Austin American-Statesman

Nation’s constructi­on spending falls 0.6% in July to continue trend

Strong homebuildi­ng can’t offset weakness in other categories.

- By Martin Crutsinger

U.S. constructi­on spending fell in July for the third time in four months as strength in home constructi­on wasn’t enough to offset weakness in nonresiden­tial building and government projects.

Constructi­on spending dropped 0.6 percent in July following an even bigger 1.4 percent decline in June, the Commerce Department said Friday. Spending on home constructi­on rose 0.8 percent as single-family homes and remodeling offset a drop in apartments.

Spending on nonresiden­tial projects fell for a second straight month, declining 1.9 percent. Spending on government projects fell 1.4 percent.

With the recent weakness, constructi­on spending is only 1.8 percent higher than a year ago at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $1.21 trillion.

Analysts expect constructi­on will provide modest support for the overall economy in the months ahead.

The fall in nonresiden­tial activity in July was the biggest setback in nearly two years, since a 2.1 percent decline in October 2015. In July, spending on offices, shopping centers and hotels all declined.

Spending on government constructi­on projects was down 1.2 percent at the federal level and 1.4 percent at the state and local level.

The government reported earlier this week that the overall economy grew at a brisk 3 percent pace in the April-June quarter, up from a lackluster 1.2 percent gain in the first quarter, as measured by the gross domestic product.

However, spending on residentia­l constructi­on actually fell at a 6.8 percent rate in the spring following a sizable 11.1 percent gain in the first quarter. Economists believe the spring slowdown in home building was in part a payback after unusually warm weather had boosted activity in the winter.

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