The Palm Beach Post

Constructi­on spending hits record high

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON — U.S. constructi­on spending surged 1.8 percent to a record high in April as home building rose by the largest amount in 24 years.

The April gain reversed a 1.7 percent drop in March, the Commerce Department reported Friday.

The strength stemmed from a sizable 4.5 percent rise in residentia­l constructi­on, the biggest percentage gain since November 1993. Non-residentia­l constructi­on rose by a more modest 0.8 percent while spending on government projects fell 1.3 percent as both the federal government and state and local government­s saw declines.

The overall gain pushed constructi­on to an all-time high of $1.31 trillion at a seasonally adjusted annual rate, 7.6 percent above the level of a year ago.

Constructi­on is expected to provide a healthy contributi­on to economic growth this year.

The gain in home constructi­on marked a rebound from a 2.6 percent drop in March and was driven by a 3.6 percent jump in the volatile apartment sector.

Spending on single-family homes was flat in April. But the overall level of residentia­l spending was the highest since October 2006.

The increase in nonresiden­tial spending included a 3 percent rise in spending on hotels and motels and a 1.8 percent rise in office building.

The weakness in government spending reflects in part tight budgets at all levels of government.

State and local constructi­on spending edged down 0.3 percent, while spending by the federal government dropped 10.2 percent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States