End to Harsh Winter Should Lead to Further Gains in Private
Construction But Highway Spending Could Drop Sharply Unless Trust Fund is
Replenished Promptly, Association Officials Warn
Total construction spending remained in a holding pattern in
March as strong gains in apartment construction and modest growth in
homebuilding and private nonresidential activity offset falling public outlays,
according to an analysis of new Census Bureau data by the Associated General
Contractors of America (AGC). Association officials noted that the construction
spending figures may get dramatically worse unless public officials act
urgently to maintain federal highway funding.
“Overall construction spending has increased from a year ago
but has stayed in a narrow range since December,” said Ken Simonson, the
association's chief economist. “It is encouraging that spending remained level
despite severe winter weather that may have delayed some projects, and the
totals are likely to grow moving into spring.”
Construction put in place totaled $943 billion in March, 0.2
percent above the revised February total and matching the latest estimate for
January. Spending in March was 8.4 percent higher than a year earlier.
Private residential construction spending increased by 0.5
percent in March to reach the highest rate since May 2008. The latest total
topped the year-ago level by 16 percent. Single-family construction rose 0.2
percent in March and 13 percent year-over-year. Multifamily spending leaped 4.4
percent and 33 percent, respectively.
Private nonresidential spending edged up 0.2 percent for the
month and 8.6 percent over 12 months. Most major categories increased from
year-ago levels. The largest private segment, power construction—comprising
work on oil and gas fields and pipelines as well as electricity projects—rose
2.8 percent over the year. The fastest-growing private type was communication
construction, with a 34 percent gain since March 2013.
Public construction spending declined 0.6 percent for the
month and 0.8 percent year-over-year, sinking to its lowest mark since November
2006. The largest public segment, highway and street construction, increased
8.5 percent from a year before, but the second-biggest category, educational
construction, slumped 5.3 percent.
“All of these trends are likely to continue,” Simonson
predicted. “There appears to be plenty of demand for more apartments and many
categories of private nonresidential construction. Single-family homebuilding
should remain above year-ago levels, although growing much more slowly as the
year progresses. Public construction is likely to shrink further, based on what
has been proposed or enacted in federal and state budgets.”
Association officials cautioned that the recent increase in
highway spending will reverse course if the federal Highway Trust Fund runs out
of money this summer. The Trust Fund provides funding to every state to match
state spending on highway and bridge repair and construction projects. If the
Fund runs out of money, billions of dollars worth of construction projects are
likely to be stalled.
“Unless Congress and the administration get together in the
next few weeks on a funding plan, thousands of construction projects across the
country may have to lay off workers in the height of the construction season,”
said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer. “There is
no time left for political posturing; construction workers and companies need
immediate assurance that they will be paid on time for their work.”
Source: AGC
of America
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