US
cuts and manufacturing slowdown fuel growth fears
A
contraction in European and UK manufacturing and an easing in China
is fuelling fears for the world economy just as America embarks on
government spending cuts.
1
March, 2013
The
pace of manufacturing expansion softened in China, while it
contracted in Europe and in Britain, according to new surveys.
The
blitz of data drove the FTSE 100 down 0.6pc to 6,324.86, triggered
selling across European bourses and sent the pound below the $1.50
mark for the first time since 2010.
While
traders sold in Europe, President Barack Obama and Republicans met in
Washington in a bid to delay or avert $85bn in government spending
cuts - known in the US as the sequester - that are due to start
today.
In
the absence of growth across Europe and in Britain, investors fear
that spending cuts in America could hobble a recovery in the world's
largest economy.
That
concern was sharpened after separate figures showed incomes in the US
tumbled by 3.6pc in January. "The weakness in income is very
troubling," said Chris Low, an economist at FTN Financial. The
"sequester is a big deal."
As
traders tracked the talks in Washington, there was little
encouragement to be taken from most of the manufacturing surveys.
In
Britain, activity unexpectedly contracted in February, with an index
from the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply sinking to 47.9
from 50.5 in January.
Europe's
manufacturing sector contracted for the nineteenth month in a row as
the continent's debt crisis weighed on demand. Although still
expanding in China, a separate survey showed the pace of
manufacturing in Asia's largest economy was at a five-month low.
America's
manufacturing sector offered the one bright spot, with an index from
the Institute of Supply Manufacturing climbing to a
better-than-expected 54.2 last month from 53.1 in January.
Despite
the better performance from the US manufacturing, the International
Monetary Fund warned this week that the spending cuts will knock
about half a percentage point off growth in the world's largest
economy.
"The
problem though is that we just don’t know how it (the US economy)
will react once the cuts really start to come through," said
James Knightley, an economist at ING.
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