Business World

Factory output recovers from four-month slump, fastest in more than 4 years

- By Jochebed B. Gonzales Senior Researcher

FACTORY OUTPUT expanded by its fastest pace in more than four years in January, recovering from contractio­n in much of last year’s second half.

Preliminar­y data from the Monthly Integrated Survey of Selected Industries ( MISSI) of the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) showed that manufactur­ing output — as measured by the Volume of Production Index ( VoPI) — rose 21.9% year on year.

The January result was higher than the 14.9% growth recorded in the same month last year and a turnaround of the 9.2% decline seen in December 2017. January’s reading was also the fastest growth since December 2013’s 22.8% increase.

According to PSA data, January’s 2018 growth was “supported by two-digit annual expansions in 13 major sectors.” These sectors, ranked according to contributi­on to the overall growth rate, were: petroleum products (37%), machinery except electrical (36.8%), food manufactur­ing (15.2%), electrical machinery (13.9%), chemical products (32.3%), basic metals (35.5%), beverages (31.8%), printing (114.5%), non-metallic mineral products (17.5%), fabricated metal products ( 32.2%), paper

and paper products (14.7%), miscellane­ous manufactur­es (12.3%) and leather products (39.2%).

Capacity utilizatio­n, which is the extent by which industry resources are used to produce goods, averaged 84.1% for January, with 11 of the 20 major industries (55%) operating at capacity utilizatio­n rates of at least 80%.

For Michael L. Ricafort, economist at the Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. ( RCBC): “[t]he strong, back-to-back growth in manufactur­ing may reflect the record high foreign direct investment­s in recent months… especially the new and expansion of manufactur­ing facilities that already became operationa­l.”

“The recent improvemen­ts in manufactur­ing growth may also reflect the recent pick-up in the country’s exports growth, amid expansion of the country’s export markets with more free trade agreements,” Mr. Ricafort added.

Angelo B. Taningco, Security Bank Corp. economist, attributed the increase in production activity to higher wholesale prices of select manufactur­ed products. “Moreover, buoyant global demand for manufactur­ed items may have likewise encouraged bigger production,” he said.

Looking forward, manufactur­ing output is expected to sustain growth this year on account of higher government and household consumptio­ns as well as the “continued gains” in investment­s, according to Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia in a statement released by the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA).

“The sustained momentum in global trade growth will also provide additional boost to manufactur­ing growth, particular­ly exportorie­nted sectors,” added Mr. Pernia, who heads NEDA as director-general.

The NEDA chief also cited results of the central bank’s latest business expectatio­n survey showing industry firms recording a higher confidence index score of 39% in the first quarter, better than the 33.2% in the fourth quarter of 2017.

RCBC’s Mr. Ricafort was likewise optimistic, citing favorable demographi­cs, improving economic and credit fundamenta­ls, better ties with the United States, as well as increasing investment pledges and official developmen­t assistance from China and Japan that would lead to more infrastruc­ture projects.

“Manufactur­ing is still expected to sustain its double- digit growth in the coming months,” he said.

“[The] increased deployment of infrastruc­ture projects… would be a source of growth for the local manufactur­ing to keep up with the greater requiremen­ts of the fast-growing economy for constructi­on-related/-allied industries.”

For Security Bank’s Mr. Taningco, the entry of more foreign investment­s in manufactur­ing and a vibrant global economy “would spur external demand for domestic manufactur­ed goods.”

“I expect food manufactur­es, machinery, petroleum, iron and steel, basic metals, nonmetalli­c minerals and cement to spearhead manufactur­ing production throughout the year,” Mr. Taningco said.

Sought for comment, Philippine Exporters Confederat­ion, Inc. President Sergio R. Ortiz-Luis, Jr. noted that market conditions domestical­ly and in the US are “erratic” but should “even out” in the middle of the year.

“There are swings and correction­s in the market, but I think the manufactur­ing sector is catching up with the orders,” Mr. Ortiz-Luis said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines