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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Factory activity fueling modest economic recovery

In this Jan. 25, 2010 photo, Glenn Hanson stitches together the four panels of a football at the Wilson Sporting Goods football factory in Ada, Ohio. The Institute for Supply Management said Feb. 1, 2010, the manufacturing index expanded in January for the sixth straight month, to the highest point since 2004.  (Associated Press)
Associated Press
NEW YORK — Hopes that America’s factories will help drive the economic recovery gained support Monday from news that manufacturing activity grew in January to its strongest point since 2004. Other reports Monday offered a reminder that the recovery remains fragile. Construction spending sank in December to its lowest level in more than six years. And gains in personal income and spending were too modest in December to suggest that consumers can fuel a strong rebound. “Right now we’re getting a recovery,” said Michael Gregory of BMO Capital Markets. “But you have to be skeptical. This kind of performance cannot be sustained unless we get those other areas that are still weak in the economy to contribute to growth — housing, construction, real consumer spending.” Manufacturing activity has become a pocket of strength, though some of it flows from temporary factors such as customers needing to add to depleted stockpiles of goods. The Institute for Supply Management said its manufacturing index read 58.4 in January, compared with 54.9 in December. It was the sixth straight month of expansion. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters had expected a level of 55.5. A reading above 50 indicates growth. New orders, a sign of future growth, jumped in January to its highest level since 2004. So did current production. Order backlogs grew, along with prices companies paid. Thirteen of 18 industries said they were expanding, led by the apparel, textile mills and machinery sectors. China’s manufacturing also expanded in January, and the outlook was positive despite government efforts to cool inflation by tightening control over bank lending, two surveys showed Monday. U.S. manufacturers have been pumping up production to feed their customers’ depleted stockpiles. The ISM said manufacturers’ inventories contracted at a slower rate in January. Still, their customers’ stockpiles fell to an all-time low. As their customers try to restock their shelves, manufacturers need to ramp up production to match their demands. That could mean hiring more workers, which would help invigorate the economic rebound. ISM’s employment measure grew last month. “Production growth is finally beginning to tax existing work forces to the point where companies need to expand employment, and, critically, have enough confidence to do so,” said Pierre Ellis of Decision Economics. AK Steel Holding Corp. said in January that it had hired some new employees as production increased to about 85 percent of capacity, compared with 45 percent six months earlier. Still, companies aren’t hiring at a rate anywhere near enough to replace the more than 7 million jobs lost during the recession. The manufacturing sector has lost 2.1 million jobs. “We’re just not going to recapture those,” said Wells Fargo chief economist John Silvia. Companies that laid off workers in the past are being cautious about rehiring, even as their business improves. Raj Batra, president of a unit of Siemens USA that helps update industrial corporations’ equipment and software, said more of his customers are interested in modernizing their factories. Still, he doesn’t plan to rehire laid-off employees. “We still have ample capacity,” Batra said. If necessary to meet demand, he said he plans to use contract workers but doesn’t expect to add to full-time payrolls anytime soon. Unemployment held at 10 percent in December and is expected to remain elevated for years. The Obama administration included a measure in its 2011 budget for jobs that would give businesses tax breaks to promote hiring. President Barack Obama has also proposed tax incentives for businesses to invest in new plants and equipment. The administration projects in its budget that the unemployment rate will fall only slightly by the end of the year, averaging 9.8 percent in the fourth quarter. The budget also forecasts that the economy will grow 2.7 percent this year. That rate is “about half the size of a typical recovery” in the post-World War II period, Alan Krueger, the Treasury Department’s chief economist, said in a statement. It reflects “the lingering aftereffects of the financial crisis,” he wrote. Still, the economy is benefiting as a weak dollar boosts exports to fast-growing countries in Asia and Latin America. Monday’s report said exports grew more quickly in January, to 58.5 from 54.5 in December. Investors drew hope from the positive signals in the economic reports. The Dow Jones industrial average finished up about 118 points, more than 1 percent, and broader stock averages also rose. The Commerce Department report on construction said home building fell by the steepest amount in seven months, evidence that housing remains a weak spot in the economy. Spending on new homes, office buildings and highways fell 1.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $902.5 billion, the lowest since August 2003. That was much worse than analysts’ expectations of a 0.5 percent drop. Housing activity was weak in December in part because a new homebuyer tax credit was originally slated to expire in November, and many buyers rushed to complete purchases before the deadline. Congress has extended the credit through April and expanded it. A separate Commerce report said personal incomes rose more than expected in December, and consumer spending increased for the third straight month. But income growth was spurred by a one-time Social Security payment. Wages and salaries rose only 0.1 percent, after increasing 0.4 percent in November. Consumer spending increased 0.2 percent, less than analysts’ forecasts of 0.3 percent. Many households are reluctant to ramp up spending amid tight credit and high unemployment. Widespread joblessness is also limiting wage and salary growth. Companies are finding it easier to retain workers without raising compensation. “Consumers continue to save far more than in recent years and allocate their spending very carefully,” Julia Coronado, an economist at BNP Paribas, wrote in a note to clients. Economists worry that once inventory levels are stabilized, manufacturing growth will slow as unemployment remains high and spending tepid. “A short term burst of contribution from inventories and fiscal stimulus will fade,” said Paul Dales of Capital Economics. “Consumption is not in any position to take up the slack.”