Mon, May 28, 2012, 3:37 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Manufacturers providing outsize boost to economy

Manufacturers are providing an outsize boost to economy's recovery

WASHINGTON (AP) -- American factories are humming — and driving the economy forward.

Manufacturers have been hiring more consistently than other employers, for jobs with better-than-average pay. They just had their best month of growth in five years. And more factory output has raised demand in some other industries, such as shipping, leading to further hiring.

"The manufacturing sector is on a tear," said Paul Ashworth, an economist at Capital Economics.

It's an optimistic theme that serves President Barack Obama's political needs. On Wednesday, Obama traveled to Milwaukee to salute a company that brought jobs back to the United States. The president has promoted the nation's manufacturing base as an engine of growth and as evidence of a recovering economy.

No one thinks manufacturing will return to its 1950s peak. After all, the factory sector now makes up barely one-tenth of the economy.

But since the recession ended more than 2½ years ago, factories have been contributing disproportionately to the recovery in hiring and the overall economy.

A big reason, economists say, is that individuals and businesses are making major purchases they delayed during the Great Recession and its aftermath. Consumers are buying more cars and appliances. Companies are investing in industrial machinery and computers.

The release of that pent-up demand gives manufacturing a kick that isn't visible in some other corners of the economy. Manufacturing was hit particularly hard by the recession. Consumers postponed purchases of cars, refrigerators and flat-screen TVs, even as they continued to visit doctors, get haircuts and pay utility bills.

"Manufacturing has punched above its weight, but that's because it was punched in the stomach in the recession," Michael Montgomery, a senior economist at IHS Global Insight, said.

Factory output got off to a robust start this year, and it ended last year with the fastest growth in five years, the Federal Reserve said Wednesday.

Those were the best back-to-back monthly performances since summer 2009, when the recession ended, according to Jonathan Basile, an economist at Credit Suisse.

Manufacturing is delivering an outsize benefit to the economy in key ways:

— JOBS:

About 9 percent of the nation's jobs are in manufacturing. But last year, factories added 13 percent of new jobs. And in January, about one-fifth of the 243,000 net jobs the economy created were in manufacturing.

Factory growth has also helped to increase hiring in other industries such as shipping, warehousing, department store sales and auto sales. Railroad operators such as Union Pacific have stepped up hiring as their shipments of cars, machinery and other equipment have climbed.

The hiring has boosted struggling Midwestern states such as Ohio and Michigan, which will likely be battleground states in the presidential election.

George Mokrzan, an economist at Columbus, Ohio-based Huntington Bank, said those two states have added a greater percentage of jobs since the recession ended than the nation as a whole.

— WAGES:

Average hourly pay for factory workers making durable goods, such as autos, was $20.15 in January, according to the Labor Department. That's above the average of $19.37 for the broad service sector, meaning that each new manufacturing job, on average, fuels more consumer spending than does the equivalent new service-sector jobs.

The service sector, which employs roughly 90 percent of the private-sector workforce, includes everything from restaurants and hotels and retailers to financial service firms and construction companies.

— CONFIDENCE:

As Clint Eastwood's Super Bowl halftime ad for Chrysler ("Our second half is about to begin.") showed, Americans are thought to respond more emotionally to a rebound in manufacturing than in other sectors. The perception that American manufacturing is healthy again could boost confidence in the economy, some analysts say.

Jeffrey Bergstrand, a finance professor at Notre Dame University, calls it "factory nostalgia" but says that it is "economically legitimate."

"It reminds us of the period of the greatest growth we had in the U.S. economy," Bergstrand said. "It's also ... an association with the boom in the middle class, (when) they were all sharing in that economic boom."

Still, economists caution that expanding factories can do only so much to reduce unemployment. That's because factories have increasingly relied on automation and other advances to produce more goods with fewer people.

Many economists expect manufacturing to keep growing faster than the broader economy for the rest of the year. It's not clear how long that will continue.

"This is nothing more than the manufacturing sector recovering faster because it got hammered worse," Montgomery said.

 

18 comments

  • big D  •  3 months ago
    What are they manufacturing? Fabricated News Articles!!!! LOL
  • Frank  •  Newark, New Jersey  •  3 months ago
    Bull-----
  • redcheeze  •  3 months ago
    there are a lot of things that have killed the american economy but two stick out in my mind, we have 60 million more people in this country than we had 20 years ago and most of the manufacturing is done overseas.

    That's great for a large corporation but not so much for smaller firms trying to compete with goods that are manufactured overseas for pennies and workers left here in the states fighting for what few jobs we do have left in this country.
  • Ralph  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 months ago
    The fact is, we are growing jobs, just not enough. To breakeven with population trends we need at least 200,000 per month. In addition, to support 2 million illegals pouring across our southern border, we need another 300,000 each month. Besides, the President said last year that 28 million Americans did not have health insurance. Of the 28 million, 18 million are illegally in the United States. Send more tax dollars, we need to care for these people.
  • william  •  Ironton, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    the OSAMA OBAMA state run media........the AP writers along with OBAMA should be banned from any media outlet........sorry BAS!ARDS!!
  • istartedi  •  3 months ago
    Manufacturing has also probably picked up due to a weak dollar. That makes our goods more attractive overseas. What we gain in these manufacturing jobs is lost due to high inflation. It also makes us vulnerable if importers of US goods slide into recession. Not sure how much we send to Europe. NPR has an article about recession there and says its 1/5th of our output but doesn't cite a source...
  • redcheeze  •  3 months ago
    when did $42k a year become a good wage? if this was 1982 maybe but 2012,... no so much
    • Scott 3 months ago
      still double what I make
    • JeffC 3 months ago
      Manufacturing pays about half that where I live.
  • Glenn  •  Raleigh, North Carolina  •  3 months ago
    What planet is AP on? The only manufacturing business booming right now is prison building to house all those non-violent drug use offenders.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
    Selling what? The globes collapsing.
  • Annonomous  •  3 months ago
    " "The manufacturing sector is on a tear," said Paul Ashworth, an economist at Capital Economics..." US STEEL just reported its 3rd year of consecutive losses last month. Three straight years of red ink. That's quite a tear isn't it. In 2007 US STEEL made $18/share profit - nearly $2 billion that year. Maybe they're not a "manufacturer" anymore and Paul Ashworth is really a good economist too.
    • CoRealist 3 months ago
      One company is not equivalent of a sector. It is the same as if your neighbor cheated on his wife doesn't mean that you cheated on your wife. You could but there is little relation between the two.
    • Annonomous 3 months ago
      Nucor steel just closed two facilities due to lack of demand for steel housing products. AK Steel just barely broke even in 2011 after 2 years of losses. Every steel "MANUFACTURER" out there will tell you the economy stinks.
    • Harvey 3 months ago
      Gordon gekko sucks "N".igger coc*k!
  • blame yourself  •  3 months ago
    they must be making jail cell doors and straight jackets
  • R.K.Heetseeker  •  3 months ago
    Thanks for a factual, good article.
    • william 3 months ago
      You are a frigging IDIOT!!
  • Peppino  •  3 months ago
    Cheaper than China!Now the Heroic 'Job Creators' can bring the jobs back home!
  • Libcrapper  •  3 months ago
    Only thing humming is oscumbamites on thier knees
  • Dan  •  3 months ago
    This is out path to wealth as a nation and as individuals. Make it happen.
  • Roger L  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 months ago
    But whiney Liberals have no skills, especially recent college graduates.
  • CoRealist  •  Denver, Colorado  •  3 months ago
    The doom and gloomers are out in full force again. Is there any good economic data that you don't complain about ?
    • JeffC 3 months ago
      If it was real.
      This is much ado about nothing.
      Too little too late.
  • Libcrapper  •  3 months ago
    More oscumba propaganda
 
Recent Quotes
Symbol Price Change % Chg 
Your most recently viewed tickers will automatically show up here if you type a ticker in the "Enter symbol/company" at the bottom of this module.
You need to enable your browser cookies to view your most recent quotes.
 
Sign-in to view quotes in your portfolios.

Trading Center

Yahoo! Finance on Facebook

  YAHOO! FINANCE ON TWITTER