What’s the latest news on tariffs? It remains a mixed bag of uncertainty. We talk to manufacturing industry advocates and analysts—and take the pulse on how it is affecting the aerospace and automotive industries.
Overall, U.S. manufacturing remained healthy in early 2019.
After a softening of demand in Q4 2018, activity picked up in January but then softened slightly at the end of February, says Omar S. Nashashibi, founding partner of The Franklin Partnership LLP and head of government relations for One Voice, the advocacy program of the Precision Metalforming Association and the National Tooling and Machining Association.
As of early March, automotive was flat and aerospace was rising.
“Aerospace seems to continue to do well with increases expected,” says Nashashibi, fresh from several industry conferences. “Most of the people in aerospace and defense with whom I spoke are very busy.”
Yet slower growth in China combined with the trade war is creating headwinds, says Jason Alexander, principal and industrial products senior analyst at RSM US LLP.
In January, China lowered its economic growth target for 2019 to a range between 6.0 and 6.5 percent, compared with last year’s 6.5 percent.
It may seem like a subtle shift, but it is significant. If growth is 6.2 percent or lower, “that would be the slowest rate of economic growth in almost three decades in China,” Alexander notes.
On top of that, a constantly shifting mix of tariffs and unilateral negotiations has created a “lingering uncertainty tax” on the industry, he noted.
Tariff concerns, however, did not slow manufacturers from hiring last year: Companies posted net job gains of 284,000 which were the best since 1997—and up about 77,000 from 2017.
As of early March, there were several major fronts in the trade war, all in a state of flux.
Worried about tariffs? Learn how to future your business from tariff fallout.
Talk to Us!
Leave a reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *