Industry pays more for labor, materials; consumers are next

A worker welds a structural steel beam during production at the SME Steel Contractors facility in West Jordan, Utah, on Feb. 1, 2021. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by George Frey
A worker welds a structural steel beam during production at the SME Steel Contractors facility in West Jordan, Utah, on Feb. 1, 2021. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by George Frey

Inflation continues to brew in America's industrial heartland as growing materials shortages cascade into record-long delivery times and leave manufacturers struggling to keep pace with an energized economy.

As producers attempt to navigate supply-chain pitfalls for the commodities necessary to produce their wares, wage growth is beginning to percolate. A recent Labor Department report showed the largest quarterly increase in worker pay at companies since 2003.

This combination of higher labor and materials costs will probably lead to a bigger pickup in consumer inflation at a time when monetary and fiscal policies are conducive to faster economic growth. Colgate-Palmolive Co., food and beverage maker Mondelez International Inc. and Kimberly-Clark Corp. are among a growing number of companies raising prices.

While Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell says the central bank views the shortages in materials and supply-chain challenges as temporary, companies are saying the constraints will linger, possibly into 2022.

The Labor Department releases April inflation data Wednesday.

Longer lead times are one of the clearest indications of the supply-chain challenges that producers face. Wait times of factories for production materials grew to 79 days in April, the longest in records dating back to 1987, according to the latest Institute for Supply Management data. The average delivery time of supplies for maintenance, repair and operations was also the longest in the institute's data.

Such delays have inflated order backlogs to record levels and kept a lid on a breakout in production growth.

The institute's monthly reports also provide a clear indication of a growing number of commodities in short supply. In November, purchasing managers listed just eight materials that companies were struggling to get their hands on. Five months later, it's expanded to 24.

While some things like personal protective equipment and gloves have been in short supply for months, others like aluminum, wood pallets and rubber-based products are additions to the list.

Meantime, companies largest cost -- labor -- is accelerating as the lifting of coronavirus restrictions leads to a broader pickup in economic activity.

The government's latest employment cost index, a quarterly measure of compensation, showed wages in the private sector climbed in the first quarter by the most in 18 years.

Most economists prefer the employment cost index because, unlike average hourly earnings in the monthly jobs reports, the worker-pay data isn't distorted by the compositional changes in employment that have been particularly severe amid the pandemic. The overall employment cost index, including government workers, registered the biggest increase since 2007.

Despite an elevated unemployment rate, many firms have cited troubles finding qualified workers. As a result, some are offering incentives like signing bonuses and increasing wages to attract applicants. Some 28% of small businesses reported raising compensation in a March survey by the National Federation of Independent Business.

Increasing vaccinations have also allowed more Americans to head back to their favorite restaurants or begin traveling again. For service providers, that means hiring more workers. That will only increase amid projections for a wave of pent-up demand.

But it's been challenging to attract workers, which may reflect lingering child care obligations and enhanced unemployment benefits. The more generous jobless insurance and two latest rounds of pandemic-relief checks have given some workers the opportunity to be more selective about which job they take.

These factors may help explain a big increase in first-quarter wages for service providers. The 1.3% gain was the largest quarterly gain in two decades of record keeping.

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