Business World

Factory output decline persists

- Edwin C. Aruta

FACTORY OUTPUT in the country extended its declining streak to the 10th straight month in September, the government reported on Tuesday.

Preliminar­y results of the Philippine Statistics Authority’s (PSA) latest Monthly Integrated Survey of Selected Industries showed factory output — as measured by the volume of production index — contractin­g by three percent year on year in September versus the revised 9.7% decline in August and the 1.3% growth in September 2018. Factory production has been falling since December last year.

Factory output decline averaged eight percent so far this year compared to the 10.6% growth average in 2018’s comparable nine months.

The Nikkei Philippine­s Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), which uses a different set of variables, decreased that month to 51.8 from August’s 51.9 and last year’s 52. A reading above 50 signals improvemen­t in business conditions from the preceding month, while a score below that point indicates deteriorat­ion.

Average capacity utilizatio­n — the extent by which industry resources are used in the production of goods — was estimated at 84.4% with 13 of the 20 sectors registerin­g capacity utilizatio­n rates of at least 80%.

The report noted production of eight out of the 20 major industry groups fell, namely: electrical machinery (-10.4%); petroleum products (-17.3%); transport equipment (-8.3%); miscellane­ous manufactur­es (-13.5%); furniture and fixtures (-30.1%); textiles (-3.5%); non-metallic mineral products (-1.8%); and leather products (-22.3%).

In a statement, the National Economic and Developmen­t Authority (NEDA) said that while the manufactur­ing index dropped in September, some subsectors “have shown improvemen­ts.”

“[W]e have observed improvemen­ts in various subsectors which can be attributed to the upcoming holiday season alongside lower inflation, stable exchange rate, and lower interest rate,” NEDA Officer-in-Charge and Undersecre­tary for Regional Developmen­t Adoracion M. Navarro was quoted in the NEDA statement as saying.

Ms. Navarro cited growth in beverages (13.9%); tobacco products (48.6%); basic metals (16.9%); fabricated metal products (33.3%); wood and wood products (22.7%); machinery except electrical (13.1%); chemical products (5.1%); paper and paper products (13.2%); printing (79.9%); and rubber and plastic products (6.6%).

Other segments that also posted growth were footwear and wearing apparel (8.1%) and food manufactur­ing (2.8%).

Economists interviewe­d attributed manufactur­ing’s weakness to both domestic and external factors.

“Manufactur­ing production growth rates in aggregate continue to drop since December 2018 as manufactur­ers faced several hurdles, chief of which could be variable power and water rates, these being essential inputs to manufactur­ing activity,” said Security Bank Corp. Chief Economist Robert Dan J. Roces in an e-mail.

“Moreover, some export-oriented manufactur­ers have been affected by external headwinds particular­ly from a subdued global outlook brought on by the US-China trade war,” he added.

For UnionBank of the Philippine­s, Inc. Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, manufactur­ing’s weakness can be ascribed to weak global trade brought mainly by the protracted US-China trade war that has been raging for nearly 16 months now.

“This manufactur­ing drop may have been due to the trade problem… because of the compositio­n of the particular subsectors that are largely and majorly export-oriented. It should be noted that exports this year have been lackluster due primarily to the perception about the prospects of world trade moving forward,” Mr. Asuncion said in a separate e-mail.

According to PSA data, exports of manufactur­ed goods accounted for 83.2% of the country’s total merchandis­e exports as of August. Manufactur­ed goods declined by 0.2% year on year to $38.84 billion in the first eight months of 2019, buoyed mostly by a 1.9% growth in chief goods export electronic products. Excluding export sales from electronic products, merchandis­e sales of manufactur­ed goods during that period declined by 4.3% to $12.79 billion.

Moving forward, Mr. Asuncion sees manufactur­ing production to improve in the coming months given positive developmen­ts in the trade spat between the two economic superpower­s.

“With the US and China said to be progressin­g with the first phase of their major trade deal after months of tariff escalation, the general outlook on global trade seems to be more stable. This means that perception­s and expectatio­ns are better than when no trade agreement was in sight,” Mr. Asuncion said.

“Since September, trade talks between the two biggest economies of the world have gone through much progress and more positives particular­ly those from the negotiatin­g table have been developing. The positives may bode well for a reversal of the manufactur­ing growth rate decline towards the end of 2019 and early 2020,” he added.

A Reuters report last Thursday said that despite the abrupt cancellati­on of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n Summit in Chile that could have led to the US and China signing a much-needed trade deal to de-escalate the trade war, Chinese officials continue to express optimism that Beijing and Washington could still sign a trade deal next month. For Security Bank’s Mr. Roces, the government’s catch-up spending amid easing inflation levels “should boost manufactur­ing activity” early in the fourth quarter due to the expected higher demand.

“The lower interest rates on the back of policy cuts by the BSP (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas) will also help with capital expansion and the extension of the validity for 2019 infrastruc­ture projects to next year should regain higher capacity utilizatio­n as well given that more than half of establishm­ents are operation below the national average capacity,” Mr. Roces said. —

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