plug: graphs prepared using Mariner Calc
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updated: 2024-11-14
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"Res ipsa loquitur." (The facts speak for themselves.) |
Average Annual Incomes 1890-1957 by industry/occupation
Bodies shopped as percentage of total employment
Software Products/Publishing: Production Workers (SIC1)
EEU80737201
EEU8073721
CEU5051120006
retrieved via https://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/srgate
Software Products/Publishing: Production Workers
CEU5051120006
High-Tech employment in Silicon Valley 2000-2008
Software Products/Publishing: Production Workers (focus on Recent)
CEU5051120006
"IT" "production workers": Products vs. Body Shops
EEU80737201
EEU80737210
CEU5051120006
EEU80737001
EEU80737010
EEU80737006
Software Publishing Productivity (unreliable fabrication from the evil neo-Keynesian BEA)
Numbers Either Gigged or Genuinely Employed in Information Industries
CEU5000000006
CEU5000000030
CEU5000000007
Numbers Either Gigged or Genuinely Employed in Information Industries since 1999 (includes USA citizens both native & naturalized), guest-workers, invaders & other illegal aliens, "student interns/apprentices"...)
Average Weekly Hours of paid work in Information (and bodyshops and related and contrasting) Industries
Average Weekly Hours of paid work reported in Information (and bodyshops and related and contrasting) Industries since 2000
CEU5000000007
Information Industries Hourly Earnings not adjusted for inflation
CEU5000000030
Information Industries Aggregate Average Inflation-Adjusted Hourly Earnings
CEU5000000030
CUUR0000AA0
Information Industries Aggregate Average Inflation-Adjusted Annualized Earnings. The projection from hourly or weekly earnings is not realistic in this age of rampant bodyshopping/ gig/ contingent/ temporary/ contract/ consulting/ contract/ coolie work which often leaves skilled professionals under-employed and even unemployed for months and years at a stretch. & The 30 individuals working 16 hours a day in the month of April can be dumped and replaced by 2 different people working 4-6 hours per day or 60 individuals working 6 hours per day in May (or until the next major "enhancement" project), while the first person is totally unemployed (0 hours/week), so BLS figures on average hours worked per week do not come close to reflecting the reality. Annual median national aggregate earnings for all industries in the base year (1913) were $2000.
Numbers Employed by Industry (3)
Numbers Employed by Industry (4)
CEU5000000006
CEU5051320006
CEU5051200006
CEU6054000006
CEU6054130006
CEU6054150006
CEU6054151106
CEU6054151206
CEU6054151906
CEU6054170006
CEU6054171006
CEU6056130006
CEU6056131006
CEU6056132006
CEU6056133006
CEU6562000106
CEU5051120006 was changed to CEU5051320006 at end of 2022/beginning of 2023 with the apparent result of increasing the numbers employed in the category by about 30K-35K... ; and, of course, they have made the old CEU5051120006, etc. data-series going back to 1990 unavailable... although the numbers seem to match back before 2020... and other sub-industry revisions seem to be slightly increasing or decreasing by 2K-100K from the previous numbers.
UnEmployment Rate by Industry
LNU04034179
Earnings per Hour (earnings per week/hours paid work) by Industry
CEU5000000030
CEU5051320030
CEU5051200030
CEU6054000030
CEU6054130030
CEU6054150030
CEU6054151130
CEU6054151230
CEU6054151930
CEU6054170030
CEU6054171030
CEU6056130030
CEU6056131030
CEU6056132030
CEU6056133030
CEU6562000130
CEU5051120030 was changed to CEU5051320030 at end of 2022/beginning of 2023
CEU6562000103=average hourly earnings for health care production workers
CEU6562000130=average weekly earnings for health care production workers
Average Weekly Hours Reported Worked by Industry (What are the median, skew, kurtosis, standard deviation?)
CEU5000000007
CEU5051320007
CEU5051200007
CEU6054000007
CEU6054130007
CEU6054150007
CEU6054151107
CEU6054151207
CEU6054151907
CEU6054170007
CEU6054171007
CEU6056130007
CEU6056131007
CEU6056132007
CEU6056133007
CEU6562000107
CEU5051120007 was changed to CEU5051320007 at end of 2022/beginning of 2023
Average Weekly Hours worked in Software Product Dev (SW Publishing) vs. all Information (What are the median, skew, kurtosis, standard deviation?)
CEU5000000007
CEU5051320007
Earnings per Hour Software Product Dev (SW Publishing) vs. all Information (What are the median, skew, kurtosis, standard deviation?)
CEU5000000030
CEU5051320030
CEU5000000007
CEU5051120007
CEU5000000030
CUUR0000AA0
Earnings per Hour (Not adjusted for inflation) (What are the median, skew, kurtosis, standard deviation?)
CEU5000000030
CEU5051320030
CEU5051200030
CEU6054000030
CEU6054130030
CEU6054150030
CEU6054151130
CEU6054151230
CEU6054151930
CEU6054170030
CEU6054171030
CEU6056130030
CEU6056131030
CEU6056132030
CEU6056133030
CEU6562000130
Earnings per Hour (inflation adjusted base 1913=1) (What are the median, skew, kurtosis, standard deviation?)
CUUR0000AA0
NAICS 511 publishing (non-internet)
Number employed publishing (non-internet) production workers (CEU5051100006) from CES (NOT seasonally perverted)
Average weekly hours reported publishing (non-internet) production workers (CEU5051100007) from CES (NOT seasonally perverted)
Average hourly pay publishing (non-internet) production workers (CEU5051100008) from CES (NOT seasonally perverted)
Unemployment rates publishing (non-internet) production workers (LNU04034176) from CES (NOT seasonally perverted)
CEU5051100006 BLS discontinued
CEU5051100007 BLS discontinued
CEU5051100008 BLS discontinued
LNU04034176
NAICS 515 broadcasting
Number employed broadcasting production workers (CEU5051500006) from CES (NOT seasonally perverted)
Average hours reported of broadcasting production workers (CEU5051500007) from CES BLS discontinued
Average hourly pay of broadcasting production workers (CEU5051500008) from CES BLS discontinued
unemployment rates of broadcasting production workers (LNU04034182) from CPS (NOT seasonally perverted)
CEU5051500006 BLS discontinued
CEU5051500007 BLS discontinued
CEU5051500008 BLS discontinued
LNU04034182
NAICS 517 telecommunications
Number employed telecommunications production workers (CES5051700006) from CES (NOT seasonally perverted)
Average hours reported of telecommunications production workers (CEU5051700007) from CES (NSA)
Average hourly pay of telecommunications production workers (CEU5051700008) from CES
unemployment rates of telecommunications production workers (LNU040434188) from CPS BLS discontinued
CES5051700006
CEU5051700007
CEU5051700008
LNU040434188 BLS discontinued
NAICS 518 ISP & "data processing"
Number employed ISP & "data processing" production workers (CES5051800006) from CES (NOT seasonally perverted)
Average hours reported of ISP & "data processing" production workers (CEU5051800007) from CES (NSA)
Average hourly pay of ISP & "data processing" production workers (CEU5051800008) from CES (NSA)
unemployment rates of ISP & "data processing" production workers (LNU04034191) from CPS (NSA)
CES5051800006
CEU5051800007
CEU5051800008
LNU04034191
NAICS 519 other "information services" (including internet publishing & broadcasting)
Number employed ISP & "information services" production workers (CES5051900006) from CES (NOT seasonally perverted)
Average hours reported of "information services" production workers (CEU5051900007) from CES (NSA)
Average hourly pay of "information services" production workers (CEU5051900008) from CES (NSA)
unemployment rates of "information services" production workers (LNU04034194) from CPS (NSA)
CES5051900006
CEU5051900007
CEU5051900008
LNU04034194
People who are skilled in, who used to be employed in information sub-industries (or any other industry category), but have not been able to get work in those sub-industries for some time are not included in the calculations of unemployment rates for the sub-industries in which they have knowledge, skill or experience, though they are part of the under-utilized or under-employed information sub-industries (or any other industry category) talent pool. They have not had eager employers offering them update training, refresher training, "next new thing" training (and the vast majority do not have the funds & other resources to buy new hardware, new books, new training classes {neither live, brick & mortar nor on-line "tutoring"}, nor relocation assistance to appear begging at door-steps thousands of miles from where they were left high-and-dry by any of the last several recessions. They have been disappeared, cancelled into the gig services slave-pens, retail greeter slums, "homeless shelters", or simply declared to be "hard-core unemployed" and "not in the labor force" (NILF), regardless of whether they are actively seeking work, yearning to get back home to their most productive niche and geographic area, doing what they have the resources to do to seek real, honest employers, to "reach out", to badger job sites & Q&A sites in their specialties to improve, etc.
end construction zone 🚧
Fed All Information Industry Employees (CEU5000000001)
Fed average hourly earnings of production workers (CEU5000000008)
Fed number employed telecommunications production workers (CEU5051120030)
Fed unemployment rate telecommunications production workers (LNU04034188)
Venture Capital in Silicon Valley, 1995-2008
St. Louis Fed: Professional & Business Bodyshopping
(ottO .G nhoJ)
jgo Resume | jgo Reading Room |
jgo Econ Data | jgo Econ News Bits |
jgo's Links | |
jgo's Work in Progress | |
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