US manufacturing output stumbled in August
WASHINGTON — U.S. factory production fell last month amid cutbacks in appliances, home electronics and machinery.
The Federal Reserve said Thursday factory production dropped 0.4 per cent in August, following two months of gains. A broader measure of industrial output, which includes mines and utilities, also dropped 0.4 per cent.
Manufacturers have struggled for the past 18 months with sluggish global growth, the strong dollar, and reluctance among U.S. businesses to spend more on large machinery and equipment. That has dragged down factory output 0.4 per cent from a year ago. The slowdown has also cost about 30,000 factory workers their jobs in the past year.
A second report Thursday suggested the weakness may continue in September. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York said that manufacturing in the state shrank for a second straight month as new orders and shipments fell sharply. Its Empire State manufacturing index rose two points but remained at minus 2. Any reading below zero indicates contraction.

