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Business

Manufacturing output in US hit by shutdown

Published: 25 Oct 2013 - 04:12 am | Last Updated: 29 Jan 2022 - 04:54 am

NEW YORK/LONDON: Fact-ories in China boosted production this month, but US manufacturing output fell for the first time in four years while the euro zone economy lost momentum, surveys yesterday showed.

The data suggested the world economy is still facing speed bumps as China tries to rebound from a slowdown and as growth in advanced economies remains fragile. One such hurdle was a partial US government shutdown that lasted for the first 16 days of October. This likely disrupted factory output in the world’s largest economy and will probably end up slowing overall US growth in the fourth quarter. According to financial data firm Markit, US factory output contracted in October for the first time since late 2009 and the overall pace of growth was the slowest in a year. 

Markit chief economist Chris Williamson said the survey “suggests that the disruptions and uncertainty caused by the crisis hit companies hard,” even if determining the precise impact of the shutdown remains difficult.

The shutdown, the first in 17 years, forced hundreds of thousands of federal employees to take unpaid leave. Economists expect that put a brake on US growth in the fourth quarter, which was expected to mark the transition to a stronger pace of expansion. 

A Reuters poll of more than 70 economists last week forecast gross domestic product growth of 2.3 percent between October and December. The economy grew 2.5 percent in the third quarter. 

There was some positive news from the world’s second largest economy. The Markit/HSBC Purchasing Managers Index for China rose to 50.9 this month from 50.2 in September, the fastest expansion in seven months.

In the first nine months of the year China’s $8.5 trillion economy grew 7.7 percent from a year earlier, putting it on track to achieve Beijing’s 2013 target of 7.5 percent. But that would still be the weakest growth in 14 years. 

The slowdown in Asian economies may last for the rest of this year as weak global growth and reforms in many countries hinder activity, Reuters polls showed yesterday. Growth in China and India, the two regional powerhouses, will likely languish at multi-year lows. 

Growth momentum also slowed in Europe this month. Markit’s  “flash” Composite Purchasing Managers Index for the euro zone, based on surveys of thousands of companies across the region, showed the economy lost a bit of steam this month. While the index was still above the 50 mark that separates growth from contraction, it retreated to 51.5 after hitting a two-year high of 52.2 in September.

Germany factory activity grew, the PMI survey showed, although the country’s service industry saw a surprising fall in the pace of growth. But things were bleaker across the border in France, where manufacturing activity declined at a faster pace and services expansion all but ground to a halt. reuters