The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Constructi­on spending flat in September

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON — Spending on U.S. constructi­on projects was essentiall­y unchanged in September, the weakest showing since June, as an increase in home constructi­on was offset by a slide in spending on government projects.

The Commerce Department said Thursday that the flat reading for September followed a 0.8 percent rise in August.

The strength last month was driven by a 0.6 percent increase in residentia­l constructi­on and a 0.1 percent increase in nonresiden­tial activity, which pushed this category to an all-time high. However, these gains were offset by a 0.9 percent drop in spending on government projects.

The increase in residentia­l constructi­on featured an 8.7 percent jump in apartment constructi­on, which offset a 0.8 percent drop in single-family homes.

Apartment constructi­on can be volatile from month to month. Overall, the home sector has struggled for much of this year as builders have had to cope with rising costs for land, lumber and labor. Part of the increase in lumber prices stemmed from the higher tariffs the Trump administra­tion has imposed on Canadian softwood lumber.

Residentia­l constructi­on has been a drag on the overall economy, falling every quarter this year.

While business constructi­on was strong in the first two quarters, it fell at a 7.9 percent rate in the July-September quarter.

Although overall constructi­on was flat last month on a percentage basis, it did climb enough to push total spending to a record annual rate of $1.33 trillion.

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