Nonresidential construction spending expanded 0.8% in December, totaling $720.4 billion on a seasonally adjusted basis, according to Associated Builders and Contractors’ (ABC) analysis of data released today by the U.S. Census Bureau. This represents the fifth consecutive month during which the pace of nonresidential spending has increased.
Nonresidential spending expanded 0.1% on a year-over-year basis and sits at its highest level since March. Private nonresidential construction spending increased 1.1% for the month, but is down 2.5% year over year, while public nonresidential spending increased 0.4% for the month and 4.4% for the year. Spending in the power and manufacturing categories, which are two of the largest nonresidential subsectors, contracted by a combined 10.3%, or $18.2 billion, since December 2016.
“While data releases are important for many reasons, including helping us to understand what happened in the past, their principal value lies in clarifying our shared understanding of the probable future,” said ABC Chief Economist Anirban Basu. “Today’s data release, which essentially confirms the existence of the ongoing construction expansion cycle, is less useful than usual. The obvious reason is that the December data reflect a pre-existing pattern of construction spending. The future is likely to represent a departure from prior trends, in large measure because of the recently passed tax reform bill.
“Even before the United States enacted tax reform, global and domestic financial systems were flush with liquidity and capital,” said Basu. “The tax cut will further bolster liquidity and confidence, which will ultimately translate into more construction starts and spending. If long-awaited progress is made on infrastructure spending, the construction recovery will likely transition from solid to spectacular. Note that the transportation category has already expanded 12.9% on a year-over-year basis. During much of the past three years, spending growth generally has been concentrated in a number of key private construction segments, while public construction has tended to lag.
“Of course, industry insiders are scratching their collective heads regarding how to amass enough human capital to actually deliver construction services on time and on budget,” said Basu. “Frankly, that’s a mystery. The implication is that any infrastructure package must be accompanied by action that helps expand apprenticeship programs, steps up investment in two-year colleges, encourages high schools to offer career and technical education, and encourages more people to leap into the U.S. labor force.”
Related Stories
Market Data | Apr 20, 2021
Demand for design services continues to rapidly escalate
AIA’s ABI score for March rose to 55.6 compared to 53.3 in February.
Market Data | Apr 16, 2021
Construction employment in March trails March 2020 mark in 35 states
Nonresidential projects lag despite hot homebuilding market.
Market Data | Apr 13, 2021
ABC’s Construction Backlog slips in March; Contractor optimism continues to improve
The Construction Backlog Indicator fell to 7.8 months in March.
Market Data | Apr 9, 2021
Record jump in materials prices and supply chain distributions threaten construction firms' ability to complete vital nonresidential projects
A government index that measures the selling price for goods used construction jumped 3.5% from February to March.
Contractors | Apr 9, 2021
Construction bidding activity ticks up in February
The Blue Book Network's Velocity Index measures month-to-month changes in bidding activity among construction firms across five building sectors and in all 50 states.
Industry Research | Apr 9, 2021
BD+C exclusive research: What building owners want from AEC firms
BD+C’s first-ever owners’ survey finds them focused on improving buildings’ performance for higher investment returns.
Market Data | Apr 7, 2021
Construction employment drops in 236 metro areas between February 2020 and February 2021
Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land and Odessa, Texas have worst 12-month employment losses.
Market Data | Apr 2, 2021
Nonresidential construction spending down 1.3% in February, says ABC
On a monthly basis, spending was down in 13 of 16 nonresidential subcategories.
Market Data | Apr 1, 2021
Construction spending slips in February
Shrinking demand, soaring costs, and supply delays threaten project completion dates and finances.
Market Data | Mar 26, 2021
Construction employment in February trails pre-pandemic level in 44 states
Soaring costs, supply-chain problems jeopardize future jobs.