The Commercial Appeal

Building spending drops 1% in January

- MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON - Builders cut back on constructi­on spending in January by the largest amount in nine months, with weakness stemming from the biggest reduction in government activity in nearly 15 years.

Constructi­on spending fell 1 percent in January, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. It was the first decline since September and the biggest drop since a 2.9 percent dip in April.

Spending on government projects tumbled 5 percent, the largest onemonth drop since March 2002.

President Donald Trump wants to sharply increase spending on government infrastruc­ture projects over the next decade. But his proposal is expected to face hurdles winning approval in Congress at a time of rising budget deficits.

For January, spending by the federal government on constructi­on projects was down 7.4 percent, while spending by state and local government­s fell 4.8 percent. The overall decline in government spending pushed total activity in the category down to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $268.7 billion, the lowest level since last March.

Residentia­l constructi­on showed a modest gain, while private nonresiden­tial activity was flat.

The 1 percent fall in total constructi­on spending followed a tiny 0.1 percent rise in December and left total activity at an annualrate­of$1.18trillion,3.1percent higher than a year ago.

Economists believe that constructi­on activity should provide support for overall economic growth this year.

 ?? NIKKI BOERTMAN, THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Dr. Reginald Coopwood, CEO of Regional One Health, in the lobby at their new East Campus on Quince.
NIKKI BOERTMAN, THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Dr. Reginald Coopwood, CEO of Regional One Health, in the lobby at their new East Campus on Quince.

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