Construction starts will decrease in 2020, Dodge Data predicts

by Christopher Brinckerhoff | 1 November 2019 12:00 am

Dodge Data and Analytics[1] released its 2020 Dodge Construction Outlook. The report predicts total U.S. construction starts will slip to $776 billion in 2020, a decline of 4 percent from the 2019 estimated level of activity.

“The recovery in construction starts that began during 2010 in the aftermath of the Great Recession is coming to an end,” said Richard Branch, chief economist at Dodge Data and Analytics. “Easing economic growth driven by mounting trade tensions and lack of skilled labor will lead to a broad based, but orderly pullback in construction starts in 2020. After increasing 3 percent in 2018 construction starts dipped an estimated 1 percent in 2019 and will fall 4 percent in 2020.”

However, 2020 will not be a repeat of what the construction industry endured during the Great Recession, Branch said. “Economic growth is slowing but is not anticipated to contract next year. Construction starts, therefore, will decline but the level of activity will remain close to recent highs. By major construction sector, the dollar value of starts for residential buildings will be down 6 percent, while starts for both nonresidential buildings and non-building construction will drop 3 percent.”

The pattern of construction starts for specific segments is:

Endnotes:
  1. Dodge Data and Analytics: https://www.construction.com/
  2. www.construction.com/analytics-store/2019-dodge-construction-outlook.html: https://www.construction.com/analytics-store/2019-dodge-construction-outlook.html

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