Public and privately funded construction spending
ended 2020 with a 4.7 percent increase over spending in 2019. The U.S. Census
Bureau said the combined outlays for the recent year was $1.430 trillion
compared to 1.365 trillion the prior year. Residential spending, which
increased significantly on a percentage basis in the public sector although the
dollar amount remained relatively small, was an aggregate of $616.169 billion
for the year, an 11.8 percent increase from 2019.
During the last month of the year, total
construction spending was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $1.490
trillion. This was a 1.0 percent gain from November and 5.7 percent higher than
the same month in 2019. On a non-adjusted basis $112.706 billion in
construction was put in place compared to $124.760 billion in November.
Privately funded construction in December was
at an annual rate of $1.138 trillion, a 1.2 percent change from November and up
6.5 percent from December 2019. On a non-adjusted basis spending totaled
$87,627 billion, down from $96.144 billion in November. For the year, private
sector expenditures totaled $1.079 trillion, up 4.7 per cent from the full 2019
amount.
Residential spending on behalf of the
private sector in December was at an annualized rate of $691.000 billion, with
$365.032 billion accounted for by single-family construction. Another $91.369 was
spent on constructing units in building with five or more. The months total
residential construction was at a rate that was 3.1 percent higher than in November
and 20.7 percent higher year-over-year. Single family spending was 5.8 percent
and 23.5 percent higher than the two earlier periods.
Non-adjusted spending for residential
construction totaled $50.595 for the month, down from $57.630 billion in
November. The single-family total of $27.382 billion was down from $30.280
billion the prior month. Total residential spending for the year, $607.593
billion, was 11.6 percent higher than spending throughout 2019. Single family
spending grew 7.9 percent to $302.049 billion and the multifamily share grew 6.3
percent to $85.169 billion.
Publicly funded construction was at a rate
of $352.822 billion in December, an 0.5 percent monthly gain and up 3.0 percent
compared to the previous December. Residential spending was at a rate of $9.172
billion, a 22.7 percent higher rate than a year earlier. For the entire year
total construction expenses were $350.460 billion, an increase of 4.8 percent
from 2019. It is interesting that construction moneys increased by essentially
the same percentage year-over-year for both public and private sectors.
As noted above, public sector spending on
residential construction rose significantly in 2020 to a total of $8.576
billion. This is a 32.1 percent change from the $6.493 billion spent in 2019.
Source: mortgagenewsdaily.com