Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, and San Mateo Counties, Calif. Coextensive with Santa Clara County, Calif. Consists of Bayamon, Canovanas, Carolina, Catano, Guaynabo, Loiza, San Juan, Toa Baja, and Trujillo Alto Municipios, P.R. Coextensive with Santa Barbara County, Calif. Coextensive with Santa Cruz County, Calif Coextensive with Sonoma County, Calif. Coextensive with Sarasota County, Fla. Consists of Bryan, Chatham, and Effingham Counties, Ga. Consists of King and Snohomish Counties, Wash. Coextensive with Grayson County, Tex. Consists of Bossier, Caddo, and Webster Parishes, La. Consists of Woodbury County, Iowa and Dakota County, Nebr. Coextensive with Minnehaha County, S.D. Consists of Marshall and St. Joseph Counties, Ind. Coextensive with Spokane County, Wash. Consists of Menard and Sangamon Counties, Ill. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 A-8 - Springfield, Mo . .................... . Springfield, Ohio .................... Springfield-Chicopee-Holyoke, Mass.-Conn... . Steubenville-Weirton, Ohio-W. Va......... . Stockton, Calif . .................... . Syracuse, N.Y ....................... Tacoma, Wash ....................... Tallahassee, Fla ...................... Tampa-St. Petersburg, Fla . ............. . Terre Haute, Ind . ................... . Texarkana, Tex.-Texarkana, Ark. ......... Toledo, Ohio-Mich .................... Topeka, Kans ....................... Trenton, N.J ........................ Tucson, Ariz ........................ Tulsa, Okla ......................... Tuscaloosa, Ala . .................... . Tyler, Tex . ........................ Utica-Rome, N.Y ..................... Vallejo-Fairfield-Napa, Calif. ..... . . . . . . Vineland-Millville-Bridgeton, N.J. ......... Waco, Tex . ........................ Washington, D.C.-Md.-Va. ............. Waterbury, Conn ..................... Waterloo-Cedar Falls, Iowa .............. West Palm Beach-Boca Raton, Fla......... . Wheeling, W. Va.-Ohio ................. Wichita, Kans . ..................... . Wichita Falls, Tex . ................... Williamsport, Pa . .................... Wilmington, Del.-N.J.-Md............... Wilmington, N.C . ................... . Worcester, Mass ...................... Yakima, Wash . ..................... . York, Pa . ......................... Youngstown-Warren, Ohio .............. APPENDIX A Consists of Christian and Greene Counties, Mo. Consists of Champaign and Clark Counties, Ohio Consists of Chicopee, Holyoke, Springfield, and Westfield cities and Agawam, East Longmeadow, Hampden, Longmeadow, Ludlow, Monson, Palmer, Southwick, West Springfield, and Wilbraham towns in Hampden County; Northampton city and Belchertown, Easthampton, Granby, Hadley, Hatfield, Southampton, and South Hadley towns in Hampshire County; Warren town in Worcester County, Mass.; and Somers town in Tolland County, Conn. Consists of Stamford city and Darien, Greenwich, and New Canaan towns in Fairfield County, Conn. Consists of Jefferson County, Ohio and Brooke and Hancock Counties, W. Va. Coextensive with San Joaquin County, Calif. Consists of Madison, Onondaga, and Oswego Counties, N.Y. Coextensive with Pierce County, Wash. Consists of Leon and Wakulla Counties, Fla. Consists of Hillsborough, Pasco, and Pinellas Counties, Fla. Consists of Clay, Sullivan, Vermillion, and Vigo Counties, Ind. Consists of Bowie County, Tex. and Little River and Miller Counties, Ark. Consists of Fulton, Lucas, Ottawa, and Wood Counties, Ohio and Monroe County, Mich. Consists of Jefferson, Osage, and Shawnee Counties, Kans. Coextensive with Mercer County, N.J. Coextensive with Pima County, Ariz. Consists of Creek, Mayes, Osage, Rogers, Tulsa, and Wagoner Counties, Okla. Coextensive with Tuscaloosa County, Ala. Coextensive with Smith County, Tex. Consists of Herkimer and Oneida Counties, N.Y. Consists of Napa and Solano Counties, Calif. Coextensive with Cumberland County, N.J. Coextensive with McLennan County, Tex. Consists of District of Columbia.; Charles, Montgomery, and Prince Georges Counties, Md; and Alexandria,' Fairfax; Falls Church, Manassas, and Manassas Park cities and Arlington, Fairfax, Loudoun, and Prince William Counties, Va. Consists of Thomaston, Watertown, and Woodbury towns in Litchfield County; and Waterbury city, Naugatuck borough, and Beacon Falls, Cheshire, Middlebury, Prospect, Southbury, and Wolcott towns in New Haven County, Conn. Coextensive with Black Hawk County, Iowa Coextensive with Palm Beach County, Fla. Consists of Marshall and Ohio Counties, W. Va. and Belmont County, Ohio Consists of Butler and Sedgwick Counties, Kans. Consists of Clay and Wichita Counties, Tex. Coextensive with Lycoming County, Pa. Consists of New Castle County, Del.; Salem County, N.J.; and Cecil County, Md. Consists of Brunswick and New Hanover Counties, N.C. Consists of Worcester city and Auburn, Berlin, Boylston, Brookfield, Charlton, East B rookfield, Grafton, Holden, Leicester, Millbury, Northborough, Northbridge, North Brookfield, Oxford, Paxton, Shrewsbury, Spencer, Sterling, Sutton, Upton, Uxbridge, Webster, Westborough, and West Boylston towns in Worcester County, Mass. Coextensive with Yakima County, Wash. Consists of Adams and York Counties, Pa. Consists of Mahoning and Trumbull Counties, Ohio Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-R DP84B00049R001002540002-3 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Appendix B. Limitations of the Data and Explanation of Terms LIMITATION OF THE DATA The MA-175 survey was conducted to measure the impact of Government procurement upon the manufacturing economy and upon geographic areas in terms of 92 Government-oriented industries. Similar data for other manufacturing industries which may have made shipments to the Federal Government are not available. Therefore, the data at the U.S. level do not repre- sent all Federal Government procurement, only that of the 92 industries selected for the sample. It is believed these industries constitute the vast bulk of Federal procurement. For the most part, shipments to the Federal Government represented by the data shown in this report consist of finished goods or com- ponents produced to military specifications. With the exception of the machinery industries, the major portion of Government business of these industries is subject to renegotiation and, there- fore, is separately identified in the records of the respondents. The respondents, in fact, were advised that they could base their subcontract shipments and receipts on those transactions. Government shipments consist of products shipped to (or receipts for work done for) Federal agencies, their contractors, subcontractors, and suppliers. The Government total is further subdivided into shipments or receipts (1) on Government prime contracts and (2) to or from other manufacturers in ultimate performance of Federal Government contracts (subcontracts). The prime contract of shipments figures for the industries surveyed account for the great bulk of all such Government contracts in manufacturing, while the subcontract data repre- sent a much smaller proportion of the total subcontracts for all manufacturing. The survey was designed primarily to measure the volume of shipments to the Federal Government made by prime contracting industries and was not intended to include all manufacturing industries that may have been engaged in sub- contracting activities related to Government contracts. In inter- preting the figures for subcontract work, it should be noted that these industries do not represent all "basic materials" and "other components" industries that are usually important in subcontracts. Shipments of materials and companies purchased by the Government and furnished to contractors supplying finished equipment were reported as prime contracts. Furthermore, there is no indication of the level of subcon- tracting (e.g., first tier, second tier, etc.). Because of the nature of the industries surveyed, it is likely that, except for a few industries such as electronic components, most of the subcon- tracting is first tier only, and the pyramiding of shipments values from one tier to another is not large. In addition to data shown for the 92 selected industries, this report includes separate data on "miscellaneous industries." Respondents were instructed that if their company has signif- icant research, development, test, evaluation, or production con- tracts in the fields of aerospace, atomic energy, electronics, instrumentation, ordnance, or shipbuilding, which were assigned by the company to establishments that were not covered in the MA-100 survey, they were to complete a Form MA-175 for each such location. These nonmanufacturing facilities of the manu- facturing companies reporting on this survey are classified in this category, which also includes a small number of nonprofit research corporations working on defense contracts. The particular sample selected for this survey is one of a large number of similar probability samples of the same size that could have been selected, by chance, using the same sample design. Each of the possible samples would yield somewhat different sets of results. The sampling errors-the differences between the estimates obtained and the results theoretically obtainable from a comparable complete canvas of the same target universe-are unknown. Guides to the potential size of the sampling errors, however, are provided by the estimated relative standard errors of the estimates. These are shown for a few key data items in the report. On the average, relative stand- ard errors tend to be somewhat higher for detailed figures than for larger aggregates. In conjunction with its associated estimates, the relative standard error (computed as the estimated standard error of estimate divided by the value of the estimate itself) may be used to define confidence intervals, ranges which could be expected to include comparable complete coverage values for specified percentages of all possible samples. The complete coverage value would be included in the range: 1. From one standard error below to one standard error above the derived estimate for about two-thirds of all samples. 2. From two standard errors below to two standard errors above the derived estimate for about 19 out of 20 of all possible samples. 3. From three standard errors below to three standard errors above the derived estimate for nearly all samples. An inference that the comparable complete coverage results would be within the indicated ranges would be correct in approximately the relative frequencies shown. Those propor- Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 tions, therefore, may be interpreted as defining the confidence that the estimates shown would differ from complete-coverage results by as much as one, two, or three standard errors, re- spectively. For example, if an estimated total is shown as $20.0 million with an associated relative standard error of 2 percent, the standard error is $0.4 million. Then there is approximately 67 percent confidence that the interval $19.6 to $20.4 million in- cludes the complete coverage total, about 95 percent confidence that the interval $19.2 to $20.8 million includes the complete coverage total, and almost certain confidence that the interval $18.8 to $21.2 million includes the complete coverage total. In addition to the sampling errors, the estimates are subject to various response and operational errors: errors of collection, reporting, transcription, etc. These operational errors would also occur if a complete canvass were to be conducted under the same conditions as this survey. Explicit measures of their effects generally are not available. However, it is believed that most of the important operational errors were detected and corrected in the course of the Census Bureau's review of the data for reason- ableness and consistency. EXPLANATION OF TERMS FOR MA-175 SURVEY NOTE: Respondents in both the MA-100 and the MA-175 surveys were asked to copy onto their MA-175 reports the figures on employment, cost of materials, and value of ship- ments as reported on the corresponding Form MA-100. The following definitions of these terms are based on the reporting instructions for Form MA-100. All employees. This category includes all full-time and part-time employees on the payrolls of operating manufacturing establishments who worked or received pay for any part of the pay period ended nearest the 12th of the month specified on the report form. Included are all persons on paid sick leave, paid holidays, and paid vacations during this pay period. Excluded are members of the Armed Forces and pensioners carried on the active rolls but not working during the period. Officers of cor- porations are included as employees; proprietors and partners of unincorporated firms are, however, excluded from the total. Production and related workers. This category includes workers (up through the working foreman level) engaged in fabricating, processing, assembling, inspecting, receiving, stor- age, handling, packing, warehousing, shipping (but not deliver- ing), maintenance, repair, janitoral and watchman services, product development, auxiliary production for plants' own use (e.g., power plant), recordkeeping, and other closely associated services. Excludes proprietors and partners. All other employees. Nonproduction personnel, including those engaged in the following activities: supervision above working foreman level, sales (including driver salesmen), sales delivery (truck drivers and helpers), advertising, credit, collec- tion, installation and servicing of own product, clerical and rou- tine office functions, executive, purchasing, finance, legal, per- sonnel (including cafeteria, etc.), professional, and technical. Excludes proprietors and partners. Average employment. The annual survey report forms re- quested employment figures for "production and related work- ers" for four selected pay periods (i.e., production workers' midmonth employment in March, May, August, and November). For "all other employees" only a mid-March figure was re- quested. Thus, the "annual average" is composed of an average of the four monthly figures for the "production workers" plus the March figure for "all other employees." Value added by manufacture. This measure of manufactur- ing activity is derived by subtracting the cost of materials, supplies, containers, fuel, purchased electricity, and contract work from the value of shipments (or value of production) plus receipts for services rendered. This figure is then adjusted by the addition of value added by merchandising operations (that is the difference between the sales value and cost of merchandise sold without further manufacture, processing, or assembly) plus the net change in finished goods and work-in-process inventories between the beginning and end of the year. However, value added for 1974 through 1979 for SIC 3731 was not adjusted for inventory changes between the beginning and ending of the year. Value added avoids the duplication in the value of shipments figure which results from the use of products of some establish- ments as materials by others. Consequently, it is considered to be the best value measure available for comparing the relative economic importance of manufacturing among industries and geographic areas. Cost of materials. This term refers to direct changes actually paid or payable for items consumed or put into production during the year, including freight charges and other direct charges incurred by the establishment in acquiring these ma- terials. Manufacturers included the cost of materials or fuel con- sumed regardless of whether these items were purchased by the individual establishment from other companies, transferred to it from other establishments of the same company, or withdrawn from inventory during the year. To arrive at the industry total cost of materials, separate figures were obtained for (a) the total delivered cost of all raw materials, semifinished goods, parts, components, containers, scrap, and supplies put into production or used as operating supplies and for repair and maintenance during that year; (b) the amount paid for electric energy purchased; (c) the amount paid for all fuels consumed for heat, power, or the generation of electricity; (d) the cost of work done by others on materials or parts furnished by manufacturing establishments (contract work); and (e) cost of products bought and resold in the same condition. The total excludes the cost of services used, such as advertising, insurance, telephone, etc., and research, develop- mental, and consulting services of other establishments; it also excludes overhead costs, such as depreciation charges, rent, interest, royalties, etc. It excludes materials, machinery, and equipment used in plant expansion or capitalized repairs which are chargeable to fixed assets accounts. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Value of shipments. The amounts under value of shipments are the received or receivable net selling values, f.o.b. plant, after discounts and allowances, and excluding freight charges and excise taxes. Under the general heading of shipments, manu- facturers were asked to include all items made by or for each establishment from materials owned by it, whether sold, trans- ferred to other plants of the same company, or shipped on consignment. Also included were receipts for contract work and for such miscellaneous activities as sale of scrap and refuse, installation work by manufacturing plant employees, research and development work, and repair work. The net selling value of products made in one plant on a contract basis from materials owned by others was reported by the plant providing the ma- terials. The value of products bought and resold without further processing (merchandising) was reported separately and is in- cluded in the value of shipments totals for each industry. In the case of multiunit companies, the manufacturer was requested to report the value of products transferred to other establishments of the same company (i.e., other manufacturing plants, separate sales branches, or retail stores) as though the establishments were separate economic units. The company was requested to include in "value of interplant transfers within the company" not only the direct costs of production but also a reasonable proportion of "all other costs" (including company overhead) -and profit. Value of production. Although establishments in most indus- tries reported value of shipments (as defined above), establish- ments in SIC 3731 reported value of production for 1979 and earlier years since value of production was considered to be a more appropriate measure of output in these industries for that period. Wage board and graded employees. These classifications refer to those nonmilitary personnel employed by Department of Defense-owned and -operated establishments. The Department of Defense categories of "wage board" and "graded" corre- spond to "production and related workers" and "all other em- ployees," respectively, for industrial manufacturing facilities. Costs. Represents the cost of materials, supplies, and parts used; the cost of contractual services; and other costs directly related to the manufacturing activities of the installation. Value of shipments or receipts for services. Represents total billings (including progress billings) based on the Industrial Fund accounting system of the Department of Defense, includ- ing receipts for construction and conversion, manufacture and assembly, and research and development. Unbilled costs of work in progress are reported separately. Total revenue. Represents total billings adjusted by the in- crease or decrease in the unbilled costs of work in progress. Value added by manufacture. Value added A represents total revenue less cost of materials. Value added B represents total revenue less cost of materials, contractual services, and other costs. I Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 I Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Appendix C. Description of Survey Sample and Estimating Procedure The estimates presented in this report are derived from a probability sample of approximately 6,500 manufacturing establishments which were selected from the 1977 Census of Manufactures. The sample included only plants in 92 of the approximately 450 four-digit SIC manufacturing industries, which on the basis of earlier, more detailed studies had been shown to be engaged most extensively in business with the Federal Government. A certainty cutoff level of 500 employees was arbitrarily defined for the survey; that is, all in-scope establishments with employment of 500 or more were included in the sample with certainty. The smaller establishments were subsequently assigned sampling probabilities that were proportional to their total value of shipments. No establishment, regardless of its ship- ments, was assigned a probility less than 0.005. Establishments chosen for the survey were assigned weights equal to the reciprocal of their probabilities of selection. Individual establish- ment data were inflated by their sampling weights to develop industry or geographic reciprocal estimates that are used in the final estimation procedure. All establishments included in the MA-175 survey were instructed to report total employment, cost of materials, and value of shipments. These data were to be identical to the data reported for these items on the 1979 MA-100 form filed with the Census Bureau for that plant, providing the establishment reported on the MA-100. In addition, the establishments were instructed to indicate by means of a check box inquiry the range of value of shipments made by the establishment to the Federal Government in 1979. Those establishments indicating shipments of $1 million or more to the Federal Government were asked to report the value of such shipments classified by the specific Government agency to which the products were billed, while the remaining plants (those indicating value of shipments of less than $1 million to the Federal Government) were not required to complete this portion of the inquiry. In order to estimate for the latter respondents, a linear approxi- mation to the mean value of the range (which the respondent checked) was employed. The following values were used to estimate shipments for establishments that shipped less than $1 million to the Federal Government: Up to $100,000, estimated at $42,000 $100,000 to $249,999, estimated at $150,000 $250,000 to $499,999, estimated at $350,000 $500,000 to $999,999, estimated at $700,000 These estimates are included in the "other Government agency not specifically known" category. A Government employment figure is shown in the various tables. This also is an estimated figure derived as a straight proration of the employment of the plant by the ratio of the Government shipments data reported by agency as a percentage of the total shipments of that establishment. There was a major change in 1978 from past publications in the estimation procedures. Government shipments totals in the 1978 report were ratio-estimated based on data from the ASM. This was done by first developing reciprocal estimates (indivi- dual plant data multiplied by its sample weight) for each industry or geographical area as mentioned above for all data items on the MA-175 survey form. Total employment (TE) and total value of shipments (TVS) are collected both on the MA-175 and ASM (MA-100) survey forms. The reciprocal estimates at each U.S. four-digit industry cell for total employ- ment and total value of shipments from the MA-175 were compared to the ASM estimate for the corresponding four-digit industry. These resulting ratios were multiplied by the MA-175 reciprocal estimates of Government shipments or Government employment to adjust the original estimates; that is, the revised Government shipments estimate for industry "i" is defined as: Where X. is the revised estimate of Government shipments for i industry i. MA-1001 is the estimate of total value of shipments for industry "i" obtained from the ASM. MA-1751 is the reciprocal estimate of total value of ship- ments for industry "i" obtained from the MA-175. X1 is the reciprocal estimate of Government shipments for industry "i" obtained from the MA-175. Data at the State and area level for Government shipments and employment were obtained by a ratio of X, multiplied by the area estimate Xa, i.e., Where Xa' is the adjusted Government shipments for area "a." Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 X' is the sum of the adjusted Government shipments summed Where over all 92 four-digit industries within the scope of the MA-175 survey. X is the sum of the unadjusted Government shipments summed over all 92 four-digit industries within the scope of the MA-175 survey. Xa is the unadjusted Government shipments for geographic area "a." Similar adjustments were made to the area estimates for total Government employment. The ratios x actually computed were 1.06 and 1.05 for shipments and employment respectively. All Government-related data for 1977 and 1978 in this report have been adjusted in this fashion. For 1977, however, the link was to the 1977 Census of Manufactures data (complete enumeration). As the 1979 ASM totals have yet to be published, this methodology cannot be directly employed for the 1979 survey data. As an interim procedure, it was initially planned to estimate 1979 ASM level numbers by adjusting the 1978 ASM estimates by the year-to-year movement indicated by the 1979 to 1978 MA-175 reciprocals, i.e., '79 MA-175. YY '78 MA-1751 Y. is the estimated 1979 ASM value for industry "i." Y. is the 1978 ASM value for industry "i." '79 MA-175 is the 1979 MA-175 reciprocal estimate for industry "i." '78 MA-175 is the 1978 MA-175 reciprocal estimate for industry "i." Y could then replace MA-100. in the methodology de- scribed above. However, as a new MA-175 survey panel was selected for 1979, the estimated year-to-year change was found to be very unreliable. In part, this was due to the coverage deterioration of the prior MA-175 panel and in part due to the independence of the two panels. Accordingly, the decision was made only for 1979 to publish MA-175 reciprocal estimates for employment, value added, and total shipments. When 1979 ASM estimates become available, future publica- tions will show 1979 data adjusted by the methodology previously described. In future years, when the current ASM data are not available, the procedure for obtaining Yi can be performed since the identical panel will be estimating both current and prior year MA-175 values. The statistics for the MA-171 survey (tables 7 and 8) are obtained from a complete census of all defense-owned and -operated manufacturing facilities and hence are universe estimates. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Appendix D. Survey Forms and Instructions 1 li 211101110 -241223, Respon au ~ e '' Ii REPORT FOR ;cA 'iNDAIt"x AR". ? cct 9 f on U.s. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE T! eaRE.~ of T E NAM o the same law, your report to the Census Bureau is confidential, it may be seetao sworn Census employees and may be used only for lsb w la o ti stic a l purposes. The H cENsu, ~ ante Provides that copies retained in your files are immune from l ega l rocess. to CURRENT INDUSTRIAL REPORTS orrospondanea perSein ing're this drrbblishm.d+'s report, P s....r.r I. he rile number oboe. your nom. RIRQRT'+ON,' N S~IIN N7 ~I0 i~aI~1RA 1OVaNi/R0 "' " . 0 INSTRUCTIONS - PIeese refer r.'h e Bureau of the Census I natrocrion Manual before filing this norm. Complete and return his form in 1201 East Tenth Street the envelope provided to: Jeffersonville, Indiana 47132 (P'"" correct any error in name and address /ncludlrig ZIP cone) EMPLOYER IDENTIFICATION (EI) NUMBER Name Identification number used on Employers Quarterly P ERSON TO BE CONTACTED Federal Tax Return (U.S. Treasury Department ( Enter arm and t l h Form 941) (Enter If not shown) ~~~ (Correct number It wrong) I e ep one number f not shown - Correct If wrong) Area code Number PART I Section A CURRENT REPORT CTt Section B PREVIOUS REPORTS For each item listed below, enter figures for current period or mark "None" in column (d). Item Amount for this period in unit of (a) Unit measure shown in of Item column (b) THE FIGURES SHOWN BELOW measure code (Enter figure or WERE REPOR Product PREV O TED FOR THE I US T mark None) code Description WO PERIODS i (b} (t) (dJ None I: :( (el I(/l 00` "; ;0 . ?T c o ~ . I Nell . eo a' 0 6: R r I A ` i , o,. IM N 11 ; a l MR , ' Ica( IN . I. A Tam 1 R 0 :a A I'MAG. I i ,,( ' .A oN riA p p. t 0 04 ? ` ~ A MS o ro 'sty ;A 000 0 .'.OR:..O ~ . . e.. 0 . F "film, VU iNAzA, i - , . P. R I a'N RA ;A.;:, p RA Olt; Rt i A. it t 1 i , cc ~o ~,~ N M; n o0}5 i00444 4"M im - Continuation sheers ore included, if all of your items could not be listed o thi ~' n s gage. . if addItIonal Epee, Is _LJJ us. __v.,. PI&W real '"Sind afford fpm woe Prepsled. . Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 D-2 APPENDIX D PART IA I ADDITIONAL ITEMS OF THIS ESTABLISHMENT Use this part if you do not have enough space in pan 1. Item (a) Product code Amount for this period in unit of measure THE FIGURES SHOWN BELOW shown in column (b) WERE REPORTED FOR THE (Enter fi ure or 1 PREVIOUS TWO PERIODS mark N ee) Mone (e) (t) Unit of measure Item code if continuation sheets have been enclosed, complete parts It, III, and IV below only on:first sheet. t PART II Has there been any change in the ownership or operation of this establishnen. during this period? Yes - Indicate type of change below. ^ No'' r e s : ,. of Address (Number, street city State, 7,lW. cadel comp . "v , I A. ^ Purchased from C. ^ Plant discontinued all operations I - o.^ Plant operations no longer covered by this survey A(Odscribe in "rRemarks" the products currently produced.) E.^ Reorganized (Describe in "Remarks;'' e.g., partndrship change or change in corporate status.) b1i PART III Do the figures shown on this report and an your last edpert cover the identical eitdbIlshments4 r -t r.----- PART IV PART V CERTIFICATION - This report is substantially accurate and has been prepared in accordance with instructions. Date Sijneture of authorized official Title and organization NOTE: The industry totals compiled from data on this form will be published by the Bureau of the Census in Current Industrial Reports as soon as possible after the necessary reports are received. Copies are available upon request to the Bureau of the Census. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDPR4R[1nn4QRnMr)t)O^A o) Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 ITEM 5 BILLINGS BY THIS ESTABLISH. MENT DURING CALENDAR YEAR 1979 ITEM 6 COSTS DURING CALENDAR YEAR 1979 ITEM 7 CHECKS TO ASSURE A COMPLETE AND ACCURATE -REPORT (Please complete this item after you have answered a,I Items on this report,) ITEM 8 REMARKS PERTAIN- ING TO THIS REPORT PERIOD OF REPORT ITEM 9 ITEM 10 APPENDIX D Enter below the specified classes of billings of this establishment for calendar year 1979 Billings for products and services (including progress billings) The Census Bureau reviews your report for omissions, Inconsistencies, and unusual ratios. To save you future correspondence about these problems, please make the following checks before returning your report: o. Review this report carefully to see that no Items are omitted. b. Calculate and enter the four "reasonableness" checks (described below), then review the resulting figures. c. Correct your report for any errors you find; explain unusual figures In "Remarks" section, easone enesa checks (I) Average houily wages per Wage Board employee (2) Work days per year per Wage Board employee (3) Wages and salaries per dollar of earned revenue Item code 41, column G (Wages Paid Wage Board employees) + Item code 59, column B (Total estimated man-hours) Item code 59, column A (Wage Board work days in thousands) 1,000+ item code 41, column F (Average number of Wage Board employees) Item code 72, (Wages and salaries of civilian employees) + item code 69 (Total earned revenue) (4) Is the total earned revenue (item code 69, total) greater than total costs incurred (item code 79, total)? . . . . . , . . ^ Yes ^ No - If "No," please explain in "Remarks" section. CERTIFICATION - This report is substantially accurate and has been prepared in accordance with instructions. Item code Item code Value (Thousands of dollars) Cost (Thousands of dollars) esu t g g re or 1979 Telephone - Area code, number, exlenalon D-3 Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 D-4 *.TOTAL, 1979 (Sum of lines a, b, c, and d) Work days (Thousands) Estimated number of work hours*** (Thousands) -Obtain figure for column (B) by multiplying column (A) by average number of hours per day per Wage Board employee in this establishment. APPENDIX D DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE-OWNED AND OPERATED ESTABLISHMENTS PRIMARILY ENGAGED IN MANUFACTURING AND ASSEMBLY, AND/OR RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT - 1979 (Includes shipyards) INSTRUCTIONS - This report is to be prepared by those Department of Defense establishments whose primary activities are manufacture and assembly and/or research and development. All shipyards are included. The information requested is based upon reports now regularly prepared by most such establishments. ITEM 1 - NAME AND PHYSICAL LOCATION OF ESTABLISHMENT 0 a. Name of establishment Your answers to parts b, c, d, e, and f of this item should relate to the ACTUAL PHYSICAL LOCATION of this establishment which may be different from the mailing address. If establishment location cannot be described by street and number, give e and number, If any, ofroad or highway and sufficient information to locate establishment, e. g?. Rt. 25, 3 miles south of Charlesville. c. Type and name of place in which located - Mark (X) first applicable type and enter name of place. Village or borough ITEM 3 EMPLOYMENT PAYROLLS IN CALENDAR YEAR 1979 (Civilian employees only) ITEM 4 WORK DAYS OF WAGE BOARD EMPLOYEES BY CALENDAR QUARTER 1979 Item code e to this inquiry is required by law (title 13. U.S. Code). By the NOTICE - Respons onfiden[i el. It may be seen se e e Inw, your report to the Censbs Burdeauly for statistical purpos Thelaw alto s n ensu employees and may ,files are mmune from legal process. a o provides copies ined in your (Please correct it any error in name and address, Inclutling ZIP code) N DECEMBER 31, 1979 1 d. Is this establishment physically located within the legal boundaries of the place named in "c"o g. Telephone number of establishment (Include area code) ZIP code ITEM 2 - NATURE OF ACTIVITY Describe briefly the kind of activity of this establishment. If a manufacturing plant, list the three most important products. At end of quarter (As reported on Civil Service Form SF-I13-Ar") March (A) Sum of columns A. B. C, and D Average number of employees (Col. E divided by 4) (F) Total wages and salaries of civilian employees (Thousands of dollars) June (8) sr The number of Wage Board employees (line a) should be the same as reported on line 5 of SF-I13-A. The total (line c) should be the same as reported on line I of SF-I 13-A. c. TOTAL CIVILIAN EMPLOYEES (Sum of lines a and 6) Enter the total number of work days of Wage Board employees for each calendar quarter of 1978. Do not include days paid for "cations, holidays, or sick leave. Item code Approved For Release 2007/04/17: (-IA-RRPRaRnnoAQ2- nlnn)r.lnnnn Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE BUREAU OF THE CENSUS Current Industrial Report INSTRUCTION MANUAL FOR REPORTING ON FORM MA-175 FOR 1979 REPORT ON SHIPMENTS TO FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AGENCIES ANNUAL REPORT INTRODUCTION This manual provides the instructions for completing your report. Please complete and return the white copy of the report form and retain the completed yellow copy for your files. ? Part A below gives general instructions about your report. ? Part B explains the format of the report form and how to report the items. ? Part C gives definitions and special instructions you should use in preparing your report. ? Part D contains the reference list of items covered in this survey. This instruction manual has been modified slightly in part C to clarify shipments for the Aerospace Industry. Part A - GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS - 1. Filing the report Return your completed form to the Bureau of the Census, 1201 East Tenth Street, Jeffersonville, Indiana 47132, Attn: CIR, within 30 days after receipt. We will accept reasonable estimates if your figures are not available within this time period. Please use the preaddressed return enve- lope that is sent with each report. We have designed your report form for automatic processing by electronic computers. We would appreciate your using a typewriter to enter all your figures. If this survey is not applicable to your establish- ment's operations, please note this fact under the "REMARKS" section of the report form together with a brief description of the principal products manufactured at this establishment and RETURN THE REPORT. - 2. Correspondence about your report In any correspondence with the Census Bureau about your report, please include the title of the survey and the I I-digit file number shown in the address box of your report form. - 3. Legal authority and confidentiality of data Responseto this inquiry is required by law (title 13, United States Code, sections 182, 224, and 225). By section 9 of the same law, your report to the Census Bureau is confidential. It may be seen only by sworn Census employees and may be used only for statisti- cal purposes. The law also provides that copies retained in your files are immune from legal process. - 4. Publication of results of this survey The Census Bureau will publish industry totals in the Current Industrial Reports, Series MA-175, as soon as possible after the necessary reports are received. Companies reporting in this survey can obtain copies of this publication without charge upon request to the Bureau of the Census, Industry Division, Washington, D.C. 20233. - 5. Companies using blank report fcrms The Reference List included in the Instruction Manual should be reviewed carefully to determine which of the items are applicable to your company. The descriptions and item codes should then be transcribed to the report form along with the respec- tive current and previous period data. Please review part B of the Instruction Manual on "How to Report" for correct entry of your data. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 APPENDIX D. Part B - HOW TO REPORT - 1. Reporting of data - Complete part I as shown in the following illustration. survey are preprinted in part I. STEP 1: For each item listed in column (a), use unit of in column (b), and ENTER figure or mark "NONE" for current period in column (d). All of the items included in this PART I Section A CTI CURRENT REPORT Section B PREVIOUS REPORTS For each item listed below, enter figures for current period or mark "None __ ___ _____ _ Item a " in column (d) ? Unit Item of _____________ Amount for this period in unit of measure shown to Column (b) ure or (Enter fi ( THE FIGURES WERE REPORT VIOUS T SHOWN BELOW ED FOR THE WO PERIODS Product Description code measure (b) code (c) g mark None) (d) ',Plane PRE (e) (f) Nu C: ricaac a. untytc ac Na,a tt vn ..,.. ,....., _. _..- -_,-_-- - oper tion of this establishment during the period. Also be sure to complete part Ill for any changes in coverage and part V for verification of the report. - 2. Employer identification number If your identification number is not preprinted on the form, enter the number used on your Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax Return (U.S. Treasury Depart- ment Form 941). If your number is preprinted but is wrong or has changed since your last report, cross it out and enter the correct number. Indicate in "Remarks" the reason for the change (such as reorganized, purchased existing business, etc.). - 3. Person to contact Enter the name and telephone number of the person to contact regarding this report, if it is not pre- printed on the form. If the preprinted name or tele- phone number is wrong, cross it out and enter the correct information. - 4. Revisions to previous data We may have changed some of the figures you origi- nally reported either as a result of correspondence with you or because the figures were not consistent with other items you reported. Please review all the preprinted figures. If any need revision, cross them out and enter the correct ones above them. - 5. Reporting period Report data for the calendar year. However, if your fiscal year includes at least 10 months of the calendar year (ends between October 31 and February 29), fiscal year figures will be acceptable. If book figures are not available, except at con- siderable cost, reasonable estimates will be acceptable. If there was a change in ownership during the year, or the establishment operated part of the year only, the data should apply to the period of operation by your company only. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 APPENDIX D Part C - DEFINITIONS AND SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS - Continued Total Employment, Cost of Materials, and Value of Shipments Item codes 2100, 2200, 3001 - All establishments should report total employment, total cost of materials, and total value of shipments. These figures should correspond to the respective items (employment-2h, cost of materials-5f, and value of shipment-14a) as reported in the Annual Survey of Manufactures Form MA-100. Some establishments included in this survey may not receive form MA-100. These establishments should report these three items in accordance with the instructions provided below. Please complete these three items even if your plant has no shipments to the Federal Govern. ment. Although reporting these items on both survey forms represents a duplication of reporting, it is very helpful in the accurate processing of this report, since the MA-175 form is processed before the larger MA-100 survey. EXCLUDE services used or overhead charges, such as advertising, telephone, telegram and cable, insurance, research and development; services of engineering, management, marketing and other professional consultants, etc., unless charges for such services are included in the prices paid for materials. EXCLUDE also overhead items such as depreciation charges against plant and equipment; rent and rental allowances; interest payments, royalties, and patent fees. EXCLUDE materials, supplies, machinery, and equipment which were used in the construction of new structures, additions to plant, or new machinery and equipment, and which are chargeable to fixed assets accounts. Exclude products purchased and resold without further manufacture of processing or assembly. Total Employment Item code 2100 - All establishments should report total employment. (You may follow the definition of employees specified by your State Employment Security Agency.) Report the average number of employees at the establishment who worked or received pay for the four pay periods including the 12th of the following months: March, May, August, and November. Include all persons on paid sick leave, paid holi- days, and paid vacation during these pay periods; exclude members of Armed Forces and pensioners carried on your active rolls. Include officers at this establishment, if a corporation; if an unincor- porated concern, exclude proprietor or partners. This figure should correspond to item 2h on the Annual Survey of Manufactures Form MA-I00. Cost of Materials Item code 2200 - All establishments should report total cost of materials. Report the delivered cost figures which should cover all raw materials, containers, scrap, and supplies, etc., which were: (I) put into production, (2) used as operating supplies, or (3) used in repair and maintenance. INCLUDE only physical goods. Report total cost materials actually consumed or put into production during the year. Cost is delivered cost, i.e., the amount paid or payable after discounts and ? including freight and other direct charges incurred by the establishment in acquiring the materials. Include all materials received for consumption, i.e., purchases from other companies, transfers from other establishments of your own company, and withdrawals from inventories. If the establishment produces items subsequently consumed in further production, report cost of original materials consumed only. This figure should correspond to item 5f, on the Annual Survey of Manufactures Form MA-100. Value of Shipments Item code 3001 - All establishments should report value of shipments. Report the total value of products shipped and other receipts. Include products made elsewhere for this establish- ment on a contract basis from materials supplied by this establishment. (The cost of these materials should be reported in item code 2200.) Value should be net selling value f.o.b. plant after discounts and allowances. Exclude freight charges and excise taxes. Sale of products bought and resold without further processing should also be included. This figure should correspond to item 14a, on the Annual Survey of Manufactures Form MA-100. Special Reporting Instructions a. Long-term contracts other than shipbuilding and aircraft - Sales that are associated with long- term contracts should normally be reported on a "delivery" rather than a "percentage-of- completion" basis. b. Special reporting instructions for shipbuilding and aircraft and aerospace industries - Because of the importance of long-term contracts in the shipbuilding and aircraft and aerospace indus- tries, special instructions have been developed. These instructions are believed to be consistent with usual accounting practices for these industries: Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 D.8 APPENDIX D Part C - DEFINITIONS AND SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS - Continued Special Reporting Instructions - Continued 1. Include all sales from production, and receipts for research development, performed for other companies, individuals, U.S. Government agencies, and foreign governments. However, exclude research and development financed by your company. Sales by foreign subsidiaries should be excluded. Transfers within the reporting unit should also be excluded. Trans- fers to other reporting units should be included. 2. Shipbuilding and repairing - For ships under construction, report the value of work done during the year as shipments. For vessels begun earlier than the beginning of the year or not completed during the year, report only the value of work done during the year. Value of work done during the year may be based on (a) multiplying the estimated percentage of work completed during the year by the contract price of the vessel, or (b) net billings for work done during the year. 3. Producers of complete aircraft and missiles - For items produced under a fixed price con- tract, report as shipments the value of deliv- eries during the year of complete aircraft, missiles, space vehicles, and missile or space vehicle engines. Work done on a cost-plus-contract should reflect the value of work done during the year. Value of work done during the year may be based on (a) multiplying the estimated percentage of work completed during the year by the contract price of aircraft or missile, or (b) net billings for work done during the year. Government Shipments Government shipments are defined broadly as transactions (including services performed) between your establishment or firm and the Federal Govern- ment. They may be either prime (direct) or sub (indirect). Circle the code which represents the dollar volume of your Government shipments. If code 1006 is circled, report these shipments by Federal Government agency (item codes 3012 through 3042). If one of the codes 1001-1005 is circled, do not complete the remaining codes; sign the form and return it. Shipments to Foreign Governments Government shipments should include shipments to foreign governments that are made based upon contracts with the U.S. Government, such as sales under the Foreign Military Assistance Program. Do not include as government shipments, shipments to foreign governments where the contract is between your firm and the foreign government even though the sale may have been subject to approval by an agency of the Federal Government. Prime (Direct) Contracts Prime or direct contracts are defined as those where the manufacturing establishment or firm has entered into a contract directly with a Federal Government agency. Distribute the amount of shipments by the Federal agencies listed in codes 3012 to 3015. Do not reduce the amount of prime contracts by that which is subcontracted to another company or to another plant of your firm. Include only those amounts which you have shipped to the Federal Government during 1979 (see "Report- ing Period") even though the overall contract may extend for several years. The only exceptions to this principle of reporting value of shipments (f.o.b. plant) during 1979 are the shipbuilding industry (SIC 3731), and the complete aircraft and missile industry (SIC 3721) which should report value of work done. In both instances, these definitions correspond to those. used on the Annual Survey of Manufactures Form MA-I00. Subcontracts Item codes 3026 through 3030 - Subcontracts are defined as shipments from your establishment to another firm or to another establishment of your own company which, in turn, ships the product to the Federal Government. Distribute the amount of shipments by the Federal agency (if known) in item codes 3026 through 3029. If the ultimate Federal agency is unknown, use item code 3030. Only include those amounts which you have actually shipped to another firm or establishment during 1979 (see "Reporting Period") even though tha overall contract may extend for several years. Examples include shipments of raw and semi- fabricated materials, "standard" parts, assemblies, equipment, and components; work done by you in supplying "special" parts, components, or assemblies in accordance with a prime or sub- contractor's designs, specifications, or directions; and services performed. Note that the value of transfers to other plants of the same company is to be reported in these subcontract columns. It is recognized that indirect government work is not always identified as such. In view of this, estimates will be acceptable in those instances where work is not subject to the Renegotiation Act of 1951, as amended. Other Shipments Item Code 3041 - Data reported here should represent the difference between the total values of shipments and/or receipts, item code 3001, and the sum of entries in item codes 3012 through 3030. Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 Part D - REFERENCE LIST Total employment of this plant (average) (Same as item 2h, Census Form MA-100) ............................ . Total cost of materials by this plant (Same as item Sf, Census Form MA-I00) Total value of shipments and/or receipts (Corresponds to item 14a, Census Form MA-100) ....................... . Circle the code which includes the shipments for the Federal Government Unit of measure Item code 1001 - None 1002- Up to $99,999 1003 - $100,000 to $249,999 1004 - $250,000 to $499,999 1005 - $500,000 to $999,999 1006 - $1 ,000,000 or more If you circled code 1006 ($1,000,000 or more), complete item codes 3012-3042. Shipments to Federal Government agencies Direct (as a prime contractor) DOD .............................................. $1,000 3012 NASA ............................................. $1,000 3013 Department of Energy ... . . . . . . . . . . . . $1,000 3014 Other Federal agencies ................................. . $1,000 3015 Indirect (as a subcontractor or supplier) (Include transfers to other plants of the some company) Government agency specifically known DOD ............................................ $1,000 3026 NASA .......................................... $1,000 3027 Department of Energy ............................... . $1,000 3028 Other Federal agencies .............................. . $1,000 3029 Government agency not specifically known ....... . .............. $1,000 3030 Other shipments (Item code 3001 minus item codes 3012-3030) . .. . Page 5 U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 19U1 . .-jYb/o9U Approved For Release 2007/04/17: CIA-RDP84B00049R001002540002-3 U.S. Department of Commerce BUREAU OF THE CENSUS Washington, D.C. 20233 Official Business Penalty for Private Use, $300 FIRST-CLASS MAIL. POSTAGE & FEES PAID CENSUS PERMIT No. G-58 ST I oom 727- Headquarters, CIA Washington, D.C. 20505