Coles College of Business
Responses from Previous Semester Student Surveys
PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS
CURRENT STUDENTS
FACULTY AND DEPARTMENTS
ALUMNI
STUDENT LIFE
> Home :: News Archive :: Georgia PMI For April Up Over March.
Prospective Students
Current Students
Faculty And Departments
Alumni
Student Life
News Archive
 

Search Coles
Search Google

 

Georgia PMI For April Up Over March

02 May 2008

Econometric Center: Georgia Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) for April is up over March

 

Director of University Relations

Frances Weyand Harrison

770−423−6203

fharris4@kennesaw.edu

Release Date: 5/2/2008

 

Contact: Aixa M. Pascual‚ 678−797−2549 or apascual@kennesaw.edu

 

Georgia Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) for April is up over March

Increases since December suggest improved economic activity among Georgia manufacturers‚ outperforming the national PMI‚ says KSU economics professor

 

KENNESAW‚ Ga.‚ (May 2‚ 2008) — Manufacturing activity in Georgia was up for the month of April‚ according to the Econometric Center at Kennesaw State University’s Michael J. Coles College of Business.

 

Georgia’s Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) — a reading of economic activity in the state’s manufacturing sector — for April was 57.0‚ up 5.1 points from 51.9 in March. The April numbers reflect higher commodity prices‚ an increase in finished inventory and an improvement in the employment picture.

 

The latest Georgia PMI surpassed 50 for the second time since December 2007‚ with March also showing an increase. However‚ the national trend remains well below this level. The national PMI for April‚ released May 1 by the Institute for Supply Management‚ was 48.6‚ unchanged from March.

 

“If this trend continues‚ it would suggest Georgia’s manufacturing sector is out−performing the national manufacturing sector‚” said Don Sabbarese‚ professor of economics and director of the Econometric Center at the Coles College of Business.

 

The Georgia PMI provides a snapshot of manufacturing activity in the state‚ just as the monthly PMI released by the Institute for Supply Management provides a picture of national manufacturing activity. A PMI reading above 50 indicates that manufacturing activity is expanding. A reading below 50 indicates the manufacturing industry is contracting.

 

The PMI‚ compiled from a monthly survey of manufacturers‚ is the earliest indicator of market conditions in the sector. Since manufacturing is sensitive to changes in the economy‚ it can also reveal changing macroeconomic trends‚ even if manufacturing accounts for only 13 percent of gross domestic product (GDP)‚ said Sabbarese.

 

The PMI’s value is in its timeliness and sensitivity to variables such as interest rates‚ global markets and other economic changes. The Georgia PMI provides valuable data that the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta analyzes‚ along with many other data sources‚ to get a picture of economic activity in Georgia.

 

The PMI reading is a composite of six variables —new orders‚ production‚ employment‚ supply deliveries‚ finished inventory and commodity prices.

 

The April PMI showed an improvement of 11.3 points‚ to 51.7‚ in the employment picture‚ which had been deteriorating for months. But it reflected a significant increase in commodity prices‚ with 80 percent of participants reporting higher commodity prices. There was a significant increase‚ 9.2 points‚ in the number of manufacturers that reported higher commodity prices.

 

“The commodity price level of 90 points is the highest reading dating back to 2000‚” Sabbarese said. “Eighty percent of participants reported higher prices. This level of price increases is putting added pressure on producers to pass these higher costs on to their customers.”

 

The April PMI also showed a significant increase in the number of companies reporting finished inventory‚ from 55.8 in March to 66.7 in April.

 

For a full report of the April PMI or to schedule an interview with Professor Don Sabbarese‚ please contact Aixa M. Pascual at 678−797−2549 or apascual@kennesaw.edu.

 

 

###

 

 

A member of the 35−unit University System of Georgia‚ Kennesaw State University is a comprehensive‚ residential institution with a growing student population of more than 20‚000 from 132 countries. The third−largest university in Georgia‚ Kennesaw State offers more than 60 graduate and undergraduate degrees‚ including doctorates in education and business.

 

Burruss Building
Burruss Building
Student Center
Student Center
Convocation Center
Convocation Center
Contact Coles | Site Map | Copyright