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The changing shape of the UK construction workforce

The changing shape of the UK construction workforce

The latest employment figures for construction don’t tell us a huge amount about job prospects in the industry other than things seem to be getting worse. But we knew that. Overall employment in the second quarter of this year was 1.1% down on a year ago and is about 15% down on the same quarter five years ago, just before the credit crunch.

Whatever the spin, whatever the weather, the housing market news looks to be getting worse

Whatever the spin, whatever the weather, the housing market news looks to be getting worse

One thing guaranteed to pull the trigger for even a half-awake journalist is an upbeat spin put on what looks like really duff news. The normal reaction is: “God, things must be bad.” So the “Wet weather fails to deter buyers” headline on the press release for the RICS Housing Market Survey immediately had me worried.

Output data suggest it’s past time for the Government to act decisively to boost construction

Output data suggest it’s past time for the Government to act decisively to boost construction

There will be some people expelling phews of relief at seeing construction output for the second quarter revised up by the Office for National Statistics from a dramatic drop of 5.2% to a less frightful fall of 3.9%. Certainly this will have the effect, all other things being equal, of lifting the rather shocking GDP drop of 0.7% by 0.1% or so. Not much, but a little.

Construction industry forecasters are of one mind: It’s worse than we thought

Construction industry forecasters are of one mind: It’s worse than we thought

The consensus among UK’s top construction forecasters is that things are worse than we thought. A week ago we saw Experian and Leading Edge downgrade their forecasts for construction growth. This week we see the Construction Products Association do the same and Hewes & Associates will follow suit when it is published shortly.

Government should be fixing its policy credibility rather than boasting about its fiscal credibility

Government should be fixing its policy credibility rather than boasting about its fiscal credibility

The Government’s intervention to boost infrastructure spending is timely. The construction data is almost all pointing in a southerly direction. The latest construction activity survey from the surveyors’ body RICS, released today, suggests workload among its members shrank in the second quarter.

Forecasters see longer deeper double dip for construction

Forecasters see longer deeper double dip for construction

The latest batch of industry forecasts are emerging and they show construction locked in a deeper recession than previous expected. The recovery now looks further away. Top graph shows how the industry appears to be facing a pretty deep and protracted second recession.

Skyscrapers and economic crises revisited. A soothsayer’s perspective on the Shard

Skyscrapers and economic crises revisited. A soothsayer’s perspective on the Shard

I’ve been increasingly worried about the possible collapse of the construction industry into a rather deep recession for some time. I have tended to keep my concerns in check, having gained a reputation for being gloomy. But while it’s tricky to tell accurately with the available data, the new orders figures just don’t seem to be healthy enough to me to support the current level of construction output. Ergo – to my mind at least – a nasty drop in…

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Output data add to worries over private sector weakness as public sector cuts hit workloads

Output data add to worries over private sector weakness as public sector cuts hit workloads

The latest output figures released by the Office for National Statistics on Friday appear to support growing concerns that the decline in construction workload might be accelerating. Analysis of the data suggests that as the decline in public sector work is gathering pace the recovery in the private sector is petering out.

Why the latest orders figures are so disturbing

Why the latest orders figures are so disturbing

The latest official data for new orders in construction could be read as good news. They show an up-tick of almost 5% in the first quarter of this year on the seasonally adjusted measure. That sounds promising on the face of it and many might claim that it is. But that would be to look at a small detail in a much bigger picture that looks far from promising.