Construction recovery slows in August
Construction’s recovery slowed down in August, according to the latest Office for National Statistics figures.
Monthly construction output growth slowed to 3% in August, following record monthly growth of 21.8% in June and growth of 17.2% in July.
New work grew 3.5%, or £270m, with repair and maintenance growing 2.3%, or £98m.
The increase in new work was driven by growth of 12%, or £310m of work, in private new housing, off set somewhat by falls of 16.4%, or £54m, in private industrial new work and 2%, £40m, in private commercial new work.
The level of construction output in August remains 10.8% below the level in February.
Mark Robinson, chief executive at Scape Group, said: “Confirmation of further growth will hearten many in the industry whose determination continues to keep order books healthy, albeit below pre-covid levels.
“However, the overall economic outlook remains ominous and construction will be expected to drive the ongoing recovery as other sectors regroup and evolve as government support recedes.”
> Previous ONS data: July growth
He said while the UK’s strategy was to use historically low interest rates to invest in public infrastructure it was imperative that contractors and public sector organisations did all they could to get spades in the ground quickly.
Following strong recovery in June and July construction, output grew by a record 18.5% in the three months to August compared with the previous three-month period.
This came after 10 consecutive periods of decline and was driven by record three-month on three-month growth in both new work, 17.5%, and repair and maintenance, 20.3%.
The unpredictability around further lockdowns is causing private commercial investors to remain cautious
Clive Docwra, McBains
The increase in new work in the three months to August was because of growth in all new work sectors apart from private industrial, which fell by 6.5%. The largest contributor to the growth was private new housing, which grew 34.9%.
The increase in repair and maintenance across the same period reflects record growth in all repair and maintenance sectors. The largest contributor was private housing repair and maintenance, which grew 35.6%.
Despite this three-month growth figures Clive Docwra, managing director at McBains, said there was a reluctance among investors to put cash into future projects.
He said: “The unpredictability around further lockdowns is causing private commercial investors to remain cautious of committing to new developments.
“The government needs to ramp up its public infrastructure programme and speed up procurement to help tide the sector over while this fragility persists.”