The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Manufactur­ing drops for 3rd straight month

Slowing global economy, trade hurting industries.

- By Paul Wiseman

WASHINGTON — U.S. manufactur­ing output dropped for the third straight month in October as trade tensions and a slowing global economy took a toll on American factories.

The Institute for Supply Management, an associatio­n of purchasing managers, said Friday its manufactur­ing index blipped up to 48.3 last month from 47.8 in September, the first uptick since March. But anything below 50 signals a contractio­n and manufactur­ing has been on a three-month losing streak.

New orders, production and hiring all contracted. But export orders increased in October after a September decline.

Twelve of 18 manufactur­ing industries contracted in October, led by primary metals, clothing and textile mills.

President Donald Trump’s trade dispute with China and conflicts with other trading partners have created uncertaint­y for manufactur­ers. They have delayed purchases and investment­s because they don’t know whether or when Trump will lift taxes on imports and which countries he might target next.

“A business owner can’t make decisions fast enough to keep up,” said Kip Eideberg, senior vice president of government and industry relations at the Associatio­n of Equipment Manufactur­ers.

Toymaker Hasbro, for instance, last month reported the trade war is wreaking havoc on its supply chain and confusing its customers.

Also Friday, the Labor Department reported the United States shed 41,000 manufactur­ing jobs in October — though that loss reflected a strike at General Motors.

Despite the manufactur­ing slump, the U.S. economy continues to grow, supported by a relatively healthy services sector and healthy consumer spending. Services firms added 157,00 jobs last month.

But the uncertaint­y over trade has kept manufactur­ers from prospering despite a relatively healthy economy and Trump’s 2017 tax cuts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States