Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Spending on constructi­on in US hits record level

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON — Spending on U.S. constructi­on projects rose to an all-time high in January, helped by strong gains for home constructi­on and government building projects.

The Commerce Department said Monday that constructi­on spending increased 1.8% in January, the strongest monthly rise in nearly two years, pushing total spending to a record seasonally adjusted annual rate of $1.37 trillion.

Spending on home constructi­on jumped 2.1%, the strongest gain since August. The strength came from single-family home constructi­on that rose 2.7% while apartment building was unchanged.

Home building has been seeing strong gains since the summer as falling mortgage rates have helped to spur a rebound after more than a year of lagging activity.

Nonresiden­tial constructi­on was up 0.8% in January with spending in the category that includes shopping centers and religious centers showing some of the biggest gains. Spending on government building projects rose 2.6% with spending by state and local government­s rising 2% to an all-time high while spending by the federal government was up 9.9% to the highest level since May 2012.

After six quarters of declining activity in housing, residentia­l constructi­on has grown at solid rates for the past two quarters with economists expecting that growth to continue this year. The overall economy grew at a moderate 2.1% annual rate in the final three months of last year, but analysts are concerned that the spreading coronaviru­s will depress U.S. growth in the first part of this year because of disruption­s to supply chains and cancellati­ons of public events.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said in a statement Friday that the Fed would be prepared to act to support economic growth if needed.

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