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  1. PMI drops to 42.3 points in November as second lockdown hits
    Photo by MacroPolis

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    restrictions and higher raw material prices drove input price inflation up leading to the fastest rise in costs

    6%
  2. Newsletter 279 -13/11/2020

    Newsletters

    largely to higher raw material costs, especially steel, and greater transportation fees. Despite rising

    6%
  3. Industrial production up by 3.3 percent in December
    Photo by Panayotis Tzamaros/Fosphotos

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    , as vendor performance deteriorated significantly. Raw material shortages, and restrictions on movement due

    6%
  4. Industrial production up by 3.4 percent in January
    Photo by Giannis Papanikos/Fosphotos

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    for a seventh straight month to the highest since October 2000. Raw material prices

    6%
  5. Industrial production up by 4.4% in February

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    delays and raw material shortages lengthened lead times, according to Markit, which noted that delivery

    6%
  6. PMI rises to 54.4 points in April, highest since February 2020
    Photo by Giannis Papanikos/Fosphotos

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    . Manufacturers registered the sharpest increase in cost burdens on record in April due to raw material shortages

    6%
  7. PMI grows in July, but supply chain issues and price pressure come to fore

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    in raw materials led to the build-up of the backlog of work, the fastest since the series began

    6%
  8. Manufacturing growing at steady pace despite supply chain, inflation issues
    Photo via https://flic.kr/p/N3FV1

    EconomyMacroeconomy

    in input prices, with the most notable acceleration coming from higher raw materials and shipping

    6%
  9. Newsletter 319 - 03/12/2021

    Newsletters

    the strong demand, the expansion slowed to four-month low with challenges manifesting in raw material

    6%
  10. Newsletter 320 - 10/12/2021

    Newsletters

    with raw materials and supply chain disruptions. Exports of servicers fully reflect the base effect

    6%