Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Industry output slows in October

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON » U.S. manufactur­ing growth slowed in October amid growing headaches from supply chain bottleneck­s and labor shortages.

The Institute for Supply Management, a trade group of purchasing managers, said Monday that its index of manufactur­ing activity dipped slightly to a reading of 60.8% in October, 0.3 percentage-points below September’s 61.1%.

Any reading above 50 indicates growth in the manufactur­ing sector. But the ISM report noted that manufactur­ers and suppliers were dealing with an unpreceden­ted number of hurdles in their efforts to meet rising demand.

“Manufactur­ers continued to face unpreceden­ted shipping bottleneck­s, input shortages and difficulti­es filing vacant positions,” said Oren Klachkin, lead U.S. economist at Oxford Economics.

The report showed the supply chain problems showing up in various areas, including a jump of 4.5 percentage points in the prices paid index to 85.7% as manufactur­ers continued to face surging prices for raw materials and component parts.

All six of the biggest manufactur­ing industries continued to register moderate to strong growth in October with 16 industrial overall registerin­g growth, led by apparel, leather and allied products and furniture and related products.

The two industries that showed decreases in growth were wood products and nonmetalli­c mineral products.

Timothy R. Fiore, head of ISM’s manufactur­ing survey committee, said that U.S. companies had been particular­ly impacted by a rise in COVID cases in many countries in Southeast Asia where much of the production of semiconduc­tors for autos and other products takes place.

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