Construction Firms Have Mixed Outlook For 2024 As Expectations For Demand Remain Mostly Positive, But Less Upbeat Than Last Year Amid New Challenges
New Industry Outlook Shows Firms Are Counting on Public Sector, Data Center and Manufacturing Construction to Offset Declines in Retail, Lodging & Office Work; Two-Thirds of Firms Plan to Hire; Many Worry about Inflation
Construction contractors have a decidedly mixed outlook for 2024 as firms predict transitions in demand for projects, the types of challenges they will face and the technologies, including artificial intelligence, they will embrace according to survey results the Associated General Contractors of America and Sage released today. Amid these changes, contractors are struggling to cope with significant labor shortages, the impacts of higher interest rates and input costs, and a supply chain that, while better, is still far from normal, according to A Construction Market in Transition: The 2024 Construction Hiring and Business Outlook.
鈥2024 offers a mixed bag for construction contractors: on one hand, demand for many types of projects should continue to expand and firms will continue to invest in the tools they need to be more efficient,鈥 said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association鈥檚 chief executive officer. 鈥淢eanwhile, they face significant challenges when it comes to finding workers, coping with rising costs and weathering the impacts of higher interest rates.鈥
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Materials:
- National Survey Results
- Press Release
- The 2024 Construction Hiring and Business Outlook Report
- 2024 Outlook Media Call Remarks
- 2024 Outlook Highlights
Regional results:
State-specific results:
You can also view results for open-shop, union, small (under $50 million), mid-size ($50.1 to 500 million) and large (over $500 million) firms.
麻豆传媒's Chief Economist, Ken Simonson provides an overview of results for the 2024 Construction Hiring and Business Outlook Survey: