John
Williams'
Shadow Government Statistics
Analysis Behind and Beyond Government Economic Reporting

Alternate CPI Chart
Have you ever wondered why the CPI, GDP and employment numbers run counter to your personal and business experiences? 
The problem lies in biased and often-manipulated government reporting.

We offer an exposé of the problems within the reporting system, and an assessment of underlying economic reality, through two basic services:

Specialized economic consulting services including customized forecasts and analyses of the general economy, as well as for specific industry, product or company results. (contact us to discuss your needs);

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The Shadow Government Statistics Newsletter

Subscription includes access to all back issues 
and SGS Alternate Data Series.

"John Williams' Shadow Government Statistics" is an electronic newsletter that exposes and analyzes the flaws in current U.S. government economic data and reporting, as well as in certain private-sector numbers, and provides an assessment of underlying economic conditions, net of financial-market hype .

• Published 11 to 12 times per year, the newsletter is supplemented by occasional Special Issues and by  interim "Flash Updates" and "Alerts" that cover key economic reports and highlight unusual developments. (See "Newsletter Coverage" below for the publication's regular scope of coverage.)

• Subscription service provides website access to current and archived content, data on proprietary alternate estimates of the CPI, Unemployment and the GDP, an ongoing estimate of M3 growth -- where the M3 series no longer is reported by the Federal Reserve -- and a financial-weighted index of the U.S. dollar. Also available is an inflation calculator that estimates comparative prices between any two months, 1913 to date, using both the official CPI and the SGS-alternate measure. Postings to the website of all new material are advised directly to subscribers by e-mail.

Payment Methods We accept payment by either check or credit card. For credit-card payments, we use PayPal as our processor. (You need not have a PayPal account to use this vehicle.) All amounts due are payable in U.S. dollars.

Newsletter Coverage The newsletter includes regular coverage and analysis of the economy and the broad financial markets:

  • "Opening Comments" provides an overview of current economic and financial-market conditions and developments.
  • The "Reporting Focus" section covers the prior month's economic reporting (employment/unemployment, CPI, GDP, money supply, retail sales, housing statistics, factory orders, trade balance, consumer confidence, purchasing managers' survey, short-term credit measures, federal budget deficit and others), including estimates of actual results net of any reporting biases. Also provided are annual reviews of the U.S. government's GAAP-based financial statements and estimates of income variance.
  • Further, the coming month's reporting is examined, highlighting unusual circumstances and biases that could bring results in above or below market expectations.
  • The "Markets Focus" section assesses circumstances in the U.S. equity and credit markets, as well circumstances as they relate to the U.S. dollar and gold markets.
  • The "Reporting/Market Focus" details the background of government series or special items affecting the markets, along with updates to changes in reporting methodologies.
  • The newsletter is supplemented by frequent Flash Updates and occasional interim Special Issues/Alerts that highlight unusual developments or topics of special interest.

Examples of past Newsletters, Flash Updates and Alerts are open to non-subscribers on this Archives page.  Look in the right-hand column for "open" material.

We like to gain some firsthand knowledge about our subscribers in the belief that, over time, this helps a great deal in fashioning services that are most suited and responsive to client needs. To further this goal, subscribers are invited to have direct phone or e-mail communication with John Williams during the term of the subscription. We look forward to serving you and hope you will subscribe today!

Some Biographical & Additional Background Information

Walter J. "John" Williams was born in 1949. He received an A.B. in Economics, cum laude, from Dartmouth College in 1971, and was awarded a M.B.A. from Dartmouth's Amos Tuck School of Business Administration in 1972, where he was named an Edward Tuck Scholar. During his career as a consulting economist, John has worked with individuals as well as Fortune 500 companies.

Formally known as Walter J. Williams, my friends call me John. For more than 25 years, I have been a private consulting economist and, out of necessity, had to become a specialist in government economic reporting.

One of my early clients was a large manufacturer of commercial airplanes, who had developed an econometric model for predicting revenue passenger miles. The level of revenue passenger miles was their primary sales forecasting tool, and the model was heavily dependent on the GNP (now GDP) as reported by the Department of Commerce. Suddenly, their model stopped working, and they asked me if I could fix it. I realized the GNP numbers were faulty, corrected them for my client (official reporting was similarly revised a couple of years later) and the model worked again, at least for a while, until GNP methodological changes eventually made the underlying data worthless.

That began a lengthy process of exploring the history and nature of economic reporting and in interviewing key people involved in the process from the early days of government reporting through the present. For a number of years I conducted surveys among business economists as to the quality of government statistics (the vast majority thought it was pretty bad), and my results led to front page stories in the New York Times and Investors Business Daily, considerable coverage in the broadcast media and a joint meeting with representatives of all the government's statistical agencies. Despite minor changes to the system, government reporting has deteriorated sharply in the last decade or so. -- John Williams

Alternate Data Money Supply, M3 Chart
Charts of Historical Alternate Data for the U.S. GDP, CPI, M3 & Employment.

Data downloads for subscribers.
Primers on Government Economic Reports
What you've suspected but were afraid to ask.
Series Master Introduction
Employment and Unemployment
Federal Deficit Reality
Consumer Price Index
Response to BLS Article on CPI Misconceptions
Gross Domestic Product
Reporting/Market Focus
Various economic and financial-market series are examined and explained.
Updates of Primer Series plus Housing, Durable Goods Orders, PPI, Money Supply, Income Variance, Retail Sales, etc.
Special Reports
• Hyperinflation  •  Money Supply
Latest Commentaries
Flash Update Subscruption required November 30th, 2008
• Employment Outlook Sinks • 3rd-Qtr Gross Domestic Income Contracted Year-to-Year • Broad Money Growth Stagnant in Latest Week  More ...
Flash Update Subscruption required November 23rd, 2008
• Monetary Base Annual Growth Now at 75.5% • Systemic Solvency Crisis Intensifies Anew • Increased Nationalization of U.S. Banks Ahead? More ...
Flash Update Subscruption required November 19th, 2008
• Annual CPI Inflation Slowed to 3.7% (11.6% SGS) in October • Inflation/Deflation Traditionally Measured in Terms of Annual Change • Industrial Production, Housing Starts Showed Deepening Downturn More ...
Newsletter (Issue No. 47) Subscruption required November 14th, 2008
• Still-Intensifying U.S. Inflationary Recession • Systemic Solvency Crisis • Market Instability Not Contained • Obama Faces Same Limited Options as Bush • Hyperinflation Possible in 2009 • Despite extraordinary actions by the Federal Reserve, U.S. Treasury and other central banks and finance ministries, the global solvency crises, financial panics and market distortions and instabilities continue. While the collapse of a functional U.S. banking system has been avoided, so far, bank lending has not resumed meaningfully, and other weak links in the economy appear ready to break. Possible failures of the "Big-Three" U.S. automakers now are touted in the financial media. Where GM once boasted, "What is good for General Motors is good for America," a failure there would be the ultimate symbol of structural destruction that has sapped U.S. economic activity for decades. Structural issues drove the economy into deep recession well before any crises exacerbations. With the economy in recession, oil prices down and the dollar stronger, deflation concerns abound. Yet, inflation ultimately is a monetary phenomenon, and the Fed's recent monetary incontinence promises much higher inflation ahead, regardless of near-term CPI gyrations from the pre-election plunge in gasoline prices. More ...
Flash Update Subscruption required November 7th, 2008
• Bureau of Labor Statistics Plays Post-Election Catch-Up • October 240K Payroll Loss: 419K Loss Net of Revisions, 308K Loss Net of Concurrent Seasonal Factor Bias • Broad Unemployment Rate Highest of Current Series • Monetary Base Surge Continues: Up 48.2% Year/Year  More ...
Flash Update Subscruption required November 6th, 2008
• October Employment Conditions Should Show Marked Deterioration  More ...
Flash Update Subscruption required October 30th, 2008
• Gimmicked GDP Overstatement Continues, Despite Reported Contraction • GDP Inflation Hits 18-Year High • "Recession" Dates Back to 4th-Quarter 2006  More ...
Flash Update Subscruption required October 26th, 2008

• Bank Lending Picks Up • Monetary Base Up 38.0% Year-to-Year • Near-Term U.S. Debt Default Unlikely, Unless Lenders Request Non-Dollar Issuance • Administration Signals Reporting of 3rd-Qtr GDP Contraction
 More ...
Special Update Subscruption required October 16th, 2008
• Inflationary Recession Remains Intact and Intensifies • Federal Debt Jumps $1.25 Trillion Year/Year, $650 Billion in Six Weeks • Inflation Holds Despite Oil Sell-Off • 3rd-Quarter Real Retail Sales Plunge Annualized 10.1%, 4.2% Year/Year • 3rd-Quarter Industrial Production Down for Second Consecutive Quarter, Year/Year  More ...
Flash Update Subscruption required October 10th, 2008
• Latest Monetary Base Jumped 16.8% Year-to-Year • September M3 Growth Expanded Year-to-Year and Month-to-Month  More ...
Alert Subscruption required October 8th, 2008
• Fed and Treasury Continue Propping the System At All Costs (Particularly Inflation) • Intensifying Inflationary Recession Concerns Overshadowed by Systemic Risks More ...
Alert Subscruption required October 3rd, 2008
• Fed Began Sidestepping No "Bailout" Before First House Vote • M1 and M2 Annualized Surges of 800% and 200% are Panic Distortions (Offset in M3) • Jobs Plunged by 219,000 Net of Concurrent-Seasonal-Factor Bias • "Core" Inflation Turned Higher  More ...
Newsletter (Issue No. 46) Subscruption required September 29th, 2008
• Washington Bailout Likely Will Not End Crisis • Cost of Saving the System Is Inflation • Inflationary Recession Deepens Rapidly • Gold Should Benefit from Inflation-Hedge and Safe-Haven Qualities
In terms of magnitude, global scope and the underlying complexity and interdependencies of troubled financial instruments, the systemic solvency upheaval roiling the U.S. and global financial markets is without precedence. The crisis is the natural outcome of decades of financial leverage being built upon financial leverage; of income variance being pushed even beyond that which preceded the 1929 financial panic...
 More ...
Alert Subscruption required September 26th, 2008
• Money Supply Begins to Reflect Intensifying Solvency Crisis • Recession Deepens Despite Still-Bogus GDP Reporting • Financial Storm Likely to Worsen, Risks Mount of Systemic Instability  More ...
Washington Journal, C-SPAN September 25th, 2008
John Williams on C-SPAN TV John Williams talks and takes call-in questions about how misreporting of government data has contributed to the current financial crisis.
Watch at the CSPAN Video Library
 More ...
Alert Subscruption required September 22nd, 2008
• Government Actions Will Spike Money Supply • Highly Unlikely That the Financial Storm Has Passed • Recession Was Well Underway Before the Housing/Mortgage Crisis Broke  More ...
Archives

John Williams'
"Shadow Government Statistics"

P.O. Box 16121, Oakland, CA 94610
johnwilliams@shadowstats.com



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