LogisticsIndustry ContextThursday, June 25, 20263 min read

Manufacturing grows at fastest rate since 2021 amid big job cuts

Supply Chain Dive18h agogeneral
Manufacturing grows at fastest rate since 2021 amid big job cuts
Executive Summary

S&P Global flagged “an ongoing bifurcation of the economy, with sluggish service sector growth contrasting with an increasingly solid manufacturing expansion.”

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An article from Dive Brief Manufacturing grows at fastest rate since 2021 amid big job cuts S&P Global flagged “an ongoing bifurcation of the economy, with sluggish service sector growth contrasting with an increasingly solid manufacturing expansion.”

Published June 25, 2026 Jim Tyson Senior Reporter Share Copy link Email / Print License Add us on Google Courtesy of IACMI–The Composites Institute First published on Listen to the article 3 min This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback. Dive Brief: U. S.

manufacturing expanded this month at the fastest rate since July 2021 as war-related concerns about supplies pushed up new orders to a four-year high, S&P Global said Tuesday. At the same time, output and new orders growth in the service sector was sluggish, reflecting resistance to rising prices and low consumer confidence, S&P Global said.

Excluding the pandemic period, job cuts at factories hit the highest level since 2009. “Most worrying was the further fall in employment” in manufacturing prompted by concerns over the rising prices of raw materials and the staying-power of demand, Chris Williamson, chief business economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said in a statement.

“We remain concerned as factory growth continues to be temporarily buoyed by inventory building amid supply fears.” Dive Insight: Overall U. S. business activity rose in June for the third consecutive month, S&P Global said, noting that its composite index increased to 52. 2 — a five-month high — from 51. 5 in May.

Still, the rate of growth remained below the level before the start of the war with Iran on Feb. 28, according to S&P Global. Also, the June survey “pointed to an ongoing bifurcation of the economy, with sluggish service sector growth contrasting with an increasingly solid manufacturing expansion,” S&P Global said.

“Service providers often cited elevated prices, higher interest rates and low confidence among both business and consumer customers,” S&P Global said. The service sector fuels more than 75% of U. S. economic growth. Amid signs of weakness, several economists have trimmed their estimates for growth this year.

The National Association for Business Economics on Monday said a panel of association economists trimmed its median forecast for gross domestic product growth this year to 2% from 2. 4% in March. The economists echoed findings of the S&P Global survey, noting the harm to the outlook from persistent war, according to NABE.

“Geopolitical conflict remains the top downside concern,” KPMG Senior Economist Yelena Maleyev said in a statement. Yet “for the first time in over a year, an end to the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East outranked productivity gains as the leading upside risk,” said Maleyev, chair of the NABE survey.

Jagged progress toward resolution of the Iran war has lifted spirits among manufacturers and providers of services, according to Williamson. “Brighter news out of the Middle East has helped restore some confidence among US businesses in June,” he said.

Still, “the survey signals that current output levels are consistent with the economy struggling to grow much faster than a 1% annualized rate in the second quarter,” he said. Add us on Google Share Copy link Email / Print License Filed Under: Procurement, Manufacturing

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This briefing is based on reporting from Supply Chain Dive. Use the original post for full primary-source context.

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