Manufacturing, favoured by Trump, comes to life in US

epa05764011 Thai workers work on BMW 330e Luxury plug-in hybrid cars during a press visit to BMW's plug-in hybrid vehicle assembly line at the BMW Group Manufacturing plant in Rayong province, Thailand, 01 February 2017. The German carmaker BMW group starts its production line of BMW 330e Luxury and X5 xDrive40e M Sport plug-in hybrid cars at the BMW automaker production plant in Thailand, aimed to bring down the hybrid vehicle's costs and make it more affordable in the country. The Thai military junta government planned to promote investment in the automotive industry to make Thailand a regional production and export hub of hybrid vehicles.  EPA/RUNGROJ YONGRIT

Bloomberg

America’s manufacturers are showing signs of fabricating some genuine momentum.
Toss in improvement among US builders and miners and the US is undergoing the blue-collar revival that President Donald Trump has been pushing. Gary Cohn, the top economic adviser at the White House, told CNBC that the country is seeing jobs being created in the sectors that need them.
Manufacturing expanded in August at the fastest pace in more than six years, the Institute for Supply Management said. The increase from the previous month was driven by the group’s gauge of factory employment, which reached the highest level since 2011.
The ISM data were consistent with numbers from the Labor Department’s jobs report; a similar manufacturing gauge in Europe is also showing one of the fastest expansions since 2011. The US government said the 36,000 advance in factory payrolls last month matched the biggest increase since 2012.
What’s more, the breadth of job gains at factories—from appliance makers to auto makers to fabricated-metal producers—is the strongest in almost two decades, according to the Labor Department. The manufacturing employment diffusion index surged to 73.1, the highest since November 1997.
Other goods producers are ramping up hiring. Construction employment rose by 28,000 in August, the biggest advance in six months, according to the government. The increase was paced by an 11,500 jump in residential specialty-trade contracting payrolls. That sector has recouped more than half of the 1 million jobs lost as a result of the housing-related economic recession.
Mining—including oil, gas, metals and coal—posted a 6,500 increase in payrolls last month, the most since April, Labor Department figures showed. While the category represents a small share of total employment in the US, those industries and their 670,400 workers are breathing a bit easier.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend