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Financial stimulus in the UK not reaching the construction industry

August 12th, 2009 by tom | Filed under Daily News, Employment, Recession, The Budget.

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Recent reports have it that the injection of public money that is supposed to pump new life into the construction industry is just not making it. Construction projects across the UK lay abandoned and uncompleted sector, glaring evidence that the sharpest contraction that the building sector has ever known looks a long way from ending.

According to a recent survey carried out on behalf of the industry, the UK government pledge to re-programme more than £3 billion of publicly owned construction projects , that were due to begin in 2010 and 2011 to this year, have failed to materialise as yet. The idea of bringing these projects forward was to offset that painful lack of new building starts in the private sector.

However a recent report from the Construction Products Association revealed that a nationwide cross section of their members reported that instead of the promised increase in new projects, even existing construction projects have been mothballed by the UK government as funding dries up. These projects include important and much needed public works including schools, hospitals road works and general infrastructure, had found public work had declined over the past year. Of the civil engineering and building companies contributing to the survey, 47 per cent of them reported lower work rates in the first quarter of 2009. Construction companies involved in building social housing reported a fall of project completions 27 percent compared to last year.

According to a spokesman for the UK Contractor’s Group, the government stimuli that was promised in Darling’s budget and pre-budget reports have so far failed to appear and their absence is having a very distinct impact on the UK construction industry, which has been hardest hit by the recession. The sector accounts for about 8 per cent of UK output and a similar percentage of jobs.

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