NAPL Printing Business Index Rose in March But Rising Costs Present New Challenge

The Printing Business Index® (PBI®) of the National Association for Printing Leadership (NAPL), the Association’s broadest measure of print activity, rose to 60.1 in March 2004, up from 57.8 in February and 59.0 in January. Nearing the record high 62.7 reached in October 2004, the March reading marks the 21st consecutive month that the PBI has been above the critical 50.0 mark–the point at which more printers report activity is picking up than report activity is slowing down.
NAPL Vice President and Chief Economist Andrew Paparozzi tempered the good economic news with a word of caution. "We’re seeing signs of continued strength from a broad range of indicators, including the PBI, and that’s good news for the industry," he said. "It’s important to recognize, however, that the business environment is not all sunshine. Costs continue to rise, putting a squeeze on profits, so companies must continue to emphasize efficiency and productivity improvements."
The PBI combines input from NAPL’s Printing Business Panel about work-on-hand, current business conditions, expected business conditions (confidence), hiring plans, profitability, and other key indicators into a single measure of activity. The NAPL Printing Business Panel is a representative group of more than 300 printers that the Association surveys monthly on a range of key printing issues. Since the same companies are surveyed every time, data are strictly comparable from period to period.
The economic analysis comes from NAPL’s Printing Economic Research Center (PERC), which produces research and publications sponsored by Heidelberg, Kennesaw, Ga.
The NAPL Printing Business Index®
A reading above 50.0 means more printers report activity is picking up than report activity is slowing down; a reading below 50.0 means the opposite.
2005
Mar — 60.1
Feb — 57.8
Jan — 59.0
2004
Dec — 59.7
Nov — 59.6
Oct — 62.7
Sep — 59.9
Aug — 55.9
Jul — 56.4
Jun — 54.3
May — 53.0
Apr — 60.1
About NAPL
Chartered in 1933, the National Association for Printing Leadership is a not-for-profit trade association representing the $88 billion commercial printing industry. NAPL’s mission is “To enable the printing community to profit from change” through a full range of management and educational services to its membership, including conferences, seminars, publications, books, consulting, and economic data and analysis. The Association’s Printing Economic Research Center (PERC) produces the Economic Edge newsletter, the Printing Business Conditions Special Update, and the Leading Indicators Services, a source of late-breaking data on trends within the graphic arts industry. The Center’s research is sponsored by Heidelberg, Kennesaw, Ga.
Additional information can be found at the organization web site napl.org.
This article was last modified on January 6, 2023
This article was first published on May 9, 2005
