Wednesday, August 10, 2011

"Freight Broker Training" Will U.S. manufacturing step up?

By Patrick Burnson, Executive Editor
August 05, 2011
While the global economic crisis continues to capture mainstream business press headlines this week, one supply chain industry analyst reports that other recent trends bear watching.

According to Daniel J. Meckstroth, Ph.D., Chief Economist for the Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI, the ISM Index for July suggests a more complex recovery scenario:

“The Institute for Supply Management reports that its index of manufacturing activity was 50.9 percent for July, 4.4 percentage points less than the 55.3 percent seen in June. Fifty percent is the dividing line between expansion and contraction,” Meckstroth said. “Manufacturing posted very strong growth from January to April but the pace of growth has decelerated markedly since that time and appears to have nearly flattened out by July. Some of the late spring and early summer doldrums were caused by supply chain issues related to getting automotive and semiconductor imports from Japan, and transportation delays due to spring flooding in the Midwest. But the underlying problem is that the economy is growing very slowly. GDP was nearly unchanged in the first quarter (0.4 percent) and grew only at a 1.3 percent annual rate in the second quarter of 2011.

“Commodity inflation eroded consumers’ spendable incomes at a time when they were working through debt problems and state and local governments cut spending to solve budget problems,” he added. “Although the ISM report is gloomy, we expect manufacturing activity to improve. Motor vehicle production schedules are increasing as parts are more available and inventories remain low. In addition, business equipment spending has been, and is expected to remain, relatively strong. Profits are high and firms are willing to invest to upgrade their operations to take advantage of accelerated depreciation.”

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