The latest Construction Trade Survey from the Construction Products Association published today (August 6), shows that during the second quarter of 2012 construction suffered another sharp fall across all parts of the industry.
This includes current workloads, new orders and tender prices, adding to the continuing woes and growing uncertainty for the UK economy as a whole.
As public sector investment continued to decline, in line with the government’s budget deficit reduction objective, there was no sign of any private sector recovery to off set these cuts, leaving the sector with very little optimism for recovery in the near future.
Noble Francis, CPA economics director said: “The position for construction in the UK is now looking very bleak indeed, as this is the fourth such fall in the past five quarters.
“This survey brings together the position from all parts of the construction supply chain and the fact that these findings are reflected throughout the industry should send a stark message to the government that the current situation is really beginning to hurt. The government has rightly recognised that construction is a key driver for economic recovery. Therefore, government emphasis must be focused on immediate construction work throughout the country, much of which has already been identified. But this will require actual investment to replace the rhetoric that has, of late been all prevalent.”
Stephen Ratcliffe, director UKCG, said: “Declining public sector spend and a lack of confidence amongst private investors, means action is urgently needed to kick-start the construction economy. UKCG is working with government to help speed-up decisions on school building and other major projects, and ensure capital investment benefits all parts of the UK – not just London and the South East.
“Recent announcements on infrastructure guarantees and rail investment have been welcome, but we also need ‘shovels in the ground’ today. More resources could be directed to social housing and repair and maintenance projects – these are labour intensive and can be got off the ground very quickly.”
Key survey findings include: