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Digging into Construction Data NABE Real Estate/Construction Roundtable webinar, April 8, 2010 Ken Simonson, Chief Economist AGC of America simonsonk@agc.org
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Economic impact of nonresidential construction Jobs: 28,500 per $1 billion 1/3 direct, onsite construction 1/6 indirect (quarries, mfg., services) 1/2 induced by spending from higher earnings of construction, indirect workers and owners GDP: $3.4 billion Personal Earnings: $1.1 billion 2 Source: Prof. Stephen Fuller, George Mason University
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Construction Spending, 2000-2009 Source: Census Bureau, Bureau of Economic Analysis $16,000 $15,000 $14,000 $13,000 $12,000 $11,000 $10,000 $2,000 $1,000 $0 Construction GDP GDP and Construction Spending (SAAR Annual Level, $ in billions) Construction as a % of GDP
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4 Private Nonresidential ($303b, -0.4%, -24%) Public ($293b, -1.7%, -5%) Private Residential ($251b, -2.1%, -3.8%) Source: Census Bureau 1000 950 900 850 450 400 350 300 250 200 Total Construction ($846b, -1.3%, -13%) Construction spending by segment, 1- & 12-month change Seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR)
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Single-family (SF) vs. multifamily (MF) vs. 1/10vs. 2/09 SF 0%4% Improvements -4%4% MF 0%-52% 5 Permits vs. 1/10vs. 2/09 SF 0%32% MF -8%-36% Starts SF 0%40% MF -30%-65%
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Housing outlook SF: starts, permits should rise throughout 10 MF: No improvement likely until 11 - Rental demand hurt by job losses among would- be renters and by first-time homebuyer credit - Supply swelled by owners and banks who are trying to rent out houses and condos - Banks remain unwilling to lend to developers Source: Author 6
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Nonres totals (billion $, SAAR), share, 1- & 12-month change 2/10 TotalSharevs. 1/10vs. 2/09 Nonresidential$588 billion 100 %- 1 %- 16 % Educational9216 - 1 - 13 Power8815 + 1 + 5 Highway and street8014 - 2 - 2 Manufacturing539 + 3 - 35 Commercial458 - 3 - 36 Office447 - 3 - 31 Health care417 - 2 - 15 Transportation3560 + 12 Sewage and waste disposal244 - 5 - 3 Communication203 + 10 Amusement and recreation163 - 2 - 23 Other (lodging; water, public safety; conservation; religious): 9% of total 7 Source: Census Bureau
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Construction spending: industrial, heavy (billion $, SAAR) 2008, 2009, 2010 8
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9 Construction spending: public works (billion $, SAAR) 2008, 2009, 2010
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10 Construction spending: institutional (private + state/local) 2008, 2009, 2010
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11 Construction spending: developer-financed (billion $, SAAR) 2008, 2009, 2010
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Predictors of construction demand 12 Architecture & engineering services empl. Source: American Institute of Architects, BLS
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Summary for 2010 Nonres spending: 0 to -5% (more stimulus put in place, maybe gains in retail, higher ed, hospitals) Res: +5 to +10% (SF up, MF down all year) Total construction spending: -4% to +2% Materials costs: 0% to +8% Labor costs: +3% or less 13 Source: Author
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AGC economic resources (email simonsonk@agc.org) The Data DIGest: weekly one-page email (sign up: www.agc.org/datadigest) PPI tables: emailed monthly State and metro data Stimulus info: www.agc.org/stimulus Webinars (May 4 w/ AIA, Reed) Feedback on stimulus, credit, costs 14
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NABE - Setting the pace in business economics Professional Development Seminar: DC, 4/12-14 Housing and construction session Annual meeting: Denver, 10/9-12 Real Estate/Construction Roundtable Webinars, annual & spring meeting programs Statistics Committee …much more at www.nabe.comwww.nabe.com 15 Source: Prof. Stephen Fuller, George Mason University
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