Analysis of July's Report
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Wednesday, August 1, 2007, 8:15 am EDT
Nonfarm private employment grew 48,000 from June to July of 2007 on a seasonally adjusted basis, according to the ADP National Employment Report ®.
This month's ADP National Employment Report suggests a deceleration of employment. The
three-month average change in nonfarm private employment from May to July is 96,000, which
is very close to the ADP Report's year-to-date average monthly employment change of 91,000.
In July, employment in the service-providing sector of the economy grew a moderate 89,000,
while employment in the goods-producing sector declined 41,000. This marks the eight consecutive
monthly decline in the goods-producing sector. Employment in the manufacturing sector declined 23,000.
Small- and medium-size businesses more than accounted for the increase in total employment in July,
with employment among these businesses advancing by 61,000. In contrast, employment among large businesses
fell by 13,000 in July, the second consecutive monthly decline.
The gains in employment at small- and medium-size businesses were concentrated in the service-providing
sector of the economy, which showed a gain of 85,000. However, employment among these same-size businesses
in the good-producing sector fell 24,000.
For information on the construction and use of the ADP Report, please visit the methodology section of the ADP National Employment Report website at http://ADPemploymentreport.com/methodology.aspx.

The matched sample used to develop the ADP National Employment Report was derived from ADP data which, during the first six months of 2007, averaged approximately 383,000 payrolls representing nearly 23 million U.S. employees. This approximately represents the size of the matched sample used this month.




About the ADP National Employment Report ®
The ADP National Employment Report, sponsored by ADP®, was developed and is maintained by Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC. It is a measure of employment derived from an anonymous subset of roughly 500,000 U.S. business clients. During the first six months of 2007, this subset represented approximately 383,000 U.S. business clients and nearly 23 million U.S. employees working in all private industrial sectors. The data is collected for pay periods that can be interpolated to include the week of the 12th of each month, and processed with statistical methodologies similar to those used by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics to compute employment from its monthly survey of establishments. Due to this processing, this subset is modified to make it indicative of national employment levels; therefore, the resulting employment changes computed for the ADP National Employment Report are not representative of changes in ADP's total base of U.S. business clients.
Empirical analysis performed by Macroeconomic Advisers suggests that the ADP National Employment Report can be used to develop a forecast of "true" employment that is superior to those resulting from consensus estimates, survey data, or other models of employment that do not incorporate the results of the ADP Report.
For a description of the underlying data and the statistical properties of the series, please see "ADP National Employment Report: Development Methodology" at http://ADPemploymentreport.com/methodology.aspx.
For a full schedule of future releases, please visit: www.ADPemploymentreport.com
Media contacts: ADP Public Relations: 973-974-7612
Macroeconomic Advisers: 314-721-4747
Technical information: 314-721-4747
www.ADPemploymentreport.com
The ADP National Employment Report is a trademark and service mark of ADP of North America, Inc.
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