Bright prospects for the construction industry
CPA forecasts strong growth for construction despite public housing slowdown and skilled labour shortage
CONSTRUCTION output is forecast to increase 13.2% by 2017, with private house building expected to be a key driver of this growth, according to the latest forecasts from the Construction Products Association (CPA).
Total construction output is forecast to rise 4.9% in 2015, 4.2% in 2016 and 3.5% in 2017, while private house building is anticipated to rise 9.0% in 2015, 5.5% in 2016 and 3.5% in 2017.
Meanwhile, public house building is forecast to fall 10.0% in 2015, 5.0% in 2016 and remain flat in 2017, while infrastructure output is forecast to rise 10.3% in 2015, 10.8% in 2016 and 10.4% in 2017.
Dr Noble Francis, the CPA’s economics director, commented: ‘Prospects for the construction industry are very bright. Construction output is forecast to increase 4.9% in 2015 – almost double the rate of growth for the UK economy as a whole – and 21.7% overall by 2019. This growth will mainly be driven by an increase in work across the private housing and infrastructure sectors.
‘Private house building is forecast to rise 9.0% in 2015 and 5.5% in 2016 as it benefits from a strong property market supported by rising real wages, increased mortgage availability and government policies such as Help to Buy. However, public house building activity is expected to fall sharply – 10% in 2015 and 5.0% in 2016 – due to the negative impact of cuts to social rents and the extension of Right to Buy on housing association funding.’
Dr Francis continued: ‘Infrastructure is also forecast to be one of the key drivers of construction growth over the next five years. The Government has a National Infrastructure Plan in place with a pipeline of projects across the UK worth £411 billion. As a consequence, we forecast that infrastructure output will experience double-digit growth each year to the end of our forecast horizon in 2019.’
However, Dr Francis warned that it is not all good news. ‘Yet again we expect delays until 2018 for the main works on the nuclear power station Hinkley Point C,’ he said. ‘In addition, due to concerns regarding planning and financing, we do not anticipate the main works starting on HS2 before 2020.’
Adding a further note of caution, Dr Francis warned that the CPA’s forecast growth of 21.7% by 2019 for construction had also raised a key risk regarding the lack of skilled labour.
‘Employment in the UK construction industry is now 390,000 lower than at its 2008 peak, but so far the lack of skilled labour has primarily affected the house-building sector,’ he said. ‘However, as wider industry activity picks up, this issue is likely to spread across the construction industry. In the short term, it is already putting upward pressure on costs. In the medium term, the forecast growth will not be possible without significant investment in skills.’