Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. sees its index in service sector fall

- MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON — The U.S. service sector shrank for the first time in a decade last month as the pandemic forced shutdowns and layoffs nationwide.

The Institute for Supply Management said Tuesday that its service-sector index fell to 41.8 in April, compared with a March reading of 52.5.

Any reading below 50 signals that the service sector, where the majority of Americans work, is in a contractio­n. It was the first time the services index has been in contractio­n since December 2009, and it was the lowest reading since March of that year with the nation mired in the 2008-09 recession.

In April, all major categories fell sharply with the business activity index dropping to 26, the lowest reading on record. The new orders index fell to 32.9, and the employment index dropped to 30.

The survey found growth in only two service sector industries last month, public administra­tion, as well as finance and insurance, while 16 industries reported declines.

In the agricultur­e sector, survey respondent­s said the virus had created significan­t

challenges with milk prices plunging 29% in a just a few weeks. “Milk is being dumped on farms because of the loss of markets,” the ISM survey found.

The industries in the report represent about 90% of the economy.

The Congressio­nal Budget Office is forecastin­g that the overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, will plunge by a record annual rate of 40% in the current April-June quarter.

Last week, the institute also reported that its manufactur­ing index was in contractio­n territory with a reading of 41.5 in April.

“I don’t anticipate there will be a V-shaped recovery,” Anthony Nieves, chairman of the group’s non-manufactur­ing business survey committee, said in a call with reporters.

While the Trump administra­tion is hoping for a big rebound this summer if and when the economy reopens, many economists believe the recession could drag on until a vaccine is widely available.

“Social distancing measures are being gradually lifted, but it will take time to undo the economic damage,” said Oren Klachkin, lead U.S. economist at Oxford Economics. “Significan­tly weaker demand, supply chain disruption­s … and uncertaint­y over the virus’ trajectory will pose considerab­le headwinds to an economic rebound.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States