US Factories Cut 26,000 Jobs in November as Manufacturing Woes Persist
America’s manufacturing sector shed 26,000 jobs last month in the latest sign of persistent woes gripping the nation’s industries.
The U.S. manufacturing industry shed 26,000 jobs in November, according to the latest ADP National Employment Report, which underscored continued challenges for America’s factories despite some emerging signs of stabilization in other recent manufacturing activity reports.
“While overall growth for the month was healthy, industry performance was mixed,” Nela Richardson, ADP chief economist, said in a statement. “Manufacturing was the weakest we’ve seen since spring. Financial services and leisure and hospitality were also soft.”
“Sixty-six percent of manufacturing gross domestic product (GDP) contracted in November, up from 63 percent in October,” Timothy Fiore, chair of the ISM’s manufacturing business committee, said in a statement.
While there were some positive signs in the ISM data—such as new orders expanding for the first time in eight months and input costs rising at a slower pace—the overall picture was one of continued weakness, including a reduction in factory employment.
Job data for November is due to be released on Dec. 6, with economists polled by Reuters predicting that the U.S. economy added 200,000 positions last month, after adding a paltry 12,000 in October, the lowest number since December 2020.
“Over the past several months, we’ve noted that the manufacturing sector seemed more or less stuck in a holding pattern, with sluggish global economic growth, still-high financing costs, and an uncertain outlook for U.S. tax, regulatory, and trade policy acting as stiff headwinds,” Richard Moody, chief economist at Regions Financial Corporation, wrote in a recent note.
“While the election is behind us, the policy outlook remains uncertain. As such, the manufacturing sector will remain on very tentative footing into 2025 with a meaningful rebound further off in the distance than we and many others had anticipated would be the case.”
Unlike November’s job cuts in manufacturing, employment in the services sector grew last month, according to data from both ADP and the ISM. The ISM’s employment index landed in expansion territory in November for the fourth time in five months, while ADP figures showed 140,000 service sector jobs added, led by education/health services (50,000) and trade/transportation/utilities (28,000).