Posts Tagged ‘GDP’

No votes for education?

October 24th, 2012
By: Vicki Bell

The current survey on thefabricator.com’s homepage asks which issue in the upcoming presidential election is most important to site visitors. It’s no surprise that the economy, including taxes, debt and deficit, and jobs, is the No. 1 concern with 55 percent of the votes.

Of the 13 remaining choices listed, 12 have earned one or more percent. The only choice that hasn’t received a single vote as of this writing is education.

Setting aside the fact that education likely may be among the choices of those who selected the option “several are of equal importance to me” (24 percent), it honestly concerns me that not one person chose it as most important. Have we simply become comfortable with the status of education in the U.S.? (More about this later.) Do we think that unless the others issues are addressed—for example, job creation—education doesn’t matter all that much? (more...)

Is it time for the small-business initiative?

July 29th, 2010
By: Eric Lundin

A small-business initiative working its way through Congress has been making headlines lately. It has the potential to provide $30 billion in new capital for community banks, which would use it as a foundation for lending to small and medium-sized businesses. Whether lawmakers will pass the bill is the main question.

I have a different question: What do you think? Do you want or need a loan right now?

At the risk of oversimplifying things, let’s say the typical markers of a recession are high unemployment, low consumer confidence, low consumer spending, and low business output. A perfect economic policy would put the jobless back to work, thereby rebuilding consumer confidence and kick-starting consumer spending, which would rev up the engine of business.

The government doesn’t have a perfect economic policy at its disposal. In fact, other than creating new positions and hiring people to fill them, the government doesn’t have any way to put the jobless back to work directly. It can do so indirectly by ordering some domestically made goods (for example, some government cars or an aircraft carrier or something like that) or by funding infrastructure (new or repairs).

How else can the government encourage consumers to spend? It has quite a few additional ways. For example, the stimulus package (the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009) provided federal tax cuts; expanded unemployment benefits; and increased spending on education, health care, and infrastructure. It’s hard to say if the stimulus is working, or how well, but we do have some signs of hope. The PMI has been higher than 50 for nearly a year; capacity utilization in many industries has been on the rise for almost as long; and consumer spending on durable goods has been on the rise too. On the other hand, the unemployment rate isn’t falling very fast at all, and consumer sentiment is improving slowly at best.

So let’s set the data aside and go straight to the source. Anecdotal evidence says that many fab shops are busy, but how busy? If funds were available for borrowing, would you head to the bank for a loan to buy some equipment, or is demand for your products not strong enough yet? In other words, how good or bad is the timing of the small-business initiative? Call me at 815-227-8262 or send me an e-mail (ericl@thefabricator.com). I’d love to hear your thoughts.

More good signs for manufacturing

December 3rd, 2009
By: Eric Lundin

The mood in manufacturing seemed to shift sometime during the summer. Granted, it couldn't have gotten much worse from the spring, but at least the dark mood didn't last any longer than it did.

The PMI, an index compiled by the Institute for Supply Management, broke through 50 percent in August. It was a huge relief. It had been below 50, indicating decreasing manufacturing activity, for nearly 18 months. Capacity utilization among steelmakers also was on the way up in August (from a ridiculously low 44 percent in May), as was capacity utilization among fabricators, which had hit bottom at 62.1 percent in June.

This isn't to say that all the indicators are going in the same direction. But on balance, it looks like the economy is strengthening and manufacturing is getting healthier by the day.
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Mind the gap

October 7th, 2009
By: Eric Lundin

I felt a stabbing pain when I saw the headline (A Threat to Global Recovery: Too Many Factories), and it got worse when I saw the name of the publication (Time). Call me skeptical, but I think mainstream journalists understand manufacturing as well as politicians do.

I went ahead and read the article anyway, and it turned out to be solid.
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