The AEC Lens Alex Carrick, Chief Economist at ConstructConnect
Alex Carrick is Chief Economist for ConstructConnect. He is a frequent contributor to the Daily Commercial News and the Journal of Commerce. He has delivered presentations throughout North America on the Canadian, United States and world construction outlooks. A trusted and often-quoted source for … More » 8 Mid-January Economic NuggetsJanuary 17th, 2019 by Alex Carrick, Chief Economist at ConstructConnect
Article source: ConstructConnect Well this is a fine pickle, I must say. I’m about to try writing a Nuggets report based on the latest statistical releases and many of the U.S. economy’s key data series have not been updated due to the federal government shutdown. Workers at the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), which compiles jobs numbers and inflation rate figures, are still toiling away. But workers with the Census Bureau, which monitors foreign and retail trade, plus housing starts, are off the job. The number of individuals employed by Washington on a normal workday is a little less than three million. Of that total, and with their paychecks being withheld, 800,000 are now staying at home or working for free. The figure grows considerably larger when sidelined contract workers are included in the tally. To date, this is taking a minor toll on consumer spending, but the impact will become more onerous the longer the stalemate between the President and the House lasts. Prior to recent developments, the story concerning government employment has been largely snooze-inducing. The three levels of government employment – federal, state and local − account for 22.4 million jobs in total. The shares provided by each level have stayed relatively constant over the past ten years. Almost two-thirds (64.5%) of such workers are at the local level; almost one-quarter (23.0%) at the state level; and the remaining 12.5% at the federal level.
Graph 1 shows the performances of federal, state and local government hiring since the end of the recession in July 2009. There’s also a curve for ‘all jobs’ hiring. For ease of comparison, the four data series on monthly jobs levels have been converted to indices, with July 2009’s figures chosen as the base points set equal to 100.0. Subsequent months are expressed relative to July 2009. (For example, say July 2009 = 6,000 jobs and December 2014 = 9,000 jobs; setting July 2009 equal to 100.0 will mean that December 2014, as an index, will be 9,000/6,000 = 150.0.) Graph 1: U.S. Government vs All Jobs Employment Data source: Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)./Chart: ConstructConnect. There was a huge spike in the federal government index in 2010, but that was tied to drafting an ‘army’ of short-term workers to carry out the decennial census. Apart from that exception, the payrolls of all three levels of government have stayed mostly flat. There were some decreases that were most pronounced in 2013 and 2014, but at the end of 2018, the payroll counts of federal, state and local government were nearly exact matches for their positions in July 2009. The ‘all-jobs index’, however, has been consistently shooting higher. Since July 2009, the compound annual rate of total employment increase in America has been about +1.6%. Let’s move on to some other recent findings concerning the U.S. and Canadian economies: (1) ConstructConnect’s ‘grand total’ dollar volume of U.S. construction starts in 2018 was -5.0% compared with 2017. The major type-of-structure breakdowns were as follows: residential, -9.5%; non-residential building, -7.1%; and engineering/civil, +8.8%. For Canada, ‘grand total’ starts were +20.0%, with residential at -14.8%; non-residential building, +80.8%; and engineering, +10.1%. Canada’s big total percent change was bolstered by a 2017 low-base effect. (2) In the U.S., 2018’s largest project initiations were topped by the Foxconn Technology Group’s new manufacturing plant in Wisconsin, with an estimated value of $10 billion. Pipelines in Virginia, West Virginia and Texas were also important to last year’s total starts level. In Canada, the two biggest projects to get underway in 2018 were the LNG export terminal in northwestern B.C. and the Réseau Express Métropolitain (REM) subway project in Montréal. (3) While many of the building subcategories struggled a bit to make dollar-volume ‘starts’ headway last year, 2018 was good for roadwork in both countries, +20% in the U.S. and +36 in Canada. Bridge work also had a banner year in 2018. There was groundbreaking on the $4 Gordie Howe Bridge between Detroit and Windsor, and there were numerous bridge projects scattered around the U.S. – in Boston, New York, Washington, Houston, Dallas, and Denver. (4) 2018 was also an exceptionally fine year for start-ups on high-tech data and fulfillment centers in the U.S. Apple, Amazon, Facebook, and Microsoft all contributed at least one project to ConstrucConnect’s monthly ‘Top 10 Project Starts’ lists throughout the year. By the way, the total dollar volume of the 120 projects in the U.S. monthly Top 10 lists in 2018 was $85.4 billion (USD). The comparable figure for Top 10 projects north of the border was $43.9 billion (CAD). Both countries have truly mega-sized projects; but the U.S. has extra ‘second-tier’ big projects. (5) The Consumer Confidence Index of the Conference Board has been pulling back of late. It fell modestly in November, but retreated more in December, from 136.4 to 128.1. Given that the base level for the index is 1985 = 100.0 (i.e., when expectations were neither too ebullient nor too down-in-the-dumps), it remains quite high. But the trend warrants further watching. The Conference Board’s Expectations Index in December dropped to 99.1 from 112.3 in November. (6) The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) of the Institute for Supply Management has also been easing back lately. In December, it decreased to 54.1% from 59.3% in November. The fact it’s still above 50.0% indicates that both the overall economy and the manufacturing sector are expanding. But 54% is less than the 60%-plus levels that were achieved in three months earlier in 2018 − i.e., in August (61.3%), June (60.2%) and February (60.8%). (7) In lieu of data on U.S. retail sales, which are normally calculated by the Census Bureau (where the workforce is currently idle), I’m including a fascinating graph that shows how Internet and E-auction sales have been chasing and gaining on general merchandise store sales since 2006. In 2006, receipts by the former were less than half what was being rung up at cash registers by the latter. News flash: the pursuit is over and equivalency has been achieved. Graph 2: U.S. Sales by General Merchandise Stores vs Data source: U.S. Census Bureau (Department of Commerce).
Chart: ConstructConnect. (8) Canadian housing starts, based on averages of seasonally adjusted (SA) monthly CMHC data, ended 2018 -2.9% compared with 2017 (i.e., 214,000 units versus 220,400 units). Among the nation’s major cities, Toronto – despite a drop of more than one-third – was still number one in single-family starts (6,405 units). Edmonton (4,814) placed second, ahead of Vancouver (4,592). In multi-family starts, it was Toronto out front all the way, once again (34,702 units and +21% y/y). Montreal was second in multis (22,451; +2%) and Vancouver third (18,812; -12%). Tags: Alex Carrick, Canada, Construction, federal government shutdown, manufacturing Category: ConstructConnect |