Qatar Tribune

US manufactur­ed goods sales plunge 17.2 percent in April

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NEW orders for US manufactur­ed goods cratered in April by 17.2 percent as the COVID-19 pandemic shut down factories nationwide, the Commerce Department reported on Thursday.

That decline came after a 16.6 percent drop in March, taking sales down to $170 billion in April from $246 billion before the virus hit the world’s largest economy.

Excluding transporta­tion, sales fell just 7.4 percent, according to the data, but transporta­tion orders collapsed by more than 47 percent after the 43 percent plunge in March.

Struggling aerospace giant Boeing, a key part of the transporta­tion sector, reported 31 orders in March and none in April. The company, which announced it is slashing its workforce by 10 percent and reducing production, plans to restart its Seattle-area factory next week.

Meanwhile, sales of motor vehicles and parts collapsed nearly 52.8 percent compared to March.

While manufactur­ing is a much smaller, though still important, part of the servicesdo­minated US economy, it still has a heavy weight in measuring GDP.

“Further evidence of the ravaging damage from the global coronaviru­s recession was visible” in the data, Gregory Daco of Oxford Economics said in an analysis.

In a separate report, the Commerce Department said US GDP fell 5.0 percent in the first three months of the year, slightly worse than the 4.8 percent drop originally reported, putting an end to a decade of economic expansion.

The report pointed to the collapse in consumer spending, hotels, food service and transporta­tion equipment, as well as exports.

The fall was more dramatic given that the business shutdowns did not start to take effect until the final two weeks of the quarter, and government economists could not separate out the impact of the virus on the data.

But Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the collapse in the April-June quarter could be as bad as 30 percent, levels not seen since the Great Depression of the last century.

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 ?? (AFP) ?? (File photo) Employees work on Boeing 737 MAX airplanes at the Boeing Renton Factory in Renton, Washington.
(AFP) (File photo) Employees work on Boeing 737 MAX airplanes at the Boeing Renton Factory in Renton, Washington.

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