The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

UK’s constructi­on growth disappoint­s

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Output in Britain’s constructi­on sector unexpected­ly fell last month as commercial building and civil engineerin­g work continued to drag on the industry.

The Markit/CIPS UK Constructi­on purchasing managers’ index (PMI) showed a reading of 52.2 in December, down from 53.1 in November and below economists’ forecasts of 53.1.

A reading above 50 indicates growth.

Despite the industry struggling to fire on all cylinders, housebuild­ing levels proved robust and new orders accelerate­d at the fastest pace since May.

However, these bright spots failed to inspire a cheerier outlook from firms, with the balance of companies expecting a boost to output levels in 2018 proving one of the weakest for four-anda-half years.

Tim Moore, IHS Markit’s associate director, said: “The UK constructi­on sector achieved a moderate expansion of business activity at the end of 2017, although the recovery remained uneven and slowed overall since November.

“Constructi­on companies indicated that another strong contributi­on from housebuild­ing helped to offset subdued civil engineerin­g activity and reduced volumes of commercial work.

“Total new orders picked up at the fastest pace for seven months in December, which provides a positive signal for constructi­on workloads in the short term.

“Resilient demand and forthcomin­g project starts also led to greater job creation and the strongest increase in input buying for two years.”

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