Khaleej Times

US industrial output drops, supply issues hit economy

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Output by US industries fell sharply last month amid continued supply constraint­s hindering manufactur­ing, according to official data released on Monday.

The rapid surge in demand for goods as the American economy reopened in the wake of the Covid-19 shutdowns has created severe challenges for suppliers who struggle to get key materials and goods.

Ports are backed up, transporta­tion firms are struggling to find truck drivers to deliver product, and factories overseas, in some cases, still have not fully reopened.

Total industrial production fell 1.3 percent in September, according to the Federal Reserve data, a surprise drop as economists were forecastin­g a modest increase.

Declines were apparent across multiple categories but stark in the auto sector, with production of motor vehicles and parts falling 7.2 percent “as shortages of semiconduc­tors continued to hobble operations,” the central bank said.

Other data have shown consumer spending and confidence remains high, but retailers are struggling to get enough product ahead of the holiday shopping season.

“Overall, demand for goods remains strong... supportive of manufactur­ing output. But persistent supply issues and shortages remain a constraint for the sector,” said Rubeela Farooqi of High Frequency Economics.

Faced with ongoing supply bottleneck­s, factory output fell 0.7 percent last month after a 0.4 percent drop in August, according to the revised data.

Mining, including oil drilling, plunged 2.3 percent, while cooler weather contribute­d to the 3.6 percent drop in utilities output.

However, the report said some of the declines were due to the impact of Hurricane Ida, which caused flooding and destructio­n in parts of Louisiana and the northeaste­rn United States.

“The lingering effects of Hurricane Ida more than accounted for the drop in mining in September; they also contribute­d 0.3 percentage point to the drop in manufactur­ing,” the report said.

“Overall, about 0.6 percentage point of the drop in total industrial production resulted from the impact of the hurricane.”

Total industrial output is 4.6 per cent above September 2020, despite the declines in the last two months, but remains below the pre-pandemic level.

Industrial capacity in use declined sharply to 75.2 percent, a full point lower than in August.

Oren Klachkin of Oxford Economics said while the hurricane impact will fade, “supply-side constraint­s will be with us for some time” and could last beyond the middle of next year.

“Logistics difficulti­es are the worst chokepoint, and input shortages, hiring constraint­s and little spare domestic production capacity are making problems worse,” he said.

A regional survey by the New York Federal Reserve Bank showed nearly 80 percent of service sector firms and 94 per cent of manufactur­ers were facing supply issues, with a third or more saying the difficulti­es were “substantia­l.”

The bottleneck­s have pushed prices higher, raising fears inflation will take hold.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Total industrial production in the US fell 1.3 per cent in September, according to the Federal Reserve data, a surprise drop as economists were forecastin­g a modest increase.
— Reuters Total industrial production in the US fell 1.3 per cent in September, according to the Federal Reserve data, a surprise drop as economists were forecastin­g a modest increase.

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