Business World

Manufactur­ing output growth picks up in December

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FACTORY OUTPUT grew at its fastest pace in three months in December, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Wednesday.

Preliminar­y results of the PSA’s latest Monthly Integrated Survey of Selected Industries (MISSI) showed factory production, as measured by the volume of production index (VoPI), grew by 2% year on year in December, the fastest pace since 9.8% in September and picking up from 1.8% in November.

However, this was slower than the 4.5% growth posted in December 2022.

This brought the average manufactur­ing output growth for 2023 to 4.4%, sharply slower than the 15.4% annual average growth seen in 2022.

Analysts attributed the slowdown to supply chain disruption­s due to geopolitic­al tensions overseas.

“Disruption­s in supply chain and transporta­tion from political tensions in Eastern Europe and the Middle East affected factory output. The Philippine­s is reliant on imported raw materials and work-in-progress in factory production,” Oikonomia Advisory & Research, Inc. President and Chief Economist John Paolo R. Rivera said in an e-mail.

“Relatively high inflation globally and locally in 2023 also affected production costs,” Mr. Rivera said.

Still, the manufactur­ing sector remained resilient last year, Philippine Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI) President George T. Barcelon noted in a phone interview.

“The manufactur­ing sector has been holding up… We’re gradually bouncing back. We started from a lower base, and I think it’s performing quite well,” he said.

“The export sector has not been as good as what was projected but it ended up fairly well… So, constructi­on, infrastruc­ture, and the essentials are holding up,” he added.

The country’s trade-in-goods deficit narrowed by 9% to $52.42 billion in 2023 as exports and imports declined amid slowing demand.

Merchandis­e exports dropped by 7.6% to $73.52 billion last year, PSA data showed. This was a reversal of the 6.5% growth in 2022.

On a monthly basis, the manufactur­ing sector’s VoPI declined by 6.7% in December, a turnaround from the 3% growth in the previous month. Stripping out seasonalit­y factors, VoPI slipped by 0.8% from the 0.7% growth in November last year.

In comparison, IHS Markit’s Philippine­s Manufactur­ing Purchasing Manager’s Index (PMI) expanded by 51.5 in December, slower than the 52.7 expansion seen in November last year. A PMI reading above 50 indicates improvemen­t in operating conditions, while a reading below 50 shows deteriorat­ion.

The PSA said the year-on-year growth seen in December was mainly driven by the slower annual decline in the manufactur­e of food products at 1.4% from the 4.9% drop in the previous month.

“The manufactur­e of food products contribute­d 34.5% to the uptrend of VoPI for the manufactur­ing section in December 2023,” it said.

Mr. Barcelon said typhoons in the latter part of the year as well as geopolitic­al tensions likely led to slower food production.

“Other main contributo­rs to the higher year-on-year growth of VoPI in December 2023 were the faster annual increase observed in the manufactur­e of basic pharmaceut­ical products and pharmaceut­ical preparatio­ns at 38.2% in December 2023 from 11.1% in the previous month, and the slower annual decrement in the manufactur­e of fabricated metal products, except machinery and equipment at 12% during the period from 23.5% annual decrease in the previous month,” the PSA added.

Of the remaining 19 industry divisions, eight posted year-on-year increases in December, led by coke and refined petroleum products (33.2% in 2023 from 20.3% in 2022), electrical equipment (25.8% from -49.9%), and transport equipment (23.4% from 6.4%).

Meanwhile, 11 industry divisions recorded annual declines.

“The highest annual drop was observed in manufactur­e of wood, bamboo, cane, rattan articles and related products at 55.3%,” the PSA said.

December’s capacity utilizatio­n rate, or the extent to which industry resources are used in producing goods, averaged 74.3%, slower than the revised 74.8% in the previous month.

“All industry divisions reported capacity utilizatio­n rates of more than 60% during the month. The top three industry divisions in terms of reported capacity utilizatio­n rate were manufactur­e of rubber and plastic products (80.0%), manufactur­e of machinery and equipment except electrical (79.8%), and manufactur­e of beverages (79.6%),” the PSA said.

Looking ahead, geopolitic­al tensions could continue to affect the manufactur­ing sector, analysts said.

“Sectors reliant on oil will remain affected until global tensions are eased. The government should look at alternativ­e sources of constraine­d inputs,” Mr. Rivera said.

“Another thing of concern, we’re heading into El Niño where there’s less rain, and the agricultur­e sector might be affected. Although it goes without saying that we will still need to import more food commoditie­s,” Mr. Barcelon added.

But expectatio­ns of slower inflation this year could boost the sector, they said.

“As inflation is easing significan­tly, output is expected to increase assuming no disruption particular­ly from natural calamities will happen,” Mr. Rivera said.

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas expects headline inflation to average 3.7% this year, slower than the 6% print in 2023, and to ease further to 3.2% in 2025. — Bernadette Therese M. Gadon

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