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"The supply chain problems have convinced a lot of companies that just-in-time inventory management has a problem because the inventories don't always show up just in time," Wyss said. "I believe some companies will switch to a just-in-case approach where they hold larger stockpiles."
Manufacturing is closely watched because it has the potential to fuel hiring and boost growth.
President Barack Obama on Friday made that point in Pittsburgh Friday, while calling for a "renaissance in American manufacturing" that would replace shuttered steel mills with plants producing robotics, nanotechnology and other high-tech advances. The president proposed a joint effort by industry, universities and the federal government to help reposition the United States as a leader in cutting-edge manufacturing.
"That's how we're going to strengthen existing industries, that's how we're going spark new ones," Obama said at Carnegie Mellon's National Robotics Engineering Center. "That's how we're going to create jobs, grow the middle class and secure our economic leadership."
Growth must be stronger to significantly lower the unemployment rate, which was 9.1 percent last month. The economy would need to grow 5 percent for a whole year to significantly bring down the unemployment rate. Economic growth of just 3 percent a year would hold the unemployment steady and keep up with population growth.
Employers added only 54,000 net new jobs in May, much slower than the average gain of 220,000 per month in the previous three months. The expectations for June are slightly better.
[Associated
Press;
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