| Economic Week in Review: February 5-9, 2001 
 During a light week for economic releases, reports showed that consumer
 borrowing dropped, layoffs increased, and the pace of productivity
 gains declined. These latest indicators of a slowing economy were cited
 by President Bush as a reason to act quickly on the tax-cut proposal he
 submitted to Congress on Thursday. In the financial markets, the S&P 500
 Index closed at 1,315, down 2.5% for the week, and the yield of the
 10-year U.S. Treasury note fell 11 basis points to 5.03% (as of
 4:30 p.m. Friday).
 
 Productivity growth slowed to a 2.4% annualized rate in the fourth
 quarter of 2000, according to the Labor Department. Although the growth
 rate was below those reported for the two previous quarters, it was a
 bit better than expected. And for all of 2000, productivity rose 4.3%,
 the biggest annual gain since 1983. Productivity is a gauge of the
 amount of goods and services that workers produce per hour of effort.
 Gains in productivity are crucial to raising living standards over time.
 
 Unit labor costs--which tie wage and benefit costs to productivity
 levels and are an important indicator of inflationary trends--rose at
 an annualized rate of 4.1% in the fourth quarter, compared with a
 revised 3.2% increase in the third quarter. Analysts opined that the
 increase was not enough to deter the Federal Reserve Board from
 considering further efforts to stimulate the economy by lowering short-
 term interest rates.
 
 Americans were more wary of borrowing during December. Consumer credit
 rose by $3 billion in December for an annualized rate of 2.4%, which
 was considerably less than expected and a fraction of previous months'
 increases. The growth rates for both revolving debt (mainly credit
 cards) and nonrevolving debt (loans for autos, education, and home
 improvements) declined sharply.
 
 For the week ended February 3, some 361,000 Americans filed initial
 claims for unemployment insurance, a higher-than-expected increase of
 15,000 over the previous week. The four-week moving average, a more
 accurate indicator of trends in the labor market, rose by 4,250 to
 331,250.
 
 The monthly Producer Price Index report, a gauge of wholesale
 inflation, is due for release on Friday, February 16. Other reports
 scheduled for the week of February 12 include retail sales (Tuesday),
 business inventories (Wednesday), and housing starts and industrial
 production (both on Friday).
 
 
 Summary of Major Economic Reports: February 5-9, 2001
 -----------------------------------------------------------------------
 |Date       Report            Actual     Expected   10-Year    S&P 500|
 |                             Value      Value      Note Yield Index  |
 |---------------------------------------------------------------------|
 |February 5                                         +1 bp      +0.4%  |
 |---------------------------------------------------------------------|
 |February 6                                         +4 bp      -0.2%  |
 |---------------------------------------------------------------------|
 |February 7 Consumer          +$3.0      +$7.5                        |
 |           Credit (December) billion    billion                      |
 |---------------------------------------------------------------------|
 |           Nonfarm           +2.4%      +2.2%                        |
 |           Productivity                                              |
 |           (4Q)                                                      |
 |---------------------------------------------------------------------|
 |           Unit Labor        +4.1%      +2.8%      -1 bp      -0.8%  |
 |           Costs (4Q)                                                |
 |---------------------------------------------------------------------|
 |February 8 Initial Jobless   361,000    349,000    -9 bp      -0.6%  |
 |           Claims (2/3)                                              |
 |---------------------------------------------------------------------|
 |February 9                                         -6 bp      -1.3%  |
 |---------------------------------------------------------------------|
 |                                        Weekly     -11 bp     -2.5%  |
 |                                        Change                       |
 -----------------------------------------------------------------------
 bp = basis points.
 
 Note: The economic statistics presented in this report are subject to
 revision by the agencies that issue them.
 
 "Standard & Poor's(r)," "S&P(r)," "S&P 500(r)," "Standard & Poor's
 500," and "500" are trademarks of The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
 
 (c) 2001 Vanguard Marketing Corporation, Distributor
 |