Rust Belt Manufacturing Rebounds, and Leads the U.S. Economy and the Manufacturing Renaissance
The ChicagoFederal Reserve reported today
that its Midwest Manufacturing Index was unchanged in March but remained at a three and-a-half year high of 92.2, and 8.6% above last March. Here are some
highlights of manufacturing activity in the 7th Federal Reserve district
covering Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, and Wisconsin:
1. Manufacturing output in the Midwest region rose 8.6% from a year earlier in March, more than one-and-half times greater than the 5.0% increase in national manufacturing output over the same period (see chart).
2. Regional machinery output in March gained 10.4% from its year-earlier level, and double the 5.2% increase in machinery output at the national level.
3. Regional steel output improved 11.2% from its March 2011 level, compared to an 8.1% increase in national steel output over that period.
4. The Midwest’s automotive output increased 14.2% in March from its year-ago level, compared to an 11.4% gain in national automotive output.
MP: The manufacturing sector of the economy grew at 4.6% last year, or more than twice the 1.7% growth in real GDP, as American manufacturing remains at the forefront of the economic recovery as has been frequently reported here and elsewhere. And given the growth in Midwest manufacturing activity over the last year (+8.6%) compared to output at the national level (5.0%) as reported today by the Chicago Fed, I think we can say that it's "Midwest manufacturing" that remains the forefront of the economic recovery. The Rust Belt and its traditional industries like machinery, steel and motor vehicles are coming back.
As was reported in Saturday's WSJ, "The U.S. economy is in the early stages of a long-term manufacturing renaissance," according a recent Bank of America report titled "An Industrial Revolution." From the article:
"U.S. manufacturers are more competitive with global rivals than at any time in recent memory. Energy costs and other expenses are falling, manufacturers say. And U.S. workers' pay has become more competitive with foreign wages."
1. Manufacturing output in the Midwest region rose 8.6% from a year earlier in March, more than one-and-half times greater than the 5.0% increase in national manufacturing output over the same period (see chart).
2. Regional machinery output in March gained 10.4% from its year-earlier level, and double the 5.2% increase in machinery output at the national level.
3. Regional steel output improved 11.2% from its March 2011 level, compared to an 8.1% increase in national steel output over that period.
4. The Midwest’s automotive output increased 14.2% in March from its year-ago level, compared to an 11.4% gain in national automotive output.
MP: The manufacturing sector of the economy grew at 4.6% last year, or more than twice the 1.7% growth in real GDP, as American manufacturing remains at the forefront of the economic recovery as has been frequently reported here and elsewhere. And given the growth in Midwest manufacturing activity over the last year (+8.6%) compared to output at the national level (5.0%) as reported today by the Chicago Fed, I think we can say that it's "Midwest manufacturing" that remains the forefront of the economic recovery. The Rust Belt and its traditional industries like machinery, steel and motor vehicles are coming back.
As was reported in Saturday's WSJ, "The U.S. economy is in the early stages of a long-term manufacturing renaissance," according a recent Bank of America report titled "An Industrial Revolution." From the article:
"U.S. manufacturers are more competitive with global rivals than at any time in recent memory. Energy costs and other expenses are falling, manufacturers say. And U.S. workers' pay has become more competitive with foreign wages."
6 Comments:
Recently, I am hearing American companies complain about being treated shabbily by Chinese state and federal governments.
Add on rising Chinese labor costs, and we are witnessing the evaporation of the world's last great cheap manufacturing platform. India is too hidebound and corrupt. Other countries are too small, and not as organized.
Boom, boom, boom America, if we can seize the moment. If the Fed would just drive the dollar down a few more notches.....
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Manufacturing grew at 4.6%, how about manufacturing jobs?
well ...not so quick... Iphones, most computers, TVs, other electronics still not manufactured here....
we know that some things, we don't make much anymore.
that's leads me to wonder what are the things we do make...
what manufactured stuff do we actually export?
the problem with a lot of these reports is that they are thin slices of a larger context.. almost sound-bitish in what they are informing.
ISM Prices Paid is still at 61, not exactly a low number.
And the basic index is off over 9% from a year ago data... just sayin'
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