Business World

Manufactur­ing output up 1.9% in November

- By Lourdes O. Pilar Researcher

FACTORY OUTPUT expanded in November, but the activities related to food items continued to drag the overall manufactur­ing sector.

Preliminar­y results of the Philippine Statistics Authority’s (PSA) latest Monthly Integrated Survey of Selected Industries showed factory output, as measured by the volume of production index (VoPI), rose by 1.9% year on year in November.

The November output was faster than the revised 1.5% recorded in October.

This is the highest print in two months or since the 10.4% recorded in September.

On a monthly basis, November’s output grew by 2.7%, a reversal from the 1.2% contractio­n in the previous month. Stripping out seasonalit­y factors, manufactur­ing that month edged up by 0.7%, a reversal from the 4.1% drop in October.

Year to date, factory output averaged 5.1%, lower than the 45% growth a year ago.

To compare, S&P Philippine­s Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose to 52.7 in November, higher than the of 52.4 in October. A PMI reading of above 50 means improvemen­t in operating conditions compared with the previous month, while a reading below 50 shows deteriorat­ion.

PSA said the annual growth of the VoPI in November can be attributed to the faster rise in transport equipment (17.1% from 5.8% in October), as well as the smaller declines in beverages (-11.6% in November from -34.4% in October), and chemical and chemical products (-2.4% from -10.9%).

Several industry divisions posted slower growth, such as printing and reproducti­on of recorded media (8.6% from 26.3%), basic pharmaceut­ical products and pharmaceut­ical preparatio­ns (15.5% from 16.5%), electrical equipment (29.9% from 30.5%), and coke and refined petroleum products (37% from 46.9%).

However, the PSA said 13 industry divisions recorded annual declines during the month, led by machinery and equipment except electrical (-27% from -23.1%); leather and related products, including footwear (-26% from -29%); fabricated metal products, except machinery and equipment (-25.4% from -16.4%); wearing apparel (-24.3% from -20%); and wood, bamboo, cane, rattan articles, and related products (-20.2% from -42%).

Average capacity utilizatio­n — the extent to which industry resources are used in the production of goods — averaged 74.8% in November, slightly higher than October’s 74.3% in the previous month.

All industry divisions have reached an average capacity utilizatio­n rate of more than 60%.

“Manufactur­ing activity related to food items were the drag on overall manufactur­ing with production of other items compensati­ng for the decline in those items. This may reflect the struggles experience­d by the agricultur­e sector which posted negative growth in the third quarter,” ING Bank N.V. Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said in an e-mail.

Mr. Mapa added that the manufactur­ing industry will likely help support growth, but gross domestic product (GDP) growth will likely remain largely driven by the services sector.

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