Monthly Spending Decline Comes as Industry Leaders Begin
Push for Action on Needed Federal Infrastructure Programs to Fund Highway,
Transit and Clean Water Upgrades; Measures Will Add Stability to Market
Construction spending edged down in November but outlays
for the year remained on track for a modest increase over 2013 totals,
according to an analysis by the Associated General Contractors of America.
Association officials said the new spending figures come as the group's members
prepare a new push for action on a series of federal infrastructure programs,
including funding for highway and transit upgrades and to maintain clean water
systems across the country.
"Today's figures continue the seesaw pattern that
has characterized residential, private nonresidential and public construction
throughout 2014," said Ken Simonson, the association's chief economist.
"Overall construction spending dipped in November from an upwardly revised
October total as residential building advanced but private and public
nonresidential spending both retreated."
Construction spending in November totaled $975 billion at
a seasonally adjusted annual rate, down 0.3 percent from the October total but
2.4 percent higher than in November 2013, Simonson noted. Private residential
spending in November climbed 0.9 percent from October but slipped 0.5 percent
from a year earlier, while private nonresidential spending dropped 0.3 percent
for the month but rose 4.7 percent year-over-year. The third component of the
total-public construction spending-tumbled 1.7 percent from October but was 3.2
percent higher than in November 2013.
"Month-to-month figures tend to fluctuate a lot; in
addition, the first estimates are often revised substantially," Simonson
added. "Totals that combine several months give a truer picture of
underlying trends. In this case the image is more uniformly positive: total
spending on all three components increased during the first 11 months of 2014
combined compared with the year-to-date period in 2013. Both the monthly
variability and the overall upward trend are likely to continue through much of
2015."
Total spending year-to-date was 5.7 percent above the
January-November 2013 total, Simonson said. Private residential spending rose
4.9 percent, while private nonresidential construction increased 10.8 percent. Public
outlays for construction grew by 1.1 percent as state and local governments
boosted spending by 1.6 percent, more than offsetting a 4.0 percent decline in
federal construction expenditures.
Association officials said the new spending data comes as
the group prepares a push to get Congress and the Obama administration to pass
needed infrastructure measures. In particular, the group is pushing for action
to finance the federal highway and transit program and to set up a more
sustainable way to finance clean water system upgrades in communities across
the country.
"The president and Congress can demonstrate their
ability to work together by enacting measures that will boost our economic
growth, improve our aging infrastructure and help stability the erratic
construction sector," said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association's chief
executive officer.
Source: AGC
of America
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