WASHINGTON - Orders to U.S. factories for costly goods rose a bigger-than-expected 2 percent in December, suggesting better days may be ahead for the nation's battered manufacturing sector. <br>
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The rebound in orders for durable-goods -- items expected to last at least three years -- came after new orders fell by a steep 6 percent in November, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday. <br>
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Many analysts had predicted a 1.5 percent increase in December's orders. <br>
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Manufacturers have borne the brunt of the ailing national economy, which slid into a recession in March. To cope, they have sharply cut production, trimmed hours and laid off workers. Last year, factories shed 1.3 million jobs, or about 7 percent of their work force. <br>
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As evidence of just how much damage has been inflicted on the manufacturing sector, the department said that for all of 2001 durable-goods orders fell by a record 13.2 percent, the worst showing since the government began keeping records using the current classification system in 1992. In 2000, orders rose by 6.7 percent. <br>
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Tuesday's report and other recent data suggest the recession in the manufacturing sector may be bottoming out, economists say. <br>
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A report released by the Institute for Supply Management earlier this month showed that a rise in new orders to factories helped push a key gauge of manufacturing activity higher in December, a sign the sector is beginning to emerge from a 17-month slump. <br>
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Before manufacturing can fully recover, however, businesses will have to crank up investment again and foreign companies and consumers must increase their spending on American-made goods, which would boost U.S. exports, economists say. <br>
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To revive the economy, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates 11 times last year, which had the effect of reducing the prime lending rate, a benchmark for many consumer and business loans, to its lowest level since November 1965. <br>
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Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan told Congress last week that he see signs of a recovery, prompting many analysts to predict that Fed policy-makers will leave interest rates unchanged after a two-day meeting that ends Wednesday. <br>
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Tuesday's report showed that orders for transportation equipment rose by 3.5 percent in December, after a huge 20 percent drop the month before. Orders for cars and airplanes posted gains. <br>
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Excluding the volatile transportation category, durable-goods orders increased by a solid 1.4 percent in December, the third consecutive monthly gain. <br>
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Computers and electronic products saw orders rise by 3.5 percent in December, on top of a 1.1 percent advance. All the strength came from orders for semiconductors, which rose a strong 13.3 percent. <br>
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Orders for machinery went up by 1.7 percent last month, following a 1.8 percent gain. Fabricated metal products rose 1.4 percent, after falling 1.1 percent in November. <br>
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But orders for electrical equipment and household appliances dipped by 0.2 percent in December, after rising by a solid 2 percent the month before. <br>
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Primary metals, the category that includes steel, slipped by 0.5 percent, on top of a 0.4 percent decline. <br>
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Shipments, a barometer of current demand, rose by a solid 0.5 percent in December, after falling by 0.4 percent. <br>
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