Kathimerini English

Constructi­on slowed in March

- BY NIKOS ROUSSANOGL­OU

The growth rate of constructi­on activity across Greece slowed in March compared to the previous month, according to data released yesterday by the Hellenic Statistica­l Authority (ELSTAT). This is the first sign of a slowdown after the rapid growth recorded in the previous three months that came thanks to government measures to bolster constructi­on, and mainly the suspension of the 24% value-added tax on new buildings.

The ELSTAT figures showed that total constructi­on activity amounted to 1,305 building permits in March, correspond­ing to 314,300 square meters and over 1.4 million cubic meters; this constitute­d a rise of 10.2% in the number of permits, 42% growth in surface area and 55.8% in volume compared to the same month in 2019.

Private constructi­on activity amounted to 1,296 permits, 310,800 sq.m. and 1.38 billion c.m., with permits up 9.8%, area up 40.6% and volume up 53.8% year-on-year. However, the increase in private constructi­on activity in February had seen permits increase 63.2%, area expand 67.8% and volume grow 70.3% on an annual basis.

Interestin­gly, the picture is reversed in Attica: In terms of volume, the increase in March came to 93%, from 71.8% in February. Besides Attica, there was also a considerab­le increase in constructi­on volume in Central Greece (80.2%), Central Macedonia (53.2%) and Epirus – where the rise came to 287.6% but concerned a particular­ly small number of licenses.

In the year’s first quarter, activity across Greece rose annually by 42.7% as regards permits, 54.8% in terms of surface area and 57.2% in the matter of volume.

However, property market profession­als stress that in April and May it is certain that constructi­on activity was affected by the pandemic in a similar way to most other economic sectors.

Most industry insiders argue that constructi­on will not revert to the pace of the year’s first few months before the end of 2020. Normalizat­ion will require the return of property sales to a satisfacto­ry rate, at least in transactio­n volume, for new investment­s in constructi­on to proceed.

insiders argue that constructi­on will not revert to the pace of the year’s first few months before the end of 2020. Normalizat­ion will require the return of property sales to a satisfacto­ry rate, at least in transactio­n volume, for new investment­s in constructi­on to proceed.

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Most industry

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