What Are “Principal Federal Economic Indicators?”

Image generated by GTP-4o “illustrating the concept of federal economic statistics.”

Government economic statistics help guide the actions of policymakers, firms, households, workers, and investors. As a recent report from the American Statistical Association expressed it:

“Official statistics from the federal government are a critically important source of needed information in the United States for policymakers and the public, providing information that meets the highest professional standards of relevance, accuracy, timeliness, credibility, and objectivity.”

Government agencies consider some of these statistics to be of particular importance. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has designated 36 data series as being principal federal economic indicators (PFEIs). Many of these are key macroeconomic data series, such as the consumer price index (CPI), gross domestic product (GDP), and unemployment. Others, such as housing vacancies and natural gas storage, are less familiar although important in assessing conditions in specific sectors of the economy.

Since 1985, the preparation and release of PFEIs has been governed by OMB Statistical Policy Directive No. 3. Among other things, Directive No. 3 is intended to ‘‘preserve the distinction between the policy-neutral release of data by statistical agencies and their interpretation by policy officials.’’ Although some politicians and commentators claim otherwise, federal government statistical agencies, such as the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), are largely staffed by career government employees whose sole objective is to gather and release the most accurate data possible with the funds that Congress allocates to them.

Directive No. 3 also requires the statistical agencies to act so as to ‘‘prevent early access to information that may affect financial and commodity markets.’’ Unfortunately, several times recently the BLS has been subject to criticism for releasing data early or releasing data to financial firms before the official public release of the data. For instance, on August 21, 2o24 the BLS was scheduled to release at 10:00 a.m. its annual benchmark revision of employment estimates from the establishment survey. (We discuss this release in this blog post.) Because of technical problems, the public release was delayed until 10:30. During that half hour, analysts at some financial firms called the BLS and were given the data over the phone. Doing so was contraty to Directive No. 3 because the employment data are a PFEI, which obliges the BLS to take special care that the data aren’t made available to anyone before their public release.

The New York Times filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request with the BLS in order to investigate the cause of several instances of the agency releasing data early. In an article summarizing the information the paper received as a result of its FOIA request, the reporters concluded that “the information [the BLS] has provided [about the reasons for the early data releases] has at times proved inaccurate or incomplete.” The BLS has pledged to take steps to ensure that in the future it will comply fully with Directive No. 3.

In a report discussing the difficulties federal agencies statistical have in meeting their obligations responsibilities, the American Statistical Association singled out two problems: the declining reponse rate to surveys—particularly notable with respect to the establishment employment survey—and tight budget constraints, which are hampering the ability of some agencies to hire the staff and to obtain the other resources necessary to collect and report data in an accurate and timely manner.

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