U.S. Census Bureau

U.S. Department of Commerce News

        EMBARGOED UNTIL: 12:01 A.M. EST, APRIL 24, 2000 (MONDAY)

Public Information Office                                               CB00-68
301-457-3030/301-457-3670 (fax)
301-457-1037 (TDD)
e-mail: pio@census.gov

Julius Smith
301-457-4842

         California Report First in State Series on Manufacturing 
                         Sector from Census Bureau
                                                
  The Commerce Department's Census Bureau today released the first in a series 
of state reports on the economy's manufacturing sector from the 1997 Economic 
Census.

  The report, 1997 Economic Census, Geographic 
Area Series, Manufacturing:  California, was released on the Internet. The 
remaining 50 reports will be released over the next few weeks.

  According to the report, California's manufacturing sector shipped $379.6 
billion worth of manufactured goods in 1997. Three industry groups accounted 
for about half of the manufactured goods computer and electronic products 
($113.5 billion), food products ($40.0 billion) and transportation equipment 
($34.8 billion).

  California's manufacturers employed 1.8 million workers in 1997 and had a 
total payroll of $65.8 billion. The Los Angeles-Long Beach, Calif., Primary 
Metropolitan Statistical Area (PMSA) was the state's largest manufacturing 
employer, with a total of 622,302 workers (34 percent of the sector's total). 
The San Jose, Calif., PMSA employed 249,947 manufacturing workers, while the 
Orange County, Calif., PMSA employed 215,936.

  The report shows 1997 data for the state, counties, metropolitan areas and 
places.  Data include number of establishments, establishment size, employment, 
hours worked, payroll, shipments, value added, costs of materials, capital 
expenditures and inventories.

  Statistics in the reports are prepared from data compiled from census 
questionnaires or administrative records from other federal agencies and, 
therefore, contain no sampling error. They are, however, subject to nonsampling 
errors from various sources, such as the inability to identify all cases in the 
actual universe; classification errors; differences in the interpretation of 
questions; errors in recording or coding the data obtained; and estimation of 
missing or misreported data. Steps were taken in all phases of collection, 
processing and tabulation of data to minimize the effects of nonsampling errors.

-X-
Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
(301) 763-3030

Last Revised: March 15, 2001 at 08:27:55 AM