- Posted August 05, 2014
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Manufacturing expands again in July
By Paul Wiseman
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - US manufacturing expanded for the 14th straight month in July in a good sign for the overall economy.
The Institute for Supply Management, a trade group of purchasing managers, reported last Friday that its manufacturing index rose to 57.1, highest level since April 2011 and up from 55.3 in June.
Anything above 50 signals that manufacturing is growing.
Paul Dales, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics, wrote in a research note that the index was consistent with overall economic growth of 3.5 percent.
The U.S. economy already has been showing renewed strength. Economic growth clocked in an impressive 4 percent annual pace from April through June after getting off to a bad start the first three months of the year. And the Labor Department said last Friday that employers added more than 200,000 jobs in July for the sixth straight month. Factories created 28,000 jobs in July, most since November. Over the past year, manufacturers have added 178,000 jobs, best 12-month stretch of hiring since November 2012.
Dales wrote that the ISM report "suggests that manufacturing payrolls may soon start to rise by close to 50,000 a month rather than July's 28,000."
American factories have been busy. The Commerce Department reported the week prior that orders for durable goods rose 0.7 percent in June, and a category seen as a proxy for business investment plans rose a healthy 1.4 percent.
The ISM reported that new orders, production and employment at factories rose. Exports declined last month.
Seventeen of 18 industries covered by the survey showed growth last month. Only wood products contracted.
Published: Tue, Aug 05, 2014
headlines Oakland County
- Trivia Night with Wolverine Bar
- Coulter highlights affordability initiatives and bipartisan results in State of the County speech
- Judge Yates to leave Court of Appeals this year
- Deadline to fill out Economics of Law survey extended
- American Bar Association cites members’ needs in Law Firm Intimidation hearing
headlines National
- Online shoppers find deals on the Temu app, but states say the trade-off is personal data
- Florida Bar reverses itself, says it is not investigating Lindsey Halligan
- Attorney indicted for trying to kill her husband of more than 25 years
- American Bar Association cites members’ needs in law firm intimidation hearing
- OpenAI sued for practicing law without a license
- Lindsey Halligan being investigated by the Florida Bar




