Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Growth in US manufactur­ing slowed in April from March high

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WASHINGTON, United States (AP) — Growth in US manufactur­ing slowed slightly in April partly due to a snarled global supply chain after hitting a 37-year high in March.

The Institute for Supply Management, a trade group of purchasing managers, said Monday that its index of manufactur­ing activity fell last month to a reading of 60.7. That was down from a March reading of 64.7, which had been the highest level since December 1983.

Any reading above 50 indicates manufactur­ing is expanding. April was the 11th consecutiv­e month manufactur­ing has grown after contractin­g in April 2020, when the country was struggling to deal with the shutdowns caused by a pandemic.

The slowdown in April reflected a number of problems facing US factories including disruption­s in supply chains for critical components such as computer chips.

The problems manufactur­ers are having dealing with supply chains showed up in several categories from the prices paid for components rising sharply to an increase in the backlog of unfilled orders.

“What started out as a shortage of semiconduc­tors affecting mostly the auto industry is now a shortage of basically everything, including lumber, metals and plastics,” said Michael Pearce, senior US economist at Capital Economics.

But Pearce noted that even with the decline, the manufactur­ing index remained at a high level that was consistent with growth in the overall economy of a robust six per cent.

The Government reported last week that the economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, grew by a solid 6.4 per cent between January and March with many analysts expecting growth could top 10 per cent in the current quarter as the economy reopens further.

Timothy Fiore, chair of the ISM manufactur­ing survey committee, said that companies are not able to meet demand because of supply constraint­s on the materials they need and a shortage of labour. He predicted businesses will start pushing wages higher to attract workers and will also start paying more for raw materials.

“Companies will pay whatever it takes to get people and materials,” he said. “You can’t lose market share because once you lose it, it is hard to get it back.”

The ISM report showed that optimistic comments about the future compared with cautious statements from companies came in at a ratio of 11- to-1 up from an 8-to-1 ratio in March.

All six of the biggest manufactur­ing industries including fabricated metal products, chemical products, food and beverages, and computer and electronic products, registered moderate to strong growth in April.

 ?? (Photo: AP) ?? A constructi­on worker is reflected in a wall mirror at Polar Park, Worcester Red Sox’s Triple-a baseball stadium, in Worcester, Massachuse­tts, where preparatio­ns are ongoing for the club’s opening day in May. US constructi­on spending bounced back in March following a February decline due to frigid cold and winter storms across large swaths of the country.
(Photo: AP) A constructi­on worker is reflected in a wall mirror at Polar Park, Worcester Red Sox’s Triple-a baseball stadium, in Worcester, Massachuse­tts, where preparatio­ns are ongoing for the club’s opening day in May. US constructi­on spending bounced back in March following a February decline due to frigid cold and winter storms across large swaths of the country.

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