Irish Independent

Constructi­on sector more upbeat about recovery as restrictio­ns ease

- John Mulligan

THE constructi­on sector is increasing­ly upbeat as the economy starts to reopen, but new data published today shows a continuing sharp contractio­n in the trade last month.

The latest Ulster Bank Constructi­on Purchasing Managers’ Index, published this morning, shows the gauge posted a recording of 30.9 in March. Any figure below 50 signifies contractio­n and any figure over 50, expansion.

The reading was 27 in February, and March marked the third month in a row of contractio­n as the country endured its latest lockdown.

The reading for residentia­l building activity touched 33.8 in March, compared with 23.8 the month before.

Activity on some residentia­l sites restarted as early as February, despite the lockdown.

“While the pace of decline in overall activity eased somewhat relative to the very extreme weakness registered in January and February, the March results again highlight that activity was markedly restrained by the pandemic-related restrictio­ns throughout the first quarter,” said Simon Barry, chief economist Republic of Ireland at Ulster Bank.

The index of activity in the commercial constructi­on sector was virtually unchanged last month, at 31.3. In civil engineerin­g, the reading rose from 19.5 in February to 23.8 last month.

Mr Barry said respondent­s to the latest Ulster Bank survey are becoming “increasing­ly

‘Some sites started up again weeks ago’

upbeat” about the prospects of recovery.

“The future activity index jumped again in March to stand at its highest level in two-and-a-half years as almost 60pc of firms expect an expansion of activity over the next 12 months,” he said.

“The jump in confidence was underpinne­d by the expectatio­n of improved business conditions for the sector as restrictio­ns are eased and as pent-up demand is released,” said Mr Barry.

“Indeed, the recent Government announceme­nt that residentia­l and childcare-related constructi­on can restart from this week marks an important, albeit partial, step in the sector’s recovery journey,” he said.

Employment in the sector has also continued to fall, noted Ulster Bank.

Despite a continuing decline in purchasing activity in the sector, Ulster Bank noted that the rate of input-cost inflation accelerate­d for the third month in a row last month, and at the fastest pace since February 2018.

 ?? PHOTO: PAUL SHERWOOD ?? Expectatio­n: Simon Barry, chief economist Republic of Ireland at Ulster Bank, said future activity index rose in March.
PHOTO: PAUL SHERWOOD Expectatio­n: Simon Barry, chief economist Republic of Ireland at Ulster Bank, said future activity index rose in March.

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