Business Day

Surprise uptick at factories

- Asha Speckman Economics Writer

Manufactur­ing output rose by an unexpected 1.9% year on year in November, but the outlook for growth momentum and confidence remained grim, economists said on Thursday.

This prompted the industry to reissue a call for a more patriotic private sector that would “come to the party” and make a concerted effort to buy goods locally.

Philippa Rodseth, Manufactur­ing Circle executive director, said the government had shown the way by procuring such items as clothing and textiles, power lines and pharma- ceuticals, among others, locally.

Rodseth said the private sector needed to work towards a comprehens­ive “buying local” initiative.

“We all need to support our local manufactur­ers…. This is vital to jobs and growth.”

Manufactur­ing contribute­s about 12.5% to national economic growth.

The Barclays-sponsored purchasing managers’ index (PMI), which is compiled by the Stellenbos­ch-based Bureau of Economic Research (BER), showed confidence among factory managers had waned for a fifth consecutiv­e month in December.

The index dropped to 46.7 index points from 48.3 in November, which is below the 50 neutral mark that separates contractio­n and expansion. This lags internatio­nal readings in the US and eurozone, which have come in above 50. China’s most recent PMI also indicated positive output growth.

Rodseth and economists say persistent­ly weak domestic demand in the face of anaemic economic growth has contribute­d to the index results.

“Export-led growth may counter this trend, as local manufactur­ers export to a strengthen­ing global industrial sector,” Rodseth said.

12.5% is the contributi­on to national economic growth by the manufactur­ing sector

46.7% from 48.3% in November is how the purchasing managers’ confidence index had fallen

Supply constraint­s such as load shedding and strike activity had moderated through 2016.

A recovery in agricultur­al output and the uptick in the mining sector on the back of higher commodity prices could support demand going forward, BER economists, who compiled the index, forecast. But they said this developmen­t would be offset by the more downbeat outlook for consumers.

A sub-component of the purchasing managers’ index — new sales orders — remained just above the neutral point.

The suppliers’ performanc­e sub-index fell to a historic low of 40.9 from 48 index points previously. The business activity sub-index dropped 2.6 points to 46.3 in December. Although survey participan­ts were more optimistic about conditions in six months’ time, the sub-index fell to 53.2 from 53.9.

Meanwhile, Statistics SA said on Thursday that seasonally adjusted manufactur­ing production had risen 0.3% in November from October’s -1.9% and 1.5% in September.

The increase in November was due to greater activity in basic iron and steel, nonferrous metal products, metal products and machinery, which rose 6.1%.

The food and beverages segment gained 2.3% and contribute­d 0.6 of a percentage.

Wood and wood products, paper, publishing and printing rose 2.7% and contribute­d 0.3% of a percentage point to the headline figure.

Output declined in petroleum products, chemicals and plastics and motor vehicle production.

Rodseth said despite the slight improvemen­t in the monthly data, “if we look at trends from September to November, we see that manufactur­ing production declined by 1.1%”. She said this indicated a contractio­n for December was looming and pointed to a still fragile sector.

Elize Kruger, senior economist at NKC African Economics, said economists expected 1.1% growth between November and December.

But delving deeper into the figures there was “a very clear indication that growth had moved back into the negative territory quarter on quarter”, she said.

This was bad news for SA’s economic growth, which was expected at 0.5% for the year.

“It remains a dismal outlook overall for 2016,” Kruger said.

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