Skip to content

Raw data: Industry winners and losers since 2000

The Census Bureau released its quarterly figures for industry sales and profits yesterday. For no particular reason, here are the biggest winners and losers since 2000.

Note that specialty retail refers to retail other than food, clothing, and general merchandise. Retail overall is up 74.1% since 2000.

13 thoughts on “Raw data: Industry winners and losers since 2000

  1. cld

    Possible side effects of Lupron include hot flashes, muscle loss, suicidal tendencies, my boobs swelling, and my balls shrinking. Sounds great!

    Sounds like the average Trump voter watching Drag Race.

    1. jijovig651

      Make $170 per hour. its very hard to find jobs nowadays. In this situation, you have access to a wealth of resources to help you with your working abilities. Be motivated to promote Thousands of works such as copy paste things through job boards and career websites vx10 on internet.

      Just Take A Look At This>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> https://shorturl.at/pqjkM

  2. jvoe

    Having seen some management consulting at work, I have to wonder if there is a payoff from that $39.2 billion? And that it went from nothing in 2010 to $39.2 BILLION...what the actual hell?

    1. iamr4man

      I think the zero on the chart just indicates the starting point. So if it was $20 billion in 2010 and went up to $40 billion in 2023, it went up 100% over 13 years.

      1. jte21

        Hey, being able to blame the consultants when you have to lay off a bunch of people at your company rather than drawing attention to your own management incompetence is a valuable service!

  3. jeffreycmcmahon

    Okay, if "specialty retail" doesn't include food, clothing, or general merchandise, what counts as "general merchandise" (and therefore, still not sure what counts as "specialty retail").

Comments are closed.