In The News
ATA Tonnage Index plummets 11 percent
The American Trucking Associations' advanced seasonally adjusted
For-Hire Truck Tonnage Index plunged 11.1 percent in December 2008,
marking the largest month-to-month reduction since April 1994, when the
unionized less-than-truckload industry was in the midst of a strike.
December's drop was the third-largest single-month drop since ATA began
collecting the data in 1973. In December, the seasonally adjusted
tonnage index equaled just 98.3 (2000 = 100), its lowest level since
December 2000. The not seasonally adjusted index edged 0.6 percent
higher in December.
Compared with December 2007, the index declined 14.1 percent, the
biggest year-over-year decrease since February 1996. During the fourth
quarter, tonnage was down 6 percent from the same quarter in 2007.
ATA Chief Economist Bob Costello said the December reading confirms that the United States is in the thick of a recession.
"Motor carrier freight is a reflection of the tangible-goods economy,
and December's numbers leave no doubt that the United States is in the
worst recession in decades," Costello said. "It is likely truck tonnage
will not improve much before the third quarter of this year. The
economy is expected to contract through the first half of 2009 and then
only grow slightly through the end of the year."
ATA calculates the tonnage index based on surveys from its membership
and has been doing so since the 1970s. This is a preliminary figure and
subject to change in the final report issued around the 10th day of the
month.