Sluggish Growth for 2013, Pickup in 2014

Jan. 3, 2013
Industrial production will increase only 2.0 percent in 2013, but a pickup is likely in 2014, with growth anticipated to be 3.2 percent,

There’s good news and bad news for the U.S. economy in 2013 according to the latest quarterly forecast of the Manufacturers Alliance for Productivity and Innovation U.S. Industrial Outlook (MAPI). MAPI projects that industrial production will increase 2.0 percent in 2013, but that’s a decrease from the 2.3 percent projected in its previous quarterly forecast.

A pickup is likely in 2014, however, with growth anticipated to be 3.2 percent, slightly below the 3.3 percent in the group’s September report. Manufacturing production should outperform GDP growth, which MAPI estimates will be 1.8 percent in 2013 and 2.8 percent in 2014.

After growing at a robust 10 percent annual rate in the first quarter of 2012, manufacturing production decelerated to a nominal 1 percent in the second quarter and fell by 1 percent in the third quarter. MAPI estimates 1.5 percent growth in the fourth quarter.

There are a number of factors in play.

“The outlook is for modest GDP growth throughout 2013 but it will not be until the second half of 2014 that the economy will grow at what could be called a moderate pace,” said Daniel J. Meckstroth, Ph.D., MAPI Chief Economist and author of the analysis. “Consumers continue to deleverage from debt and therefore can only increase spending commensurate with after-tax income adjusted for inflation. Less unemployment insurance income and increases in state and local taxes have eaten away at personal income gains.

“And while credit is more available,” Meckstroth added, “it is not plentiful. As a result, consumer spending can increase only at a sluggish pace.”

The report offers economic forecasts for 24 of the 27 industries it follows. MAPI anticipates that 14 of these will show gains in 2013, 4 will remain flat, and 6 will decline. Housing starts should see a 28 percent increase while aerospace products and parts production is forecast to advance by 16 percent. The outlook improves in 2014, with growth likely in 23 of 24 industries, led by housing starts at 32 percent. Public works construction is the lone industry expected to decline in 2014, by 1 percent.

According to the report, non-high-tech manufacturing production (which accounts for 90 percent of the total) is anticipated to increase 1.8 percent in 2013, down from 2.4 percent in the previous forecast, and increase by 3.7 percent in 2014, a gain from 3.5 percent from the September analysis. High-tech industrial production (computers and electronic products) is projected to expand by 3.0 percent in 2013, a retrenchment from 5.7 percent growth anticipated in MAPI’s September report. A rebound to 8.3 percent growth is forecast for 2014, a decrease from 10.1 percent in the previous outlook.

Fifteen of the 27 industries MAPI monitors had inflation-adjusted new orders or production above the level of one year ago (six fewer than reported last quarter), and 12 declined. Housing starts grew by 35 percent in the three months ending October 2012 compared to the same period one year earlier, while construction machinery improved by 21 percent in the same time frame.The largest drop came in domestic electronic computers, which declined by 32 percent.

Meckstroth reported that 8 industries are in the accelerating growth (recovery) phase of the business cycle; 11 are in the decelerating growth (expansion) phase; 5 are in the accelerating decline (either early recession or mid-recession) phase; and 3 are in the decelerating decline (late recession or very mild recession) phase.

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