Western Mail

Building in Wales ahead of UK levels

- SION BARRY Business editor sion.barry@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE Welsh constructi­on sector finished 2019 as it started it, with workloads rising and activity growing at a faster rate than in the UK as a whole.

According to the RICS (Royal Institutio­n of Chartered Surveyors) constructi­on and infrastruc­ture market survey for Q4 of 2019, a net balance of plus 16% of respondent­s said workloads rose over the quarter compared to a net balance of plus 12% of UK respondent­s.

Publicly-funded constructi­on activity was the key driver of growth in Wales, with surveyors pointing to increased activity in public housing and other public works. Infrastruc­ture workloads were also reported to be rising at a relatively strong rate.

Meanwhile, surveyors reported a reduced level of private sector house building in Q4.

This is the first time the net balance has been below zero since 2013, albeit marginally so at 7%. Encouragin­gly, Welsh surveyors are relatively positive about the next 12 months, with a net balance of plus 42% expecting workloads to be higher in a year’s time. This is the most confident respondent­s have been about workloads since Q3 of 2018.

Obstacles to potential further growth according to respondent­s include access to finance, which was cited as the biggest impediment in Wales (71% of respondent­s), and a shortage of labour (59% of respondent­s). Surveyors also continue to point to a shortage of adequately skilled labour as a major challenge.

Neil Brierley, RICS constructi­on spokesman in Wales, and regional managing director at Currie & Brown said: “2019 was overall a good year for constructi­on activity in Wales, with workloads said to be rising in all four quarters.

“The General Election result last month also appears to have supported market confidence, with the anticipati­on of additional fiscal spending to be announced at Spring Budget pushing year-ahead workload expectatio­ns higher. That said, the yet-to-be-known relationsh­ip with the EU has kept the economic outlook fragile and this could impact on businesses’ intentions to invest.”

Gareth John Davies of Total Quantity Surveying in Llanelli said: “There is a severe lack of skilled craftspeop­le within the constructi­on industry. Those apprentice­s that are coming through do not yet possess the skills that are required, and self-employed craftspers­on do not pass on their knowledge and experience.”

 ??  ?? > Cranes on the Cardiff skyline: Constructi­on activity in Wales is ahead of the UK as a whole, a new report reveals
> Cranes on the Cardiff skyline: Constructi­on activity in Wales is ahead of the UK as a whole, a new report reveals

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