Many contractors will find more projects to bid on in 2014
than they have in the past five years. Judging by recent producer price
indexes, they should be spared most materials price shocks. However, labor
availability will become an increasing concern.
The year opened with an upbeat report on construction
spending from the Census Bureau on January 2. The agency reported that spending
in November was the highest since March 2009 at a seasonally adjusted annual
rate (a statistical technique to remove distortions due to normal weather or
monthly variations). For the first 11 months of 2013 combined, year-to-date
spending rose 5.0 percent from the same months in 2012.
But the pickup was very unevenly distributed. Private
residential spending soared 18 percent year-to-date, powered by a 45 percent
leap in multifamily construction, a 28 percent jump in single-family, and a 2
percent uptick in improvements (additions and major renovations to both types).
Private nonresidential construction was unchanged, on balance. Public
construction slipped 3 percent, dragged down by an 8 percent contraction in
public educational spending, which more than offset a tiny rise in highway and
street construction. These two segments account for more than half of public construction.
The overall flatness of private nonresidential construction
masked extreme differences in some segments. The top performer through the
first 11 months was lodging construction, which climbed 26 percent as hoteliers
modernized older properties and began putting up new big-city hotels and
extended-stay properties in areas receiving an influx of oil and gas-related
workers. At the other end of the spectrum were communications construction,
down 13 percent, and power, down 11 percent. However, the apparent plunge in
power construction was driven by a surge in construction of wind facilities in
late 2012 to beat a yearend deadline to qualify for the wind production tax
credit. In 2013, the credit applied to projects begun by yearend, so there was
no comparable spike in spending.
For 2014, the two biggest private nonresidential
segments—power and manufacturing—should both post double-digit increases, along
with lodging and warehouse construction. Office and retail construction should
continue to make modest gains, although they will remain far below
pre-recession levels. But private hospital and educational construction will
remain in the doldrums.
Overall, private nonresidential construction should increase
5-10 percent. Private residential construction will grow another 10 percent or
more, thanks to continued double-digit growth in apartment construction,
although single-family homebuilding will
probably stall later in the year. Public construction will slip again, though
perhaps not as much as the 3 percent drop in 2013. Adding up the pieces, total
construction spending will rise close to 10 percent, a significant improvement
over last year’s 5 percent growth.
As for prices, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported
on December 13 that its producer price indexes (PPIs) for new nonresidential
building construction rose 3 to 4 percent between November 2012 and November
2013. These indexes measure what contractors say they would charge to construct
industrial, warehouse, school, office and health care buildings. While
moderate, those increases are larger than contractors had reported for several
years and also are larger than the PPIs for materials used in construction
(including items consumed by contractors, such as diesel fuel). The materials
index rose just 1 percent over the latest 12 months.
Materials costs should remain tame in 2014. Diesel prices
may actually fall slightly. Steel prices have begun to climb, after slumping 8
percent in 2012 and finishing 2013 roughly unchanged. However, there should not
be large spikes like those in 2004-2008. Similarly, copper and concrete prices
may rise modestly, and gypsum prices are likely to start the year higher. But
there should be ample supplies of all products, and by December, the materials
price index is not likely to increase more than 3 percent from the December
2012 level.
Labor costs and,
especially, availability will be bigger worries. The unemployment rate for
construction workers tumbled from 18.8 percent (not seasonally adjusted) in
November 2010 to 8.6 percent in November 2013 as 890,000 former employees left
the ranks of the unemployed. Unfortunately for contractors, the industry added
only 327,000 employees in that span. That means most of those experienced
workers left the industry, at least for now.
To get them back,
contractors will likely have to spend more on wages, benefits and bonuses.
Firms that can’t find the additional workers they need will increase their
payment of overtime wages. As a result, employers’ costs for employee compensation,
BLS’s overall measure of wages, salaries, benefits and required payments such
as unemployment and workers’ compensation, will probably go up 3-4 percent in
2014, compared with a 2.1 percent rise from the third quarter of 2012 to the
third quarter of 2013. Even then, more contractors will likely experience
difficulty finding skilled craft workers, supervisors and estimators
Source: AGC.org
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