Oman Daily Observer

Strain on global manufactur­ing eases as euro zone returns to growth

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LONDON: Euro zone manufactur­ing activity expanded modestly last month, its first growth since early 2019, and Asia’s pain eased as the contractio­n slowed in export-reliant nations, adding to hopes the sector is emerging from the hit of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Just over 18 million people have been infected by the coronaviru­s and the hit from lockdowns and social distancing policies to contain its spread have had a devastatin­g impact on global growth and pushed many economies into recession.

With still-rising coronaviru­s infections — and the risk of renewed lockdowns increasing — the chances of any rebound reversing course have risen and the world economic outlook has dimmed again, according to polls of over 500 economists globally.

Still, while the euro zone economy contracted a record 12.1 per cent last quarter, a poll predicted 8.1 per cent growth during the current one.

Factories appear to be playing their part in the bloc’s potential recovery, and IHS Markit’s final Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ index bounced to 51.8 in July for the euro zone from June’s 47.4 — its first time above the 50 mark separating growth from contractio­n since January 2019.

“It’s positive, they are going in the right direction. But the very fact most of the European numbers are in the low 50s suggests there is an awful long way to go,” said Peter Dixon at Commerzban­k. “With fears of a second wave of COVID-19 the headwinds to the European economy remain pretty strong.”

Manufactur­ers in Germany, Europe’s largest economy, saw an expansion for the first time since December 2018 and in France activity picked up a touch.

Meanwhile, British manufactur­ing output grew at its fastest pace in nearly three years as factories reopened and demand began to accelerate after a lockdown was eased.

Manufactur­ing activity in China expanded at the fastest pace in nearly a decade as domestic demand improved, a private sector survey showed, suggesting the world’s second-largest economy would help cushion the pandemic’s blow to world growth.

China’s Caixin/markit Manufactur­ing PMI rose to 52.8 from June’s 51.2, marking the sector’s third consecutiv­e month of growth and the biggest jump since January 2011.

The upbeat findings echoed an official survey on Friday, adding to evidence China’s economy is getting back on its feet faster than expected.

But worries about a second wave of infections may weigh on global demand and business sentiment, keeping any rebound in factory output feeble, some analysts say.

Japan, for one, will enjoy only a “very gradual and protracted recovery” as concerns about a resurgence in COVID-19 cases will weigh on domestic and overseas spending, said Stefan Angrick, senior economist at Oxford Economics. “With the pace of recovery slowing in some of Japan’s key trading partners, exports and business spending are likely to continue to struggle,” he said.

Japan and South Korea saw factory activity shrink at a much slower pace, a sign pressures on manufactur­ers were easing and raising hopes the worst impact from the pandemic was over. — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters ?? A steel worker is pictured at a furnace at the plant of German steel company Salzgitter AG in Salzgitter, Lower Saxony, Germany.
— Reuters A steel worker is pictured at a furnace at the plant of German steel company Salzgitter AG in Salzgitter, Lower Saxony, Germany.

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