WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. construction spending fell in
June by the largest amount in more than three years as housing, non-residential
construction and government spending all weakened.
Construction spending dropped 1.8 percent in June on a
seasonally adjusted basis after rising by a revised 0.8 percent in May, the
Commerce Department reported Friday. It was the biggest setback since a 2.8
percent fall in January 2011.
The weakness was widespread with spending on housing
down for a second straight month, falling 0.3 percent, while non-residential
building activity fell 1.6 percent, the biggest decrease since January.
Spending on government projects dropped 4 percent, the biggest decline in more
than a decade.
The June performance represented a setback to hopes
stronger construction activity will help support overall economic growth.
The decline in housing reflected a 1.4 percent fall in
spending on single-family construction which offset a 2.5 percent rise in the
smaller apartment sector. Even with the two months of declines, housing construction
is still 7.4 percent above the level of a year ago.
The drop in non-residential activity reflected
weakness in hotel construction and the category that includes shopping malls.
Non-residential building is 11.2 percent higher than a year ago.
The 4 percent fall in government projects was the
biggest one-month setback since government building tumbled by 6 percent in
March 2002. The June weakness reflected a 5.2 percent decline in state and
local government projects which offset a 10.4 percent rise in spending on
federal building projects.
Government building activity has been constrained in
recent years by the fall in tax revenue as a result of the Great Recession and
efforts at the federal level to get soaring budget deficits under control.
A slump in construction in the winter contributed to
the economy shrinking at an annual rate of 2.1 percent in the January-March
quarter, the biggest decline since the first quarter of 2009 during the depths
of the Great Recession.
Economists say a rebound to a 4 percent growth rate in
the second quarter will be followed by solid growth of around 3 percent in the
overall economy in the second half of this year.
Source: Philly.com
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