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Supply chain disruption costs decrease by 50%, but challenges persist – survey.

Financial​ losses ‌due to supply chain disruptions dropped over 50% on average in 2022, ⁣compared⁤ with a year earlier, but shortages and delivery delays ⁣remain challenges,⁤ according to a survey of companies being released on Thursday.

Disruptions led to ⁤an average $82 million in annual losses per company last year ​in key industries like aerospace, compared with $182 million in 2021,‌ and $184 million in 2020, supply-chain risk ​management company Interos told Reuters ahead of‌ publication.

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In‌ the latest ​report, Interos surveyed 750 companies with ‌annual revenues between $500 million and $50 billion from energy, financial services, oil and gas, healthcare,‌ government and ‌aerospace.

“The key takeaway is⁣ that⁢ people ⁢recognize it’s better than it was, but it ⁢will not⁣ go back to ​the way that it was in 2019,” ​ said Interos industry analyst Tim White.

Labor and raw ‌material constraints,⁤ as well‌ as⁣ unforeseen ⁣disruptions remain supply chain headwinds, ‌White said.

Executives were surveyed in the U.S., Canada and the​ UK and Ireland.

(Reporting by Allison Lampert in Montreal;​ editing⁢ by‌ Jonathan Oatis)

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