Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S.’ manufactur­ing growth slips

Experts note effects of supply-chain snags, labor shortages

- MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON — U.S. manufactur­ing growth slowed in October amid 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 institute’s 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 the institute’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.

“Vietnam, Malaysia and Indonesia have all been impacted by the delta variant. They have been shut down and that is why you are seeing so much struggle to obtain semiconduc­tors,” Fiore said.

He said another problem has been labor shortages with 27% of respondent­s noting higher attrition rates with workers quitting to go to higher-paying jobs and 5% noting sizable numbers of retirement­s.

“The labor shortages are definitely another headwind,” Fiore said, predicting that it will be well into next year before all the supply chain issues are resolved.

 ?? (AP/Jae C. Hong) ?? Containers are stacked at the Port of Long Beach in Long Beach in Calif. in October. U.S. manufactur­ing growth slowed last month amid growing headaches from supply chain bottleneck­s.
(AP/Jae C. Hong) Containers are stacked at the Port of Long Beach in Long Beach in Calif. in October. U.S. manufactur­ing growth slowed last month amid growing headaches from supply chain bottleneck­s.

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