Throughout the 1990s the industry experienced a modest recovery, due in large part to the fad-driven popularity of team logo sports headwear.
All together there were some 17,000 people employed in this industry (14,000 of whom were production workers).
Through the 1990s, sales continuously improved, attributable in part to the increasing popularity of designer sunglasses and to technological innovations in the development of contact lenses.
In addition to team logo sports headwear, the industry's output included straw harvest hats; jungle-cloth helmets; opera hats; panamas; and hat bodies made from fur-felt, straw, and wool-felt.
There were no major work stoppages in the pulp and paper industry during the 1990s
Industry shipments declined during the late 1990s, from $1.31 billion in 1999 to $1.23 billion in 2000
Industry shipments declined during the late 1990s, from $1.31 billion in 1999 to $1.23 billion in 2000
The canned foods industry generated more than $14.5 billion in sales in the late 1990s
The United States banking industry in the late 1990s was estimated to be worth $520 billion
The Game Headwear was created in 1960.
In the late 1990s, the American banking industry included 9,100 commercial banks and 1,800 thrift institutions
The uncoated paper and multiwall bag industry remained stagnant in the late 1990s. Shipment volumes of $2.8 billion in 2000 were equal to those of the early 1990s.
The chicken egg farm industry has been strong since the beginning of the 1990s, although it is subject to fluctuations