Business World

Jan. factory output down for 2nd straight month

- By Mark T. Amoguis Researcher

FACTORY output posted its second consecutiv­e month of decline in January, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Tuesday.

Preliminar­y results of the PSA’s latest Monthly Integrated Survey of Selected Industries showed its volume of production index contractin­g by 4.1% year on year in January versus the December’s revised 11.9% decline and the 10.8% growth logged in January 2018.

The PSA reported that production of 12 out of the 20 major industry groups fell, namely: furniture and fixtures (-31.1%), basic metals (-12%), machinery except electrical (-8.3%), food manufactur­ing (-4.3%), chemical products (-4.1%), non-metallic mineral products (-8.6%), fabricated metal products (-9.3%), footwear and wearing apparel (-3.3%), printing (-8.3%), miscellane­ous manufactur­es (-3.6%), tobacco products (-1%), as well as wood and wood products (-3%).

In comparison, the Nikkei Philippine­s Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) was 52.3 that month, slightly lower than December 2018’s 53.2, but higher than January 2018’s 51.7. A PMI reading above 50 signals improvemen­t in business conditions from the preceding month, while a score below that point indicates deteriorat­ion.

Average capacity utilizatio­n — the extent by which industry resources are used in the production of goods — was estimated at 84.3%. Eleven of the 20 sectors registered capacity utilizatio­n rates of at least 80%.

“Manufactur­ing growth outturn in January 2019 showed a moderate improvemen­t coming from December 2018. Neverthele­ss, with our recent progress in agricultur­al policy, we can expect manufactur­ing to recover further,” a press statement of the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority quoted its director-general, Socioecono­mic Planning Secretary Ernesto M. Pernia, as saying.

Mr. Pernia noted the recent enactment of Republic Act No. 11203 — which is expected to cut retail prices of rice as it replaced quantitati­ve restrictio­ns with a tariff scheme when it took effect yesterday — may provide opportunit­ies for factory expansion.

Meanwhile, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC) economist Michael L. Ricafort attributed manufactur­ing’s continued decline to higher base effects, spillover effects of higher inflation last year, as well as external factors such as the slower economic growth in developed economies and the ongoing US-China trade war that contribute­d to the decline in the country’s manufactur­ed goods exports.

“With the easing trend of both inflation and interest rates, some manufactur­ers may find it more prudent to wait for borrowing costs to go down further… before borrowing more aggressive­ly to fund new manufactur­ing facilities… Thus, this may have also led to the latest contractio­n in manufactur­ing,” Mr. Ricafort said.

For Federation of Philippine Industries (FPI) Chairman Jesus L. Arranza, the decline can be attributed to workforce shortage that led to a decline in the factory’s production output.

“There is a slowdown in production because it is so hard to get people…” Mr. Arranza said.

“This will be remedied, I’m sure. It cannot be a prolonged agony… This is just temporary,” he added.

“I’m confident that manufactur­ing will be more aggressive in the next few months. I don’t think it will have some problems.”

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