Euro area factories add jobs in struggle to keep up with orders

epa05200246 A picture made available on 08 March 2016 shows cans of fish being checked by factory manager Carsten Mueller (R) at Ruegen Fisch AG in Sassnitz, Germany, 03 March 2016. According to company information, 70 million cans of mackerel filet in tomato cream, herring in curry-pineapple-sauce, scomber mix and other sorts are produced each year. The company is Germany's market leader with further factories in Luebeck, Rostock and Lithuania. Early February 2016, Asian fish processor Thai Union bought 51 percent of the shares of the company for 42.2 million euro.  EPA/JENS BUETTNER

Bloomberg

Euro-area factories are scrambling to add staff as burgeoning orders stretch capacity.
A Purchasing Managers Index for the region’s manufacturing industry rose to 58.1 in September from 57.4 the previous month, London-based IHS Markit said on Monday. That compares with a preliminary reading of 58.2 and is the highest level in more than six and a half years. A gauge for employment rose at the fastest pace since the survey began in 1997.
The currency bloc’s economy is on track to expand 2.2 percent this year, the strongest pace in a decade as global trade, central bank stimulus and political risks all combine to support growth.
“The euro-zone manufacturing boom kicked into an even higher gear in September,” said Chris Williamson, chief economist at IHS Markit. “Surging order-book growth has encouraged manufacturers to take on extra staff at a rate never previously seen in the 20-year history of the PMI survey. Despite this expansion of capacity, backlogs of incomplete work built up at a faster rate, suggesting that the hiring upturn has plenty more room to run.”
Unemployment was 9.1 percent in August, according to a separate report from Eurostat. Factory activity expanded in all major European countries, IHS Markit said, led by Germany and the Netherlands. Greece enjoyed its strongest growth since June 2008. While inflation in the region failed to accelerate in September, European Central Bank policy makers who will decide in October how to recalibrate asset purchases can take comfort from the fact that the buoyant expansion is starting to push prices higher. “The stronger euro has so far barely dented export growth and domestic demand conditions were generally seen to have improved,” said Williamson.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend