{"id":122282,"date":"2021-10-03T12:48:23","date_gmt":"2021-10-03T12:48:23","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/?p=122282"},"modified":"2021-10-03T12:48:23","modified_gmt":"2021-10-03T12:48:23","slug":"pmi-for-indias-manufacturing-sector-rises-in-september","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/industries\/pmi-for-indias-manufacturing-sector-rises-in-september\/","title":{"rendered":"PMI for India\u2019s manufacturing sector rises in September"},"content":{"rendered":"
India\u2019s manufacturing sector recorded an uptick in September as per the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), which rose from 52.3 in August to 53.7 in September, even as price pressures intensified due to raw material shortages and high fuel and transport costs.<\/p>\n
This marks the third straight month of expansion in manufacturing activity, with consumer goods showing the highest growth in output, international sales picking up momentum and business confidence improving with hopes of increasing production in the year ahead despite the pandemic. A reading of 50 on the PMI indicates no change in activity. <\/p>\n
However, there was little change in employment for the second month in a row. In July, the PMI surveys had reported a rise in hiring for the first time after a 15-month streak of job losses for the sector, but it was followed by a pause on hiring in August. <\/p>\n
"Companies continued to purchase extra inputs in September, but jobs were little changed over the month,\u201d said Pollyanna De Lima, economics associate director at IHS Markit which compiles the PMI. \u201cIn some instances, survey participants indicated that government guidelines surrounding shift work prevented hiring,\u201d she noted. <\/p>\n
Firms reporting growth cited favourable market conditions and improved sales volumes, thanks to the easing of COVID-19 restrictions and strengthening demand conditions. <\/p>\n
\u201cIndian manufacturers lifted production to a greater extent in September as they geared up for improvements in demand and the replenishment of stocks. There was a substantial pick-up in intakes of new work, with some contribution from international markets,\u201d Ms De Lima said. <\/p>\n
Rising fuel, raw material and transportation prices pushed the overall rate of input cost inflation to a five-month high. Output prices, however, increased at a slower and only moderate rate, indicating that producers were not passing on the additional cost burden fully to customers <\/p>\n
To accommodate for rising sales and progress with production schedules, companies purchased additional raw materials and semi-finished items. The pace of input buying growth was marked in the context of historical data and quickened from August, IHS Markit said in a statement. <\/p>\n