Fifteen of the 16 nonresidential subcategories posted a monthly decline, according to the data.
For example, healthcare spending dropped 2.2%, commercial spending decreased 1.9% and water supply spending ticked down 1.8%. Meanwhile, public nonresidential construction spending tumbled 1.2%, while private nonresidential spending dropped another 0.9% in February.
However, all categories posted year-over-year spending growth, according to an analysis from the Associated General Contractors of America.
That suggests “the current downturns may reflect short-term challenges such as severe weather, not fading demand,” said Ken Simonson, AGC chief economist.
For example, construction spending increased more than 10% in 10 categories over the past 12 months, including a 36% uptick in public safety spending and 32% in manufacturing construction, said Basu.
Spending on private nonresidential construction jumped 12.6% compared to February 2023, while public construction spending posted a 16.8% growth from a year earlier, according to the data.
ABC’s Construction Confidence Index, which measures contractors outlooks over the next six months, also remains positive. That means the current dip in spending could be temporary, Basu said.
“As always, interpreting the data is complicated,” said Basu. “[But] contractors remain confident with respect to their sales over the next six months, signaling that the data could improve with the weather.”
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Join Our CommunityFifteen of the 16 nonresidential subcategories posted a monthly decline, according to the data.
For example, healthcare spending dropped 2.2%, commercial spending decreased 1.9% and water supply spending ticked down 1.8%. Meanwhile, public nonresidential construction spending tumbled 1.2%, while private nonresidential spending dropped another 0.9% in February.
However, all categories posted year-over-year spending growth, according to an analysis from the Associated General Contractors of America.
That suggests “the current downturns may reflect short-term challenges such as severe weather, not fading demand,” said Ken Simonson, AGC chief economist.
For example, construction spending increased more than 10% in 10 categories over the past 12 months, including a 36% uptick in public safety spending and 32% in manufacturing construction, said Basu.
Spending on private nonresidential construction jumped 12.6% compared to February 2023, while public construction spending posted a 16.8% growth from a year earlier, according to the data.
ABC’s Construction Confidence Index, which measures contractors outlooks over the next six months, also remains positive. That means the current dip in spending could be temporary, Basu said.
“As always, interpreting the data is complicated,” said Basu. “[But] contractors remain confident with respect to their sales over the next six months, signaling that the data could improve with the weather.”
Our library of marketing materials is tailored to help construction firms like yours. Use it to benchmark your performance, identify opportunities, stay up-to-date on trends, and make strategic business decisions.
Join Our Community