For
the first time in six months, U.S. manufacturing has grown substantially from more
new orders
being placed and more employees being put to work.
US Manufacturing - Cautiously Optimistic |
The
increase in factory activity indicates the economy may be beginning to grow
again after dwindling for the first three months of the year. Yet, overall
growth remains slow, due to a multitude of factors. Americans have been
unwilling to spend, even though there is more work and even low gas prices allowing
more flexibility to spend.
The
value of the dollar increasing acutely has made U.S. goods more expensive
overseas, decreasing exports. Economists predict the economy may grow at a 2
percent annual pace in the April-June quarter, after a 0.7 percent decline in
the first three months of the year.
With
the end of a labor dispute at West Coast ports, manufacturers have benefited
from parts and raw materials flowing more freely.
Signs
also point to the stabilizing of overseas economies. China's manufacturing
sector expanded last month, although not very rapidly, reported by an official
manufacturing index. Manufacturing in the European Union has also picked up.
U.S.
export orders did not see any rise or fall last month, after increasing in
April. This is still preferred to the three months of the first quarter when
export orders were receding.
Fourteen
industries reported growth last month, including clothing, furniture, paper
products and food and beverages. Two industries reported contraction: textile
mills and computers and electronics.
The
dramatic drop in the price of oil, from $110 a barrel last June to less than
$50 in January, has caused drilling companies to cut back heavily on digging
and building new wells. These cut backs have drastically reduced the demand for
steel pipe and other equipment.
Business
spending on buildings and equipment dropped 2.8 percent in the first quarter,
the largest drop in more than five years. Despite all of this, there are signs
that businesses, specifically those outside oil and gas, are spending more on expensive
items such as machinery.