Stefanie Valentic, Editorial Director

September 24, 2021

4 Min Read
plastics manufacturing
Getty Images

Despite a widespread movement to lower the production and use of plastics, demand for the material shows no signs of slowing down.

The Plastic Industry Association's 2021 Size and Impact Report, which is released on an annual basis, provides a reference in terms of data on employment, capital expenditures, shipments and other specialized figures.

"The plastics manufacturing industry has grown faster than any other manufacturing industry," said Dr. Pirc Pineda, economist, Plastics Industry Association.

One of the key questions answered in the report is how the pandemic affected the size of the plastics industry. Despite seeing a marked increase in single-use plastics, COVID-19 caused a nine-tenths of a percent decline in plastics manufacturing shipments in real terms, Pineda indicated. In nominal terms, there was about 2.4 percent decrease in plastics manufacturing shipments last year because of the coronavirus pandemic, accounting for the suppliers to the industry. 

"If we look at the shipments of the whole manufacturing sector of the economy, for instance, it provides clues on the health of economy and rising shipments indicate an upbeat manufacturing sector," Pineda said.

Total shipments for the plastics industry in 2020 was "at least" $541.6 billion, taking into account the $146.9 billion generated by supplying industries. Excluding supplying industries, plastics shipments totaled $394.7 billion. 

"If you look at the value of shipments adjusted for inflation, then the plastics industry has been growing faster than all manufacturing industries," Pineda explained.

The plastics industry is the eighth largest industry in the United States, with 15,688 establishments excluding those who produce captive plastic products or supply goods and services to the plastics industry.

The report showed that over the last 23 years, plastics industry employment, real shipments and real value added fared better than manufacturing as a whole. Pineda attributed this to the fact that the plastics industry is relatively new compared to other materials and methods of manufacture.

Pineda analyzed data for the industry between 1997 and 2020, showing productivity measured in real shipments per employee were up 1.2 percent while productivity in manufacturing as a whole increased 1.1 percent. When adjusted for inflation, shipments grew at an annual rate of 0.7 percent between 2010 and 2020. Despite the recession brought on by the pandemic, real value grew at a rate of 1.4 percent. In 2020, total plastics manufacturing value added was more than $144 billion. 

"If we adjust value added for inflation and index it from 1997, we will see the plastics manufacturing industry's value added has been growing above all of manufacturing industries," Pineda said. "This indicates that plastics manufacturing has a higher degree of innovation compared to other industries. I'm not saying that we're the most innovative, but if you compare it with the overall manufacturing sector, we have higher innovation than other industries."

Plastics manufacturing employment outpaced all of U.S. manufacturing, growing an average of 1.2 percent per year between 2010 and 2020, while U.S. manufacturing employment grew at a rate of 0.6 percent during the same period. The industry had a payroll of $52.1 billion in 2020, totaling more than 945,300 jobs. Texas leads the way in plastics industry employment, followed by Ohio, California, Michigan and Illinois. 

The U.S. consumed $263.8 billion worth of plastics in 2020. Consumer products totaled 83 percent of this figure, up from 79 percent in 2019.

As restaurants and events continue to return more than a year after the start of the pandemic, the demand for packaging for off-premises consumption is expected to be stable, Pineda said.

"My sense is it will continue to stay stable for an extended amount of time, not only because we have to eat but it's because there is still an unevenness in terms of how states and localities have actually opened back to the economy," he explained. "So, there will still be this purchasing of food for off premises in addition to the opening of the service sector little by little."

Capital expenditures of the U.S. plastics industry were $13.6 billion in 2020, down from $14.7 billion in 2019. Pineda said this demonstrates the value society finds in plastic products.

"There's only one way to check if your product has a value to society," he explained. "And that is the demand would actually be greater than zero, which means somebody buys it and finds utility on it. And so it has a value to society. And that's really what's going on in the plastics industry."

About the Author(s)

Stefanie Valentic

Editorial Director, Waste360

Stefanie Valentic is the editorial director of Waste360. She can be reached at [email protected].

 

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