Products
- Consumer Spending
The nation's primary measure of consumer spending, or personal consumption expenditures - Corporate Profits
A key measure of the financial health of corporate America - Disposable Personal Income
The income that's left after people pay their taxes - Fixed Assets by Type
Buildings, trucks, software, and more used in production for at least a year - Gross Domestic Income
Another way of measuring GDP, using incomes instead of spending - Gross Domestic Purchases Price Index
BEA's featured measure of price changes in the U.S. economy overall - Gross Domestic Product
GDP is a comprehensive measure of the U.S. economy and its growth - GDP Price Deflator
A price measure very similar to the GDP price index - GDP Price Index
Measures changes in prices paid for goods and services produced in the United States - Government Fixed Assets
The lasting assets owned by national, state, and local government - Government Receipts and Expenditures
Taxes, spending, and other transactions of national, state, and local government - Industry Fixed Assets
The fixed assets owned by different industries - Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index
Measures inflation in the prices paid by people living in the United States - Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index, Excluding Food and Energy
The core PCE price index excludes two volatile categories to reveal underlying inflation - Personal Income
Wages, Social Security, interest, rents, and other income received by U.S. residents - Personal Saving Rate
The percentage of people's disposable income that they save instead of spending
What are the National Economic Accounts?
BEA’s national economic statistics provide a comprehensive view of U.S. production, consumption, investment, exports and imports, and income and saving. These statistics are best known by summary measures such as gross domestic product (GDP), corporate profits, personal income and spending, and personal saving.