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Rising Materials Prices And Supply Chain Disruptions Are Hurting Many Construction Firms Already Struggling To Cope With Pandemic Impacts

New Producer Price Index Data Confirms Association Survey Showing Most Construction Firms are Being Harmed by Skyrocketing Costs for Products Like Lumber while Shipping Problems Impact Project Schedules

Another round of steep price increases and supply-chain disruptions are wreaking hardships on contractors, driving up construction costs and slowing projects, according to an analysis by the Associated General Contractors of America of government data released today. The data comes a day after the association released a new survey showing materials delays and price increases are affecting most contractors.  Association officials urged the Biden administration to end a range of trade tariffs in place, including for Canadian lumber, that are contributing to the price increases, and to help uncork supply-chain bottlenecks.

鈥淏oth today鈥檚 producer price index report and our survey results show escalating materials costs and lengthening delivery times are making life difficult for contractors and their customers, including hospitals, schools, and other facilities needed to get the economy back on track,鈥 said Ken Simonson, the association鈥檚 chief economist. 鈥淧roject owners and budget officials should anticipate that projects will cost more and have longer鈥攑erhaps uncertain鈥攃ompletion times, owing to these circumstances that contractors cannot control.鈥

Prices for materials and services used in construction and contractors鈥 bid prices both declined at the beginning of the pandemic but have diverged sharply since last April, Simonson said. A government index that measures the selling price for materials and services used in new nonresidential construction jumped 1.9 percent from January to February and 12.8 percent since April 2020. Meanwhile, the producer price index for new nonresidential construction鈥攁 measure of what contractors say they would charge to erect five types of nonresidential buildings鈥攊ncreased only 0.3 percent last month and 0.5 percent in the 10 months since April.

鈥淭he nearly 1500 contractors who responded to our survey overwhelmingly reported rising costs, shortages, and delays in receiving needed materials, parts, and supplies,鈥 Simonson added. 鈥淓ighty-five percent of respondents said their costs for these items have risen in the past year, and a majority鈥58 percent鈥攔eported projects were taken longer than before the pandemic struck. This situation will intensify the cost squeeze apparent in the producer price index data.鈥

Association officials called on the president to remove tariffs on key construction materials, including steel and lumber. They also urged Washington officials to look at ways to address supply chain problems by making it easier for Canadian materials to enter the country and exploring regulatory measures to increase shipping capacity. They noted that construction firms are already absorbing the costs associated with protecting workers from the pandemic, and that materials price spikes and shipping delays are making it harder for firms to cope.

鈥淐ontractors are caught between a pandemic market that isn鈥檛 willing to pay more for projects and materials prices that continue to spike even as delivery schedules become less reliable,鈥 said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association鈥檚 chief executive officer. 鈥淐onstruction firms won鈥檛 be able to thrive if rising materials prices continue to shrink already pressured profit margins.鈥

View producer price index data. View chart of gap between input costs and bid prices. View 澳门六合彩开奖预测鈥檚 survey.

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