Euro Zone Manufacturing Faces Turmoil Amid Middle East Conflict
Euro zone manufacturing growth reached a near four-year high in March, driven by supply chain disruptions from the Middle East conflict. Despite headline growth, underlying demand remained weak, and input costs soared. The Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index indicated growth, but business confidence slipped amid inflation and logistics challenges.
- Country:
- United Kingdom
Euro zone manufacturing showed notable growth in March, hitting levels not seen in nearly four years. However, a recent survey revealed that this apparent progress was largely driven by supply chain disruptions resulting from the ongoing Middle East conflict. These disruptions have led to delivery delays and inflated growth figures despite tepid underlying demand.
The S&P Global euro zone Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) saw an uptick to 51.6 in March, rising from 50.8 in February. This was above the preliminary estimate and signaled growth with any reading over 50.0 indicating expansion. However, input costs surged to unprecedented levels since October 2022 due to rising energy prices.
The conflict-induced logistics complications have pushed factories to raise final product prices significantly, the fastest in over three years, impacting the euro zone's competitive edge. Despite stabilization in new export orders, business confidence fell to a five-month low, with some countries like Spain contracting while others showed record growth.
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