
Irish factory activity grows at fastest pace in over three years, survey shows
The AIB Ireland Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) rose to 53.7 from 52.6 in May, marking the highest reading since May 2022 and staying above the 50.0 threshold separating expansion from contraction for the sixth successive month.
Advertisement
The increase was driven by a sharp increase in employment, with the rate of job creation reaching its strongest level since June 2022. Respondents attributed the rise to greater workloads and long-term expansion plans.
Purchasing activity surged, with the rate of growth also hitting a more than three-year high, as firms aimed to rebuild inventories amid rising demand and longer supplier delivery times.
Ireland
Ireland's housing league table: Check if your area...
Read More
Despite this, backlogs of work fell for the fourth month in a row, suggesting a lack of pressure on business capacity and while new export orders continued to decline, they came close to returning to growth after a big dip in May.
Looking ahead, manufacturers expressed optimism about future growth prospects, with 44% of respondents predicting an increase in production volumes over the next year, despite concerns over US tariffs and global economic uncertainty.
The Department of Finance and the Central Bank recently cut their economic growth forecasts for the year on global trade concerns.
As a member of the EU, the State currently faces tariffs of 10 per cent on around a quarter of its goods exports to the US.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
7 hours ago
- Times
Alcohol advertising ban dropped after industry backlash
A planned ban on alcohol advertising has been dropped after a backlash from industry. Public health measures considered for inclusion in the government's ten-year plan for the NHS have been left out after pushback from Treasury and business ministers concerned about the impact on the economy. Tougher health warnings telling drinkers that alcohol causes cancer are being considered, but there is unlikely to be a blanket requirement for them to be carried on bottles. Ministers have considered a model in Ireland, where alcohol packaging will soon be required to carry labelling warning of a 'direct link between alcohol and fatal cancers'. The plan is expected to include suggestions for exploring such a policy. Health officials had originally hoped to include a minimum unit price for alcohol in the plan, importing a Scottish policy that means a pint of beer cannot be sold for less than about £1.50 or a bottle of vodka for less than £20. However, this was vetoed at an early stage, while alcohol advertising restrictions remained in play. This could have been either a total ban or a 9pm watershed designed to bring alcohol into line with rules being introduced this year for unhealthy food. The Times understands that alcohol advertising restrictions have now been dropped from the plan to be published on Thursday after public health measures were watered down. • Restaurants to report diners' calorie counts in obesity drive The development followed a furious response from the industry, which urged ministers not to add to burdens after a rise in national insurance and the minimum wage. Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, told ministers of 'extreme concern' in the industry, criticising advertising restrictions as 'disproportionate, misguided and economically damaging' and warning they could lead to bankruptcies. She pointed to figures showing under-age drinking at record lows as young people turned away from alcohol. 'The beer and pub sector is not just an economic engine — it is a cornerstone of British culture and sport,' McClarkin said. 'These proposals were not included in the Labour Party's 2024 manifesto and risk being widely perceived as anti-growth and anti-business.' Health campaigners condemned the retreat on advertising restrictions. Jem Roberts of the Institute of Alcohol Studies said: 'One of the main goals of the ten-year health plan was to 'shift from treatment to prevention' — yet if reports are accurate, all of the prevention policies for one of the leading causes of death have been stripped out. 'That would be a baffling contradiction at the heart of a plan meant to prioritise prevention.' He said 'alcohol giants making billions from harm will be rubbing their hands in glee', adding: 'Ministers must now stand up to private corporate profits, protect the most vulnerable and, if alcohol is too 'difficult' for the ten-year plan, commit to a standalone alcohol strategy where all evidence is reviewed and all cards put openly on the table.' Campaigners have been warning of a rise in alcohol deaths. More than 10,000 people a year die directly from alcohol in the UK and deaths in England are at record highs. Thousands more cancer deaths are thought to be attributable to alcohol. Treatment costs the NHS at least £3.5 billion a year.


Reuters
9 hours ago
- Reuters
Approval of Egypt's IMF programme review faces possible delay, sources say
CAIRO, July 1 (Reuters) - The IMF may merge its fifth and sixth reviews of Egypt's $8 billion support programme because of slow progress on structural reforms, possibly delaying a new disbursement by half a year, three people with knowledge of discussions said on Tuesday. The International Monetary Fund approved its fourth review of the programme in March, unlocking a disbursement of $1.2 billion. An IMF team arrived in Egypt in May to begin the fifth review but has yet to signal its approval, the sources said. The 46-month facility was first signed in March of 2024 following more than a year of severe foreign currency shortages and inflation that peaked at 38% in September 2023. The IMF has so far paid out about $3.5 billion under the fund, according to Reuters calculations. However, it has been displeased with Egypt's slow progress on structural reforms that are the centrepiece of the facility, including the divestment of state assets, one of the sources said. Egypt failed to reach half of its structural benchmarks in its last two reviews, the first source added. Financial reforms have progressed relatively smoothly. A finance ministry spokesperson had no immediate comment. The central bank did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A delay in the fifth review would result in the programme being stalled until after the summer, with the next board meeting likely in December at the earliest. The IMF has yet to publish a staff report from the fourth review. Egypt asked for a delay to give it time to release details of measures to widen the tax base, the first source said. On Sunday, parliament approved expanding value-added tax, which will mean higher taxes on construction and contracting services, crude oil, cigarettes and alcohol. That could trigger the release of the IMF staff report, the first source said.


BreakingNews.ie
12 hours ago
- BreakingNews.ie
'Completely unnecessary': Renaming of An Bord Pleanála cost €77,000
The contentious renaming of An Bord Pleanála to An Coimisiún Pleanála (ACP) has cost the State planning watchdog just under €77,000. On Tuesday, Sinn Féin housing spokesman Eoin Ó Broin described the spend as 'completely unnecessary as there was no need to change the name of An Bord Pleanála'. Advertisement New figures provided by An Coimisiún Pleanála show that the renaming has cost the State's flagship planning agency €76,921 and the largest component is a €22,045 spend on the installation of external over entrance signage and two corner projection signs with the new name at the agency's Marlborough Street HQ in Dublin 1. The €76,921 outlay also included a spend of €18,450 on architect consultancy which provided design, coordination and project management services for internal ground floor signs and external signage. The spend also included €18,450 on a radio ad campaign; €5,380 on a new sign installation cancellation fee; €6,363 on newspaper notices and €3,637 on the change of name on the corporate seal and rubber stamps. When first mooted in 2023 in wake of scandals at the then An Bord Pleanála, trade union, FORSA expressed its opposition to plans to change the name as it would amount to a 'collective punishment'. Advertisement In correspondence with then Minister for Housing Darragh O'Brien, assistant general secretary at FORSA, Ian McDonnell said that the Forsa branch within An Bord Pleanála had passed a motion 'expressing their opposition to this proposed name change'. Mr McDonnell said that the proposed chance 'reflects negatively on all who work in the organisation' and is akin to 'collective punishment of all (past and present) in the organisation who have worked and continue to work diligently and conscientiously in accordance with public sector values of impartiality and integrity'. Deputy Ó Broin said that as a member of the Oireachtas Housing Committee he tabled an amendment to the then Planning and Development Bill to have the name of An Bord Pleanala retained but this was rejected by Government. Asked about staff's attitude to the name change, a spokesman for An Coimisiún Pleanála today said: 'In terms of staff feeling on the name change, while there was some unhappiness about the changing of the name when it was first suggested in early 2023, now the name change has taken place, the staff and planning commissioners of the Commission have embraced and accepted the name change. Advertisement Ireland Teens 'thrashed' brand new sensory room for childr... Read More He stated that 'good developments are built on solid foundations and An Coimisiún Pleanála is built on the most solid of foundations which is down to the part played by all former staff and Board members who have served with An Bord Pleanála over the last 48 years'. As part of the bid to reduce backlog in appeals, the number of senior planning inspectors at An Coimisiún Pleanála totals 60 at the end of June 2025 compared to 45 at the end of December 2023. The appeals board now has two Directors of Planning while the number of planning inspectors has reduced from 39 at the end of last year to 35 now though five new appointees are due to start in July and August. The most recent quarterly figures show that the number of cases on hand at the end of March this year was 1,369 which was down 878 or 39pc on the 2,247 cases on hand at the end of March 2024.