Description:Construction inflation is no longer firing on all cylinders, thanks to an ever-deepening recession in residential construction markets and a cooling off in global commodity markets. Materials prices with a high-end use in housing are in a free fall, with the most dramatic decline this year coming for gypsum wallboard. With housing making up over 25% of total cement shipments, producers are finding it more difficult to push through the double-digit price hikes of the past few years. Economists predict rollbacks in cement prices soon. While there are still plenty of price gyrations for metal products, they don't have the amplitude or duration of previous spikes. Rebar prices this quarter retreated from large gains during the first half. Labor markets in the robust nonresidential and civil sectors remain tight, putting upward pressure on wage settlements. Estimators say idle workers in the housing market cannot easily cross over to those sectors, where work is available.
Articles:
Economics: Inflation knocked back a notch
Wallboard: Prices succumb to housing slump
Steel: Rebar prices slow after strong first half
Insurance: Reform efforts cut workers' comp rates
Equipment: The hidden costs of skill shortages
Labor: Wage settlements reflect tight markets
Data Tables
Construction Materials Price Movement in 2007
Builders' Construction Cost Indexes
Compensation Insurance Base Rate
Open Shop Wage Rate for Journeymen
Hourly Union Pay Scales, September 2007