Ai Group Head of Policy, Peter Burn, said: "With Australia's two largest states affected by COVID-19 outbreaks and associated restrictions, the construction industry slipped into contraction in July after a robust nine-month expansion. The negative national result masked continued growth outside of NSW and Victoria and further expansions in both house building and commercial construction. Engineering construction was slightly lower while apartment building fell further into contraction. Builders and constructors reported difficulties obtaining inputs and skilled labour. Some of this is due to COVID-19 restrictions and some attributable to the strength of the expansion over the previous nine months. While there was some easing in the pace of price pressures, employers reported strong wages growth in July. New orders were broadly flat across the construction industry with the further slump in apartment orders balancing continued, though slower growth in the rest of the industry. The outlook over the next couple of months will depend heavily on the paths of the COVID-19 outbreaks and the extent of restrictions," Dr Burn said.
HIA Chief Economist, Tim Reardon, said: "Restrictions on builders working onsite have caused building activity to contract sharply in July. The Australian PCI® was dragged into negative territory for the first time in nine months following restrictions imposed to onsite building in NSW. The volume of building activity had been increasing since September 2020 but without the ability to work onsite the reported levels of building activity fell 14.4 per cent. Lockdowns in other cities have also impaired activity and new orders. Despite these lockdowns, there remains a record volume of new detached home building and renovation work to be undertaken, when restrictions ease. For builders in other regions, their main challenge remains keeping up with the large volume of work. Capacity constraints will remain a major challenge for at least the rest of this year. The exception to this is apartment construction, which continues to feel the adverse impact of constraints on migration," Mr Reardon said.
Australian PCI® – Key Findings for July:
Seasonally adjusted |
Index this month |
Change from last month |
12 month average |
Trend |
Index this month |
Change from last month |
12 month average |
Australian PCI® |
48.7 |
-6.8 |
53.9 |
House building |
54.1 |
-3.1 |
60.6 |
Activity |
40.4 |
-14.4 |
52.1 |
Apartments |
35.0 |
-5.3 |
43.6 |
Employment |
60.8 |
2.5 |
57.1 |
Commercial |
52.9 |
-0.1 |
51.0 |
New Orders |
49.5 |
-6.6 |
53.2 |
Engineering |
49.2 |
-3.9 |
49.3 |
Supplier Deliveries |
43.3 |
-7.6 |
53.3 |
||||
Input Prices |
97.2 |
-1.1 |
83.3 |
||||
Selling Prices |
81.2 |
-4.0 |
63.5 |
||||
Average Wages |
77.1 |
6.7 |
63.6 |
Capacity Utilisation (% - seasonally adjusted) |
85.4 |
0.0 |
79.7 |
Results above 50 points indicate expansion.
Background: The Ai Group/HIA Australian PCI® is a seasonally adjusted national composite index based on the diffusion indexes for activity, orders/new business, deliveries and employment with varying weights. An Australian PCI® reading above 50 points indicates that construction activity is generally expanding; below 50, that it is declining. The distance from 50 is indicative of the strength of the expansion or decline.
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Media Enquiries
Tony Melville (Ai Group) – 0419 190 347
Tim Reardon (HIA Chief Economist) – 0423 141 031