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NOTHING SCARY' IN TODAY'S NONRESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION NUMBERS, ԹϺ SAYS

Washington, D.C.—“Nonresidential construction provided a real treat to the economy in the third quarter,” Ken Simonson, Chief Economist for The Associated General Contractors of America (ԹϺ), said today. Simonson was commenting on the October 31 reports on gross domestic product and construction spending from the Commerce Department.

“Net of inflation, or real, investment in private nonresidential structures jumped 12 percent in the third quarter, the eighth straight quarter this investment category has outpaced gross domestic product growth,” Simonson remarked. “You have to go back to the mid-1950s to find another period when private nonresidential construction was so persistently robust.

“The Census Bureau’s construction spending report was even sweeter,” Simonson commented. “Private and public nonresidential construction climbed 1.8 percent for the month of September and 17 percent over the past 12 months. That was enough to overcome the 1.4 percent fall in residential spending for the month and nearly offset the 16 percent residential drop from 12 months ago.

“There was nothing scary in the nonresidential categories, even for credit-sensitive commercial types,” Simonson observed. “All 16 Census categories were up for the month, and all but religious structures were higher on both a September-over-September and a year-to-date basis.

“Over the next several months, I expect investment to slow in income-producing properties such as office, hotel and retail structures,” Simonson stated. “But accelerating investment in energy and power projects, plus continued strength in hospital and educational construction, should keep the nonresidential totals up.

“My biggest concern is higher costs,” Simonson concluded. “Diesel prices, which affect contractors thorough use of offroad equipment, construction trucks and fuel surcharges on delivery of materials, are 25 percent higher than a year ago and seem poised to rise further. Other materials, especially imports, are likely to accelerate as well. And construction wage rates are going up faster than for the economy as a whole. But public agencies, from transportation departments to county councils, have failed to budget enough for construction cost escalation, and instead are trimming projects.”

The Associated General Contractors of America (ԹϺ) is the largest and oldest national construction trade association in the United States. ԹϺ represents nearly 33,000 firms, including 7,000 of America’s leading general contractors and 11,000 specialty-contracting firms. More than 13,000 service providers and suppliers are associated with ԹϺ through a nationwide network of chapters. Visit the ԹϺ Web site at ԹϺ members are "Building Your Quality of Life.

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