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Australian Construction Market Report, May 2023

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ACIF Forecasts Show that the Construction Industry is an Engine in Powering Australia’s Recovery

The forecasts released today by the Australian Construction Industry Forum (ACIF) reveal that the Australian building and construction market is bouncing back. Growth is exceeding expectations based on Australia’s ability to bring the spread of COVID-19 under control and the deployment of a comprehensive range of policy measures designed provide a strong stimulus and a rapid recovery. The new forecasts project growth of 2.7%, bringing the level of building and construction work up to $243 billion in 2021.

Bob Richardson, Chair of ACIF’s Construction Forecasting Council commented: “Recovery is on its way! Whilst COVID and the lockdowns significantly impacted our industry in 2020, returning business confidence and the Government’s stimulus measures  will provide an uplift, and overall we expect to see a rebound in activity in 2021-2022.”

The building of new houses is entering into boom territory with 10% growth this year. The upswing is driven by a surge in house demand supported by record low interest rates, provision of significant government support programs including HomeBuilder, and an improving outlook for sustained employment growth.

Kerry Barwise, ACIF’s former Chief Forecaster from FTI Consulting, stated “The building and construction industries did better than expected in dealing with the disruptions of 2020. The forecasts  predict an even stronger outcome ahead in 2021. The industry is punching above its weight in the recovery.”

Infrastructure spending in areas including electricity supply, water, and railways are expected to benefit from enlarged infrastructure delivery programs being rolled out by Commonwealth and State governments. Government spending and investment providing social infrastructure and other essential services has been ramped up, increasing work forecasts in ad hoc categories of building, including Other Commercial and Miscellaneous, as well as in Health and Aged Care.

While the outlook for building and construction is much stronger than generally expected, the recovery remains uneven as the pandemic continues to weigh on some industry sectors and regions. Some parts of building and construction will experience remarkable growth this year, while others are expected to see contraction and decline. 

The immediate outlook for sub-sectors which have been most directly affected by lingering disruption from the pandemic and lockdowns is not so bright. Sectors that are still impacted by closed borders and other including Accommodation, Recreation and Other, including stadiums and other large scale facilities.

Building and Construction Employment

Employment in building and construction activities fell by 2.6% to 1,152,000 jobs by the end of 2020 according to ABS employment statistics. Construction employment accounted for a little under 10% of total employment across the Australian economy.

COVID-19, the lockdowns and an underlying downtrend in activity levels, especially in Residential Building activity, drove the contraction in employment in 2020. The strong rebound in Residential Building and growth in Engineering Construction activity are already driving a recovery in employment and this is expected to push job numbers up to 1.2 million in 2021. The continued uplift in infrastructure spending will sustain growth in job numbers into 2023.

Australian Building and Construction Work Done ($ billion, 2018-19 prices). Source: ACIF CFC

About Australian Construction Industry Forum (ACIF)

Australian Construction Industry Forum (ACIF) is the trusted voice of the Australian construction industry. ACIF facilitates and supports an active dialogue between key players in residential and non-residential building, and engineering construction, other industry groups, and government agencies. ACIF’s focus is on innovation, collaboration, equity and sustainability for the industry. 

ACIF Members are among the most significant associations in the industry, spanning the entire asset creation process from feasibility through design, cost planning, construction, building and management. ACIF harnesses the resources of its Members to research and develop initiatives that benefit businesses of all sizes, from the largest of construction companies to small consultancies. More information on ACIF is available from www.acif.com.au.

About ACIF Forecasts

ACIF Forecasts are rolling ten-year forecasts of demand across residential, non-residential and engineering construction in Australia. The Forecasts are prepared by respected economic modellers, using high quality data sources, and are overseen by ACIF’s Construction Forecasting Council, an industry panel of expert analysts and researchers.  

ACIF Forecasts are used by thousands of professionals each year, from across the full range of stakeholders, from major organisations to small consultancies. ACIF Forecasts are available as the Australian Construction Market Report and detailed numbers are available by subscribing to the Customised Forecasts Dashboard.

The ACIF Forecasts are available in two formats: Australian Construction Market Report, a 110-page expert analysis on the economy and industry sectors ($350), plus the Customised Forecasts Dashboard ($300), an online portal where users can query the full ACIF Forecasts database on 20 work types, over a twenty year period. As an industry not-for-profit, ACIF produces this information to assist businesses and governments at all three levels navigate the rapidly changing marketplace and help them plan for the future. Find out more at https://www.acif.com.au/forecasts/forecasts

 

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Data Sources and Methodology

Where ACIF Forecasts data comes from, and what we do with it.

The ACIF Forecasts are reported in Chain Volume Measures (that is in real value terms or in constant prices) instead of nominal values (current prices). 

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