Construction costs are expected to increase by around 6 percent in 2021, and grow by another 4 to 7 percent in 2021, according to JLL’s Construction Cost Outlook for the second half of this year.
The Outlook tracks what has been “unprecedented” volatility in materials prices, which for the 12 months through August 2021 soared by 23 percent. Over that same period, labor costs rose by 4.46 percent, bringing total construction costs up by 4.51 percent. “The lack of available labor has led to more project delays so far in 2021 than a lack of materials, and conditions are expected to worsen over the coming year,” states Henry Esposito, JLL’s Construction Research Lead and the Outlook’s author.
Construction cost gains are occurring at a time when nonresidential construction spending was down by 9.5 percent for the 12 months through July 2021. JLL does not expect a “true” rebound in that spending until the Spring or Summer of next year. And don’t count on any immediate jolt from the federal infrastructure bill that, even if it passes, won’t impact construction spending or costs for two to six years out.
Construction recovery also faces two big immediate challenges:
Supply chain delays and record-high cost increases continue to put pressure on project execution and profitability. And the delta variant and future waves of the pandemic have the potential to slow economic growth, weakening the construction rebound “and calling into question some of the rosier predictions for 2022.” The Outlook states.
SHORTAGES AND DELAYS WILL CONTINUE THROUGH ‘22
As demand for new projects continues to grow and contractor backlogs fill, there will be less incentive to bid aggressively, and contractors will aim to pass through cost increases to owners as soon as the market can bear it. This combination of factors leads JLL to extend its forecasts for 4.5 to 7.5 percent final cost growth for nonresidential construction in calendar year 2021 and to predict a similar 4 to 7 percent cost growth range for 2022.
Some materials costs will ease, but the average increase will land somewhere between 5 and 11 percent. Aside from costs, the most pressing issues for most construction materials right now are lead times and delays. “Hopes for major relief during 2021 have been largely dashed, with hope for a return to normal now pushed out into 2022,” says JLL. The most pressing development might be the recent coup d’état in Guinea, which is one the world’s largest exporters of bauxite, the ore needed to produce aluminum.
The industry’s labor shortage isn’t abating, either. From 2015 to 2019, the number of open and unfilled jobs in construction across the country doubled to 300,000. And while construction was one of the fastest sectors to recover from the pandemic, its workforce numbers still fall far short of demand, which is why JLL expects labor costs to grow in the 3 to 6 percent range. Construction also has the lowest vaccination rate, and the highest vaccine hesitancy rate, of any major industry, so jobsite workers remain more vulnerable to airborne infection that might sideline them.
JLL shows that high-wage states are clustered in the Northeast corridor and the West Coast. The Midwest is also a high-cost region, with Illinois standing out as the top state, while the entire Southeast is the cheapest area of the country to hire workers. Wage growth across the country, on the other hand, is more evenly distributed, and some of the top states in total wages—such as Illinois, New York, and California—are only in the middle of the distribution pack.
Related Stories
Market Data | Nov 15, 2017
Architecture Billings bounce back
Business conditions remain uneven across regions.
Market Data | Nov 14, 2017
U.S. construction starts had three consecutive quarters of positive growth in 2017
ConstructConnect’s quarterly report shows the most significant annual growth in the civil engineering and residential sectors.
Market Data | Nov 3, 2017
New construction starts in 2018 to increase 3% to $765 billion: Dodge report
Dodge Outlook Report predicts deceleration but still growth, reflecting a mixed pattern by project type.
Market Data | Nov 2, 2017
Construction spending up in September; Down on a YOY basis
Nonresidential construction spending is down 2.9% on a year-over-year basis.
Market Data | Oct 19, 2017
Architecture Billings Index backslides slightly
Business conditions easing in the West.
Industry Research | Oct 3, 2017
Nonresidential construction spending stabilizes in August
Spending on nonresidential construction services is still down on a YOY basis.
Market Data | Sep 21, 2017
Architecture Billings Index continues growth streak
Design services remain in high demand across all regions and in all major sectors.
Market Data | Sep 21, 2017
How brand research delivers competitive advantage
Brand research is a process that firms can use to measure their reputation and visibility in the marketplace.
Contractors | Sep 19, 2017
Commercial Construction Index finds high optimism in U.S. commercial construction industry
Hurricane recovery efforts expected to heighten concerns about labor scarcities in the south, where two-thirds of contractors already face worker shortages.
Multifamily Housing | Sep 15, 2017
Hurricane Harvey damaged fewer apartments in greater Houston than estimated
As of Sept. 14, 166 properties reported damage to 8,956 units, about 1.4% of the total supply of apartments, according to ApartmentData.com.