Last year ended on a down note for private nonresidential construction spending with December coming in 0.4 percent lower than November, according to the Feb. 2 report by the U.S. Census Bureau. Despite the decline, private nonresidential construction spending finished up 8.9 percent for the year. Total nonresidential construction spending is $726.8 billion, down 0.6 percent on a monthly basis and up 8.1 percent from last December (see graph below).
Meanwhile, 13 of the 16 subsectors in the nonresidential construction sector posted gains from December 2007 to December 2008 with manufacturing (up 46.8 percent), public safety (up 31.4 percent) and water supply construction (up 27.5 percent). Only seven subsectors posted increases in spending from November to December with conservation and development (up 11.6 percent), communication (up 4.9 percent) and manufacturing construction (up 3.0 percent).
However, several subsectors posting spending declines on a year-over-year basis are communication (down 21.9 percent), commercial (down 11.5 percent) and amusement and recreation (down 5.6 percent). Those showing the largest decreases on a monthly basis include power (down 3.5 percent), amusement and recreation (down 2.7 percent) and highway and street construction (down 2.5 percent).
Public nonresidential construction is also down slightly (0.8 percent) from November but up 6.9 percent from last December 2007. But the bad news for the year is housing as residential construction continued to drop, down 3.2 percent from November and 22.3 percent from December 2007. Overall, total construction spending was down 1.4 percent from last month and down 3.6 percent from the same time last year.