The Oklahoman

US manufactur­ing growth up in August

Supply constraint­s and labor shortages continue to be a drag on production

- Martin Crutsinger

“All segments of the manufactur­ing economy are impacted by record-long raw materials lead times, continued shortages of critical basic materials, rising commoditie­s prices and difficulti­es transporti­ng products.” Tom Fiore, chair of the ISM manufactur­ing survey committee

WASHINGTON – Growth in U.S. manufactur­ing accelerate­d in August despite the fact that companies were still struggling with supply-chain problems. h The Institute for Supply Management, a trade group of purchasing managers, said Wednesday that its index of manufactur­ing activity rose 0.4 percentage point in August to 59.9. Manufactur­ing had seen a slowdown in July when activity dipped to 59.5 from 60.6 in June. h Any reading above 50 indicates growth in the manufactur­ing sector. August marked the 15th consecutiv­e month that manufactur­ing has grown after contractin­g in April 2020 when the coronaviru­s pandemic triggered nationwide business shutdowns.

Tom Fiore, chair of the ISM manufactur­ing survey committee, said the new report showed that manufactur­ers continued to struggle to meet surging demand while at the same time dealing with numerous supply chain disruption­s.

“All segments of the manufactur­ing economy are impacted by record-long raw materials lead times, continued shortages of critical basic materials, rising commoditie­s prices and difficulties transporti­ng products,” he said.

The new surge in COVID-19 cases added to those problems, Fiore said, by causing more worker absences and increased short-term shutdowns due to shortages of parts and difficulties in finding enough workers to staff assembly lines.

While supply chain problems remain severe, they have eased somewhat in the past few months with supplier delivery times falling.

Labor problems, however, increased with the employment index falling to 49.0 in August, down from 52.9 in July.

“While some of the recent price pressures have faded, supply constraint­s, and particular­ly labor shortages, are still proving to be a drag,” said Michael Pearce, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics.

 ?? CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? An expert said a new report showed that manufactur­ers continued to struggle to meet surging demand while at the same time dealing with numerous supply chain disruption­s.
CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES An expert said a new report showed that manufactur­ers continued to struggle to meet surging demand while at the same time dealing with numerous supply chain disruption­s.

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