U.S. manufacturers aced the shutdown of their factories and warehouses last spring in response to Covid-19. They’re botching the recovery.

After carrying out an orderly retreat from assembly lines as the pandemic arrived in the U.S., many manufacturers pulled out the playbook they followed in past recessions, cutting costs and preserving cash. That left them unprepared for the sharp rebound in consumer demand that began just weeks later and never let up.

Without restaurants to visit and trips to take, Americans bought out stocks of cars, appliances, furniture and power tools. Manufacturers have been trying to catch up ever since. Nearly a year since initial coronavirus lockdowns in the U.S., barbells, kitchen mixers, mattresses and webcams are still hard to find. A global shortage of semiconductors has forced many car makers to cut production in recent weeks.

“Everyone was caught flat-footed,” said Jack Springer, chief executive officer of Malibu Boats Inc.

The boating industry was preparing for a downturn but instead sales jumped, he said. Malibu’s orders were up by more than half last June from a year earlier and sales of recreational boats in the U.S. in 2020 were the highest in 13 years, according to the National Marine Manufacturers Association, a trade group.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Republicans look to fill a glaring hole in their Senate recruitment map

Republicans have lined up a deep bench of candidates in most major…

For climate advocates, a well-timed meeting between Biden and Xi

For those invested in the fight against climate change, the timing of…

How Taylor Swift transcends America’s political divides — barely

Pop star Taylor Swift notched the highest net favorability rating of any…

Nikola Tries to Ignite Market for Its Hydrogen Fuel-Cell Trucks

As Nikola founder stands trial on securities-fraud charges, a revamped management team…