ABC Predicts Commercial Construction Slowdown Ahead
December 30th, 2016 | Category: Industry NewsAssociated Builders and Contractors (ABC) forecasts a slowdown of growth in U.S. commercial construction in 2017, according to ABC chief economist Anirban Basu.
“The U.S. economy continues to expand amid a weak global economy and, despite risks to the construction industry, nonresidential spending should expand 3.5 percent in 2017,” says Basu. “For more than two years, the Federal Reserve has been able to focus heavily on stimulating economic growth and moving the nation toward full employment. However, as commodity prices, including energy prices, firm up and labor costs march higher, the Federal Reserve will need to be more concerned about rising inflation expectations going forward. Associated increases in interest rates could have significantly negative impacts on certain asset prices, including stocks, bonds, commercial real estate and apartment buildings.”
Basu says contractors should be prepared for increases in commodity prices, which could translate into further stagnation in construction spending volumes if the purchasers of construction services are not prepared for related cost increases.
“Additionally, data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics indicate that construction job openings stand at a 10-year high and that average hourly earnings for construction workers rose above $28 per hour in 2016,” he says. “The demand for construction workers is positioned to remain high and is likely to increase already significant wage pressures.”
Still, the industry faces a “bullish scenario,” according to Basu.
“According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the average age of all fixed assets, including structures such as factories and hospitals, stands at 23 years—the oldest on record tracing back to 1925—and there is a collective awareness among American enterprises that they will need to replace much of their capital stock in future years,” he says. “In addition, now rising energy prices could produce more investment and rising earnings—potentially translating into better support for asset prices, ongoing hiring and consumer spending.”