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6/21/13, "GLOBAL ECONOMY-Chinese, US factories struggle, Europe still in slump," Reuters, Cable and Johnson,
" Euro zone business activity contracted again in June
* Chinese factory output weakest in nine months
* U.S. manufacturing slips, pace of hiring slows
"Factory output in China weakened to a
nine-month low
in June while U.S. manufacturing closed out its worst
quarter in the last four, suggesting the road to recovery for the world
economy remained an uneven one.
A day earlier, the Federal Reserve
said the U.S. economy was expanding strongly enough for the central
bank to begin slowing the pace of its stimulative bond purchases later
this year.
Other major economies are lagging America's, however,
which could limit the strength of global growth. China, the world's
second largest economy, grew at its slowest pace in 13 years in 2012 and
incoming data this year has been weaker than expected. That's evident in the country's large manufacturing sector, which,
according to the flash HSBC Purchasing Managers Index, contracted again
in June as demand fell.
"A slowdown in the Chinese economy doesn't
help the outlook for the U.S. particularly, but American growth isn't
entirely dependent on what happens in China," said Philip Shaw, chief
economist at Investec.
U.S. growth picked up in the first three
months of the year, boosted partly by a recovering housing market,
though the pace is expected to drop off in the second quarter.
Manufacturing
in particular has struggled. According to information service Markit's
latest survey, the second quarter was the worst for the sector in the
last four as the pace of hiring and overseas demand weakened.
"Companies
are certainly circumspect about any sustained revival of demand," said
Markit chief economist Chris Williamson, who added that employment was also being suppressed by "the need to boost
productivity, especially with intensifying competition from overseas and
in export markets."
Recession in the 17-country euro zone has
contributed to that lack of demand. While Markit's Flash Eurozone
Composite PMI edged up this month, it remained below the dividing line
between growth and contraction....
Separate data on Thursday showed factory activity in the U.S. mid-Atlantic region at its highest level in more than two years.
The euro zone PMI was at its highest since March 2012. But the index
has been below the 50 mark dividing growth from contraction for 21 of
the last 22 months.
A PMI covering services firms, which make up
the bulk of the bloc's economy, jumped to 48.6 last month from 47.2, its
highest since January but its 17th straight month below 50.
Markit said the latest PMI data suggested the economy would contract 0.2 percent in the current quarter.
The
European Central Bank has come under growing heat to take more action
to help bring a quicker end to the bloc's longest recession, but
economists polled by Reuters last month did not predict any easing of
policy in coming months."...
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