UK tender prices unlikely to rise significantly in 2019
The latest quarterly tender cost forecast from Mace shows that tender prices in the UK construction industry are unlikely to grow significantly in 2019.
The report, published today, shows little cause for optimism for the sector as a hoped-for uptick in output in the first quarter of 2019 fails to materialise.
Total growth in the construction industry was only 0.7% in 2018 and, although this pushed output to a record high, it was also the slowest growth rate since 2012. This slowdown, along with high levels of uncertainty, will have given contractors and subcontractors limited scope when it came to raising tender prices last year.
In many cases, input inflation will have far outstripped tender price increases. A weakening in both earnings growth and material price inflation at the end of the year may have helped combat some of these pressures.
Brexit uncertainty means the environment is unlikely to improve in the short-term, and while the easing in both labour and material inflation should continue this year, contractors and sub-contractors still won’t find it easy to pass on higher tender prices.
To see the latest set of tender cost forecasts for the next three years, please download the full report.
Steven Mason, Managing Director, Cost Consultancy said:
"While fluctuating levels of growth from one quarter to the next has done little for market confidence, it has failed to suppress increases in overall input costs, with labour costs in particular continuing to rise, albeit at a slower rate.
“We expect this to result in a modest increase in tender prices in 2019, but the continued uncertainty surrounding Brexit and the global economy as a whole will inevitably have a major part to play as we move into the second quarter.”