Home > Releases > Chicago Fed Survey of Economic Conditions > Chicago Fed Survey of Economic Conditions: Nonwage Costs Index in Federal Reserve District 7: Chicago (DISCONTINUED)
Observation:
Sep 2019: -30.46358 (+ more) Updated: Oct 16, 2019 2:31 PM CDTSep 2019: | -30.46358 | |
Aug 2019: | -19.83471 | |
Jul 2019: | . | |
Jun 2019: | -21.68675 | |
May 2019: | -16.60079 |
Units:
Index,Frequency:
MonthlyData in this graph are copyrighted. Please review the copyright information in the series notes before sharing.
Title | Release Dates | |
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Chicago Fed Survey of Business Conditions: Nonwage Costs Index | 2016-01-13 | 2019-11-26 |
Chicago Fed Survey of Economic Conditions: Nonwage Costs Index in Federal Reserve District 7: Chicago (DISCONTINUED) | 2019-11-27 | 2019-11-27 |
Source | ||
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Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago | 2016-01-13 | 2022-04-12 |
Release | ||
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Chicago Fed Survey of Business Conditions | 2016-01-13 | 2022-04-11 |
Chicago Fed Survey of Economic Conditions | 2022-04-12 | 2022-04-12 |
Units | ||
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Index | 2016-01-13 | 2019-11-27 |
Frequency | ||
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Monthly | 2016-01-13 | 2019-11-27 |
Seasonal Adjustment | ||
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Not Seasonally Adjusted | 2016-01-13 | 2019-11-27 |
Notes | ||
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February data are collected from January to Early February and are associated with March Beige Book issue.
March data are collected from Late February to March and are associated with April Beige Book issue. May data are collected from April to early May and are associated with June Beige Book issue. June data are collected from late May to June and are associated with July Beige Book issue. August data are collected July to early August and are associated with September Beige Book issue. September data are collected from late August to September and are associated with October Beige Book issue. November data are collected from October to early November and are associated with late November or December Beige Book issue. December data are collected from late November to December and are associated with January Beige Book issue. To support its Beige Book efforts, the Chicago Fed gathers information from its business contacts using an online survey system. Respondents are asked to rate various aspects of business conditions along a seven-point scale ranging from “substantially increased” to “substantially decreased.” A series of diffusion indexes summarizing the distribution of responses is then calculated. Respondents’ respective average answers to a question can be interpreted as representing their historical trends or long-run averages. Thus, zero index values indicate that, on balance, activity, hiring, capital spending, or cost pressures are growing at their trend rates or that outlooks are neutral. Positive index values indicate above-average growth (or optimistic outlooks) on balance, and negative values indicate below average growth (or pessimistic outlooks) on balance. For more information, see https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/cfsbc/index |
2016-01-13 | 2019-11-27 |