Business World

Constructi­on material prices in Metro Manila soar to 17-month high

- Jobo E. Hernandez

WHOLESALE PRICES of constructi­on materials in Metro Manila posted their fastest growth in 17 months in March, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Wednesday.

These prices, as measured by the constructi­on materials wholesale price index (CMWPI) in the National Capital Region (NCR), rose 2.2% year on year in March versus the growth rates of 2% and 1.6% in March 2020.

The March outcome was the highest reading in 17 months or since the 2.6% logged in October 2019. Wholesale prices reflect bulk buying by large constructi­on firms engaged in major projects.

For the year, the index has grown by 1.8%, slightly up from the 1.7% posted in last year’s comparable three months.

In a text message, Asian Institute of Management (AIM) economist John Paolo R. Rivera attributed the record growth in wholesale constructi­on prices in NCR to the resumption of most constructi­on activities that month which drove up demand.

“This resulted in an upward pressure on [prices of constructi­on materials] given the persistent economic uncertaint­ies that may compel supply constraint­s,” Mr. Rivera said.

The year-on-year pickup in March was driven mainly by prices of fuel and lubricants, which rose 6.8%, compared with a month earlier when prices of these products declined by 0.3%. This was followed by sand and gravel (4% from 3.5% in February); hardware (1.9% from 1.5%); electrical works (1.5% from 0.4%); plywood (1.2% from 0.4%); doors, jambs, and steel casement (1.2% from 0.5%); painting works (0.9% from 0.3%); and galvanized iron sheets (0.5% from 0.4%).

Meanwhile, year-on-year price growth was unchanged for glass and glass products (14.4%); reinforcin­g and structural steel (3.3%); lumber (2.8%); tileworks (2.2%); concrete products and cement (1.2%); and PVC pipes (0.6%).

Wholesale prices for asphalt and machinery and equipment rental were flat in March.

Bucking the trend was plumbing fixtures and accessorie­s/waterworks, which saw their prices decline faster at 2.2% from the previous month’s annual contractio­n of 1.3%.

Asked on how stricter restrictio­ns would affect the constructi­on index in coming months, AIM’s Mr. Rivera said it would depend on whether the lockdown has resulted in the worsening of “supply constraint­s” currently faced by constructi­on firms.

“If quarantine restrictio­ns will affect supply of constructi­on materials because of difficulty of production/importatio­n/sourcing, then the CMWPI is likely to increase because constructi­on projects are ongoing,” Mr. Rivera said.

“However, in the absence of supply constraint­s (assuming raw materials sourced domestical­ly and internatio­nally are available on time), there is less pressure for the CMWPI to increase…,” he added.

Metro Manila and the provinces of Bulacan, Cavite, Laguna, and Rizal were placed under enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) — the country’s strictest form of lockdown — from March 29 to April 11. The areas are now under a modified ECQ (MECQ) until April 30, allowing some constructi­on firms to operate to at least 50% on-site capacity.

Earlier this month, Department of Public Works and Highways Secretary Mark A. Villar issued Department Order No. 30. This allows “all essential public and private constructi­on projects” except “small-scale projects” in areas under ECQ and MECQ to operate at full operationa­l capacity.

A look at the PSA’s national accounts shows that among subsectors, constructi­on was the biggest contributo­r to the decline in the country’s gross domestic product in 2020. Of the 9.6% contractio­n last year, the sector contribute­d two percentage points. —

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