What's new

US manufacture shrink into recession amid trade war with china

phancong

BANNED
Oct 20, 2015
846
0
1,348
Country
United States
Location
United States
YahooNEWS
House set to vote to condemn President Trump's recent Twitter comments

US manufacturing sinks into recession amid trade wars

Heather SCOTT
AFPJuly 16, 2019, 11:35 AM PDT
28ac861dd086a2c1ec5f0301b4d596ebbadbf741.jpg

Economists still expect the Federal Reserve to cut the benchmark lending rate this month amid signs of weakness in manufacturing
Economists still expect the Federal Reserve to cut the benchmark lending rate this month amid signs of weakness in manufacturing (AFP Photo/Andrew CABALLERO-REYNOLDS)
Washington (AFP) - US manufacturing sunk into recession in June after two consecutive quarters of declines amid President Donald Trump's bitter trade wars and a slowdown in China and other trading partners.

The decline comes as the United States enters its 11th year of economic recovery and occurs despite Trump's constant pledges to restore America to manufacturing greatness -- even though services now drive three quarters of the US economy.

Despite jumping in June, manufacturing fell by a 2.2 percent annual rate in the April-June period, and total industrial production lost 1.2 percent, in both cases the second consecutive quarterly decline, the Federal Reserve said Tuesday.


SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT
Ad
1563224844775-3146.jpg.cf.webp

"Manufacturing has borne the brunt of tariff uncertainties and slowing in global economic activity," RDQ Economics said in an analysis.

The retreat comes even as American consumers are sustaining their appetite for spending, pushing retail sales higher for the fourth straight month, as shoppers in June took home more new autos and furniture and dined out more frequently.

Manufacturing jumped 0.4 percent compared to May, while total industrial production showed no change, according to the Federal Reserve report, confounding economists' expectations for a 0.2 percent gain.

However, economists said that uptick was unlikely to be sustained in coming months.

"Manufacturing is enduring a mild recession, but it probably won't deepen much further," Ian Shepherdson of Pantheon Macroeconomics said in an analysis.

- Lower interest rates -

The downturn in manufacturing is "not news; it's a consequence of China's cyclical slowdown and the trade war," he said.

He predicts Washington and Beijing will find a deal to end their bitter trade dispute -- following the resumption of talks by telephone this month -- meaning that by the end of the year "China’s economy will be turning up."

Meanwhile, retail sales rose 0.4 percent in June, double the expected gain, meaning sales are up a solid 3.4 percent compared to June of last year, according to government data.

The contrary data cast a bit of a cloud over growth figures for the second quarter and could confuse the Federal Reserve's interest rate strategy.

However, Fed Chair Jerome Powell doubled down on the case for a cut in the key borrowing rate this month, given weak manufacturing and business investment and concerns about lagging inflation.

Powell said inflation expectations "are near the bottom of their historical ranges," and despite the Fed's confidence that the US economy will continue to grow, many officials feel "the combination of these factors strengthens the case for a somewhat more accommodative stance of policy."

Shepherdson, however, said a rate cut would be premature given his expectation for a recovery in the second half of the year.

"To cut rates now because of the recent weakness of manufacturing is a mistake, in our view, because monetary policy works with long lags, and easing in H2 will be supporting growth next year," he said.

But Oxford Economics expects "manufacturing activity and overall industrial production to remain under pressure from these headwinds," and predicts the Fed to produce "three 'insurance' rate cuts over the next nine months."

Along with higher manufacturing, mining output rose 0.2 percent, while petroleum and coal jumped 2.5 percent. Mining surged 8.9 percent in the latest quarter, its 11th consecutive quarterly increase.

But with milder temperatures in June easing demand for air conditioning, utilities output fell 3.6 percent in June
 
LOL. Whele does the OP mention anytink about China corrapsing? :D
It may not be here but many other article. Ask your good US friend F22raptor, who posted many about China collapsing despite still having a higher 6.3 percent growth better than US. And China economy size is just 1/3 smaller than US, not 3 times smaller.
 
These American are very good at selective delusion. Don't bust their fantasy. Let them live in ignorant.

The previous 3% growth was based on the effect inflating bigger bubble with tax cut, and now the effect of the viagra is gone, the economic growth has become impotent again.

The next thing they are going to do is to restart the QE4 by printing more green papers out of thin air, and it is the time for the Americans to say hello to the coming hyperinflation.
 
Does this mean that the US economy has been expanding continuously for the last 11 years?!


Why yes, it does. :D

After 11 years of economic expansion, US GDP (PPP) fell to No.2 spot in 2018 and 2019 World ranking verified by IMF, World Bank and CIA.

Guess which country is No.1 .

In a country where 80% of GDP is service based, any reduction in physical goods acquired by import and local production will be fatal in mid to long turn. This is because services are rendered for physical goods in trade.

Freight, insurance, banking, warehousing, distribution, sales etc depends on transaction of physical goods. Reducing imports couple with weak local manufacturing will cause down turn in service sector in USA. And 80% of US GDP depends on service sector.

Trump is right trying to bring manufacturing back to USA, unfortunately US capitalists entrepreneurs are only interested in making money for themselves, it is individual first nation comes second for them. They are moving the oversea factories to Mexico and Vietnam, much to disappointment of Trump in his bid to make America Great Again.

Screenshot (287).png


Screenshot (288).png
 
Last edited:

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Total: 1, Members: 0, Guests: 1)


Back
Top Bottom