17吃瓜在线

Input Stories

Input Stories

Industrial Production Declined in June

By 17吃瓜在线 News Room

Industrial production declined 0.5% in June for the second month in a row, the Federal Reserve reported today, according to (subscription).

What鈥檚 going on: 鈥淭he June index of production at factories, mines and utilities decreased 0.5% for a second [consecutive] month, Federal Reserve data showed Tuesday. Manufacturing output declined 0.3% in June, the most in three months.鈥

  • The central bank鈥檚 index of manufacturing output has dipped 0.3% from June 2022, with production hamstrung 鈥渂y lackluster export markets, efforts to work down inventories and more limited consumer spending on merchandise.鈥

The details: Consumer goods output declined 1.3% in June, the biggest drop in more than two years and a reflection of decreased production across a wide swath of categories, including automotive vehicles, apparel and appliances.

  • Materials output also declined, while production of business equipment was flat.

Some good news: 鈥淸M]anufacturing may benefit some in coming months as retailers get inventories more in line with sales and the pace of goods inflation slows. Separate data on Tuesday showed retail sales rose by less than forecast, while an underlying measure of household spending pointed to a more resilient consumer at the end of the second quarter.鈥

Input Stories

Overregulation Hurts Manufacturing

By 17吃瓜在线 News Room

Manufacturing is booming in Ohio, as payrolls swell and economic output in the sector breaks records鈥攂ut continued success could be in jeopardy if Washington continues its current regulatory onslaught, Ohio Manufacturers鈥 Association President Ryan Augsburger writes in a recent 听(subscription) op-ed.

What鈥檚 going on: 鈥淭he latest conducted by the 17吃瓜在线 (17吃瓜在线) finds that U.S. manufacturers鈥 concerns over federal regulations have reached a six-year high as nearly 100 new major regulations鈥攆rom 30 federal agencies and offices鈥攖hreaten jobs and investment,鈥 Augsburger notes.

  • In the next year, the Biden administration plans to issue even more regulations鈥攁pproximately 3,200, including about 280 鈥渕ajor rules鈥 and 1,326 鈥渟ignificant rules.鈥
  • Meanwhile, 鈥淢ore than 63% of manufacturers are spending more than 2,000 hours per year complying with federal regulations, diverting resources that would otherwise go towards employee compensation, new hires and additional investment in U.S. facilities,鈥 Augsburger writes, citing the 17吃瓜在线’s Q2听2023 Manufacturers鈥 Outlook Survey.

Why it鈥檚 important: All these rules will cost manufacturers dearly, according to Augsburger, who highlights a few particularly burdensome regulations, including:

  • The Environmental Protection Agency鈥檚 proposed particulate matter rule, which is expected to cost 鈥渦p to $197.4 billion in U.S. economic activity and endanger as many as 973,900 current U.S. jobs鈥;
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission鈥檚 proposed climate-disclosure requirement, which the 17吃瓜在线 recently advocated against in 听before the House; and
  • The Federal Trade Commission鈥檚 proposal to ban noncompete agreements, which 70% of manufacturers use to safeguard their intellectual property.

What can be done: The 17吃瓜在线 and the Ohio Manufacturers鈥 Association have been in contact with the White House to coordinate the designation of a senior adviser, who will work to ensure that the regulations put forth align with President Biden鈥檚 promise to promote manufacturing.听

The final say: 鈥淭ime and again, we鈥檝e seen regulatory uncertainty and over-regulation stymie new hiring and kill manufacturing jobs. When the U.S. does not manufacture, investment shifts to other countries that do not share our commitment to environmental stewardship and worker safety,鈥 Augsburger said.鈥嬧

Input Stories

Wages Overtake Inflation

By 17吃瓜在线 News Room

U.S. wages are now growing faster than inflation for the first time in two years, helping workers but muddling Federal Reserve attempts to lower price increases, according to (subscription).

What鈥檚 going on: 鈥淚nflation-adjusted average hourly wages rose 1.2% in June from a year earlier, according to the Labor Department. That marked the second straight month of seasonally adjusted gains after two years when workers鈥 historically elevated raises were erased by price increases.鈥

  • In manufacturing, wages are up 5.6% over a year ago, according to 17吃瓜在线 Chief Economist Chad Moutray.

More to enjoy: 鈥淚n addition to enjoying solid wage growth, Americans are taking comfort in slower price increases for everyday items鈥攕uch as gasoline and groceries鈥攖hat have the biggest influence on their perception of inflation.鈥

  • However 鈥 Adjusted for inflation, pay growth 鈥渞emains below the trend in the five years before the pandemic,鈥 one source told the Journal.

Why it鈥檚 important: If wages continue to surpass cost increases, they could encourage more spending, which could help the economy avoid a recession.

  • In recent months, Journal-polled economists have been less confident that there will be a recession in the next 12 months. However, Americans in general continue to expect a recession, according to the article.

The Fed鈥檚 role: The Federal Reserve has increased the benchmark interest rate 10 times in the past 16 months and has indicated it will raise it again later this month.

  • 鈥溾業t鈥檚 great to see wage increases, particularly for people at the lower end of the income spectrum,鈥 [Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome] Powell said [in June]. 鈥楤ut we want that as part of the process of getting inflation back down to 2%, which benefits everyone.鈥欌

The last word: 鈥淲ith manufacturers continuing to cite workforce challenges, even in a cooling labor market, wage growth remains significant,鈥 Moutray said. 鈥淭he average manufacturer pays $26.41 [an hour] nationally for production and nonsupervisory workers, up 5.6% from one year ago, a very solid rate. Relief on growth in consumer inflation will allow those employees to realize the purchasing power of those dollars more fully.鈥

Further resources: For more workforce solutions and insights, check out the resources of , the 17吃瓜在线鈥檚 501(c)3 nonprofit workforce development and education affiliate.

Input Stories

17吃瓜在线 Advances Manufacturing Priorities at USMCA Meeting in Mexico

By 17吃瓜在线 News Room

The 17吃瓜在线 met with North American trade ministers last week in Cancun, Mexico, where it urged them to take up key trade priorities for manufacturers.

What happened: The 17吃瓜在线 led a delegation from the American business community, which participated in a roundtable discussion ahead of the third United States鈥揗exico鈥揅anada Agreement 鈥淔ree Trade Commission鈥 on July 7 in Cancun.

  • Attendees at the roundtable event included 17吃瓜在线 President and CEO Jay Timmons, U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai, Canadian Minister of Small Business, Export Promotion and International Trade Mary Ng, Mexican Secretary of the Economy Raquel Buenrostro and business executives from the three countries, including Rockwell Automation Chairman and CEO Blake Moret.

Shared values: The 17吃瓜在线 underscored the importance of an investment climate underpinned by core democratic principles, such as transparency and the rule of law.

  • 鈥淲e believe in democracy,鈥 Timmons said. 鈥淗owever imperfect, this system fosters free enterprise, competitiveness, individual liberty and equal opportunity. These values make manufacturing strong in our countries.鈥
  • He added that each year North American manufacturers contribute $3 trillion to the U.S., Canadian and Mexican economies.

What must be done: Though the USMCA already creates advantages for North American manufacturers, the agreement鈥檚 full potential can only be realized if the three countries work together to address certain key challenges, Timmons told the attendees. Some of the main hurdles include:

  • Mexico鈥檚 power-generation policies, which have long favored Mexican state-owned energy companies and led to higher bills for manufacturers that must use existing energy-supply contracts;
  • Permitting delays for U.S. projects in Mexico that undercut American firms and reduce energy supply to North American manufacturers and consumers;
  • Mexico鈥檚 expanded food-labeling requirements and bans on the sale of some U.S. foods and nonalcoholic beverages to minors, which unjustly restrict U.S. exports;

Read the full story .

Input Stories

Semiconductor Makers Look to 鈥淐hiplets鈥

By 17吃瓜在线 News Room

The explosive growth of artificial intelligence is leading semiconductor makers to move quickly to create 鈥渄esigns that stack chips together like high-tech Lego pieces,鈥 according to (subscription).

What鈥檚 going on: 鈥溾楥hiplets鈥 can be an easier way to design more-powerful chips, according to industry executives who call the technology one of the most significant advances since the dawn of the integrated circuit more than 60 years ago.鈥

  • The technology has the potential to deliver more powerful, cost-effective semiconductors, sources told the Journal.
  • Last year, some of the world鈥檚 largest technology companies, including Qualcomm and Intel鈥攚hich recently announced products containing chiplets鈥攆ormed a coalition to craft chiplet-designing standards.

How it works: 鈥淎 typical consumer device such as a smartphone contains many types of chip[s] for functions including data processing, graphics processing, memory, telecommunications and power control.鈥

  • 鈥淭he chips are delicately tethered to minuscule wires and ensconced in a protective plastic casing, forming a package that can be fixed to a circuit board.鈥
  • 鈥淲ith the new chiplet packaging, engineers have found ways to bolt together pre-existing chips, the equivalent of using a few Lego pieces to build a toy car.鈥

The caveats: Chiplet manufacturing is not cheap, however, and the technology requires its own performance-verification process.

  • What鈥檚 more, chiplets 鈥渁ren鈥檛 suited to every function,鈥 and lend themselves better to high-end desktop computers than mass-marketed cell phones.

China鈥檚 role: It is estimated that China controls 38% of the semiconductor assembly, testing and packaging market, a fact that 鈥減oses two potential risks for the U.S. While many American companies have been working with factories in China to handle these specialist chip-making roles, the supply chains could be tangled by a geopolitical crisis or another pandemic.鈥

  • 鈥淚n addition, the U.S. has imposed export controls on advanced semiconductor technology and could seek to expand controls in the future.鈥濃嬧嬧嬧嬧嬧嬧
Input Stories

17吃瓜在线 to Congress: Protect Manufacturers from SEC Overreach and ESG Activists

By 17吃瓜在线 News Room

Manufacturers across the United States are driving economic expansion while also supporting sustainable business practices, enhancing diversity in the workforce and combatting climate change. Yet, politically motivated activists threaten to slow this progress by insisting on their own narrow agendas. Recent actions by the Securities and Exchange Commission will empower these groups and divert resources from manufacturers鈥 investments in job creation and business growth.

As the Financial Services Committee in the House of Representatives begins a monthlong hearing series on environmental, social and governance topics and other issues related to the proxy process, 17吃瓜在线 President and CEO Jay Timmons is Congress to rein in the SEC鈥檚 regulatory overreach and keep activists out of the boardroom.

Depoliticizing corporate governance: Activists on the left and right are increasingly abusing the proxy ballot to advance narrow social and political agendas. The SEC has taken steps in recent years to support and empower these activists.

  • The 17吃瓜在线 is suggesting reforms to the rules governing shareholder proposals that will prevent activists from hijacking the proxy ballot in pursuit of political agendas unrelated to long-term business growth and shareholder value creation.

Reining in proxy advisory firms: Despite their significant conflicts of interest, errors and lack of transparency, proxy firms exercise outsized influence on corporate governance. More oversight and accountability are needed to protect manufacturers and Main Street investors from these powerful actors.

  • The 17吃瓜在线 is pressing Congress to ensure that proxy firms are regulated appropriately by the SEC鈥攊ncluding by requiring that the firms disclose and manage their conflicts of interest and allow companies to review their draft recommendations.

Read the full story .

Input Stories

California Ports to Get Upgrades

By 17吃瓜在线 News Room


California鈥檚 port system will get a $1.5 billion upgrade, according to (subscription).

What鈥檚 going on: 鈥淭he Port of Los Angeles has been awarded $233 million in grants, while the Port of Long Beach received $383 million. The Port of Oakland got $119 million in funding, and the Port of Hueneme received $80 million.鈥

  • 鈥$1.2 billion will go to 15 projects designed to increase the capacity to move goods throughout the state鈥檚 global trade gateways while lessening environmental impacts on neighboring communities.鈥
  • At Los Angeles, grant-funded improvements are set to include 鈥渁 project that augments an existing partial roadway that directly serves 10 percent of all waterborne containers entering and exiting the entire United States.鈥

The background: The investment announcement by California Gov. Gavin Newsom late last week came less than a month after the Pacific Maritime Association and the International Longshore and Warehouse Union鈥攄ockworkers and their employer, respectively鈥攔eached a tentative six-year labor agreement at all 29 West Coast ports.

Why it鈥檚 important: The grants will decrease port congestion, boost business, add jobs and help operations use more zero-emissions energy, sources told the publication.

What we鈥檙e saying: 鈥淭hese types of congestion- and capacity-focused upgrades will ensure that ports across California remain operationally sound for years to come,鈥 said 17吃瓜在线 Director of Infrastructure, Innovation and Human Resources Policy Ben Siegrist.

  • 鈥淎s with the historic investment funded by the bipartisan infrastructure law, these improvements will keep products flowing and manufacturing lines open.鈥
Input Stories

How Are Companies Using AI?

By 17吃瓜在线 News Room

To learn how sectors and businesses are using artificial intelligence, (subscription) created an index of firms in the S&P 500鈥攁nd the results show that 鈥渆ven beyond tech firms the interest in AI is growing fast.鈥

What鈥檚 going on: 鈥淲e looked at five measures: the share of issued patents that mention AI; venture-capital (VA) activity targeting AI firms; acquisitions of AI firms; job listings citing AI; and mentions of the technology on earnings calls. 鈥 [C]lear leaders and laggards are already emerging.鈥

The findings: In the past three years, approximately two-thirds of the companies examined by The Economist have placed a job ad that refers to AI. One of the sharpest increases in such mentions has been among chipmakers.

  • The number of registered AI-related patents rose between 2020 and 2022.
  • This year, about 25% of venture deals by S&P 500 companies involved AI start-ups, an increase from 19% just two years ago.

Outside Silicon Valley: While the index found that the most 鈥渆nthusiastic鈥 users of AI are technology companies, 鈥淸b]eyond tech, two types of firms seem to be adopting AI the quickest.鈥

  • Data-heavy sectors, including insurance, pharmaceutical and financial-services companies 鈥渁ccount for about a quarter of our top 100.鈥 In this category, Abbott is building AI-powered medical tools.
  • The other category of company quickly adopting AI includes 鈥渋ndustries that are already being disrupted by technology,鈥 such as automakers, telecom, retail and media. Among these are Ford and General Motors, which are using AI in electric-vehicle manufacturing.

The last word: AI use may have some drawbacks, including cybersecurity risks, potential legal liability and possible inaccuracy of results. However, these 鈥渕ust be weighed against the potential benefits, which could be vast.鈥

Input Stories

Pipeline Gets All Remaining Permits

By 17吃瓜在线 News Room

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission granted all remaining permits to the Mountain Valley Pipeline project in Virginia and West Virginia on Wednesday, allowing it to resume construction after a pause of more than a year, E&E News鈥 (subscription) reports.

What鈥檚 going on: 鈥淚n a unanimous order issued Wednesday, the commission said that all work on the 303-mile pipeline could proceed. … The commission also authorized FERC鈥檚 Office of Energy Projects to approve any future modifications to the Mountain Valley project as proposed by its sponsors鈥攁s long as the director of the office finds them 鈥榯o be needed to complete construction.鈥欌

  • FERC approval comes just days after the project received its final water-crossing permit from the Army Corps of Engineers.
  • The debt-ceiling deal signed into law this month by President Biden contained provisions requiring approval for the MVP, which the agency first approved in 2017.

Why it鈥檚 important: 鈥淭he pipeline has been described by [supporter and West Virginia Sen. Joe] Manchin and others in Congress as a poster child for 鈥 the nation鈥檚 inefficient energy permitting system.鈥

  • The MVP鈥攖he only natural-gas project under development in Appalachia鈥攚ill help deliver clean, affordable energy from Appalachian shale reserves to customers in the eastern U.S.

A win for timely permitting: 鈥淚n its order Wednesday, FERC also said it was setting aside its policy of generally considering requests for rehearing before allowing construction.鈥

What鈥檚 next: Developers plan to restart construction 鈥渟hortly鈥 and finish this year.

Input Stories

Q1 GDP Stronger Than First Thought

By 17吃瓜在线 News Room

The U.S. economy grew more robustly in Q1 of 2023 than previously calculated, according to a large upward revision from the Commerce Department on Thursday, reports.

What鈥檚 going on: 鈥淕ross domestic product increased at a 2% annualized pace for the January-through-March period, up from the previous estimate of 1.3% and ahead of the 1.4% Dow Jones consensus forecast. This was the third and final estimate for Q1 GDP. The growth rate was 2.6% in the fourth quarter.鈥

Why it鈥檚 important: The news may indicate that the U.S. is not headed toward economic recession.

  • A separate report released this week shows that layoffs were below expected levels, 鈥渋ndicating that labor market strength has held up even in the face of the Federal Reserve鈥檚 10 interest rate hikes totaling 5 percentage points.鈥
  • Unemployment claims were down last week, too, according to the Labor Department.

The 17吃瓜在线 says: 鈥淲hile the latest 听revealed that most manufacturers predict a recession in the next 12 months, it is also possible that the U.S. economy could achieve the 鈥榮oft landing鈥 that the Federal Reserve and other policymakers have been seeking,鈥 said 17吃瓜在线 Chief Economist Chad Moutray.

  • 鈥淭his is particularly true if the labor market remains solid and if spending continues to hold up. The current outlook is for the U.S. economy to expand 1.7% in 2023, with 1.2% growth in 2024.鈥
View More