AGC Sees Soaring Prices And Delivery Delays For Lumber & Steel
March 1,
2021
Association Officials Call for Removing Tariffs on Key Materials to Provide
Immediate Relief for Hard-Hit Contractors and Exploring Ways to Expand Long-Term
Capacity for Steel, Lumber and Other Materials
Price
increases—some to record-setting levels—and long delivery delays are causing
hardships for construction firms that are also experiencing challenges in
completing projects with crews limited by illness or new work site procedures
resulting from the pandemic, according to an analysis by the Associated General
Contractors of America of government data released today. Association officials
urged the Biden administration to review and rescind a range of trade tariffs in
place, including for Canadian lumber, that are contributing to the price
increases.
“The extreme price increases, as reflected in today’s producer price index
report and other sources, are harming contractors on existing projects and
making it difficult to bid new work at a profitable level,” said Ken Simonson,
the association’s chief economist. “While contractors have kept bids nearly flat
until now, project owners and budget officials should anticipate the prospect
that contractors will have to pass along their higher costs in upcoming bids.”
Prices for materials and services used in construction and contractors’ bid
prices both declined at the beginning of the pandemic but have diverged sharply
since last April, Simonson said. A government index that measures the selling
price for materials and services used in new nonresidential construction
increased 2.5 percent from December to January and 10.7 percent since April.
Meanwhile, the producer price index for new nonresidential construction—a
measure of what contractors say they would charge to erect five types of
nonresidential buildings—increased only 0.2 percent over both the latest month
and the nine months since April.
“The
government data was collected more than a month ago, and numerous sources
indicate price increases have continued or even accelerated since then,”
Simonson added. “For instance, the Framing Lumber Composite Price compiled by
the publication Random Lengths hit an all-time high last week. Several steel
product prices are also reported at record levels, and copper futures are at an
eight-year peak. Meanwhile, delivery delays are affecting both imports and
domestically sourced construction inputs.”
Association officials said that while there are a range of reasons driving price
spikes for key building materials, tariffs on numerous materials, including
lumber and steel, are contributing to those cost increases.
They urged the Biden administration to rescind these
tariffs to provide immediate relief to construction employers caught between
stagnant bid prices and rising materials costs. They also urged the
administration and Congress to explore new ways to expand capacity for a host of
key construction materials by reviewing regulatory impediments to expanding
logging and steel production, for example.
“Left unchecked, these rising materials prices threaten to undermine the
economic recovery by inflating the cost of infrastructure and economic
development projects,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief
executive officer. “Widespread harm is caused by maintaining tariffs on products
that so many Americans need to improve their houses, modernize their
infrastructure and revitalize their economy.”
View producer price index
data. View
chart of gap between input costs and bid
prices. |