Marlborough Express

20,000 constructi­on jobs on the line

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While building work is springing back to life, a constructi­on downturn with huge job losses is due next year, according to Westpac.

Senior economist Satish Ranchhod said that with up to a quarter of a million people in constructi­on-related jobs, it was quite possible that up to 20,000 jobs were in danger, as projects in the early stages failed to go ahead.

‘‘The coming year will see large falls in privately funded residentia­l and commercial constructi­on, putting large numbers of jobs at risk.’’

He predicted residentia­l building work would fall 20 per cent below pre-covid levels in the year ahead, as clients battled with ‘‘job losses, stretched balance sheets, and nervousnes­s about the economic backdrop’’.

Commercial constructi­on was set to fall by an estimated 15 per cent over 2021 and 2022, weighed down by weak tenant demand and investor nerves.

The Government’s big spendup in infrastruc­ture constructi­on would not offset the decline, but the situation would not be fully obvious until late next year, Ranchhod said.

‘‘That’s because of the large pipeline of work that was already planned prior to the outbreak of Covid-19 and a backlog of work that built up during the lockdown period,’’ he said.

‘‘However, the number of new constructi­on projects coming to market or going through the consenting process will fall over the coming months.

‘‘There is also likely to be a higher-than-usual number of planned projects that are cancelled.’’

Westpac estimates the constructi­on sector directly employs 258,000 people, and Ranchhod said it appeared the redundanci­es had only just started. After 2021, he expected a gradual pick up again, most rapidly for work on infrastruc­ture and publicly owned buildings.

In residentia­l, the weak economy would see new home sales stall, and developers would be reluctant to bring new residentia­l projects to market until things improved.

Scott Mckenzie, chief executive of unlisted commercial property fund PMG, agreed some proposed office and other commercial buildings would not make it to the market. ‘‘You need market confidence to be able to deliver those projects but liquidity – funding – is getting harder to access and that will slow down developmen­ts in the short-term to medium term at least.’’

Westpac’s gloomy assessment follows one by the BNZ, which forecast that house prices would dive up to 12 per cent in the next three years.

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