US services sector sees modest growth in March amid surging inflation

By IANS | Published: April 6, 2022 04:39 AM2022-04-06T04:39:03+5:302022-04-06T04:55:15+5:30

Washington, April 6 The US services sector posted a modest growth in March amid surging inflation and continued ...

US services sector sees modest growth in March amid surging inflation | US services sector sees modest growth in March amid surging inflation

US services sector sees modest growth in March amid surging inflation

Washington, April 6 The US services sector posted a modest growth in March amid surging inflation and continued supply bottlenecks, the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) reported.

The Services Purchasing Managers' Index registered 58.3 per cent, 1.8 percentage points above February's reading, according to the latest Services ISM Report on Business. Any reading above 50 per cent indicates the services sector is generally expanding.

"Inflation and supply chain issues have been among the top challenges for the service sector for months, and Russia's war on Ukraine has worsened both," Tim Quinlan and Shannon Seery, Economists at Wells Fargo Securities, said in an analysis.

Despite these headwinds, they argued, "orders and activity both ramped up a bit and businesses are finally netting some new hires".

The ISM report showed that the Supplier Deliveries Index registered 63.4 per cent, 2.8 percentage points lower than the February figure. A reading of above 50 per cent indicates slower deliveries, Xinhua news agency reported.

"We are still seeing raw material subcomponent shortages, transportation delays and price increases," said a business executive from the utilities industry.

The Prices Index registered 83.8 per cent, up 0.7 percentage point from the February figure and its second-highest reading ever, slightly behind December 2021 (83.9 per cent), the ISM report showed.

"Labor and inflation continue to push costs higher across the board for food and food-service supplies," said a business executive from the educational services industry.

A representative from the construction industry, meanwhile, noted that pricing pressures are stronger than ever due to the Russia-Ukraine war, and energy costs are skyrocketing.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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