Real gross domestic product (GDP) expanded only 0.5% on a seasonally adjusted annual rate during 2016's first quarter according to an analysis of Bureau of Economic Analysis data released today by Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC). This disappointing figure follows a 1.4% annualized rate of economic output expansion during the fourth quarter of 2015.
Nonresidential fixed investment struggled with a 5.9% decline during the year's first three months after falling 2.1% during 2015's final quarter. Nonresidential fixed investment in structures fared particularly poorly, declining 10.7% during the first quarter on an annualized basis while nonresidential investment in equipment fell 8.6%.
"Aside from consumer spending growth, state and local government spending growth and residential building, very little expanded in America during the first three months of 2016," said ABC Chief Economist Anirban Basu. "It is quite conceivable that the current U.S. economic expansion will end before the economy registers a 3% or better rate of growth for a single calendar year. The last time the U.S. economy expanded more than 3% was in 2005, when the economy expanded 3.4%."
"Corporate profitability has been slipping in recent quarters and the mergers and acquisition marketplace has heated up, an unfavorable sign for nonresidential contractors," said Basu. "Many corporate CEOs continue to use available cash to purchase competitors either to gain access to product pipelines, thereby diminishing required product development expenses, or to generate cost savings by eliminating duplicative functions. The result is a lack of business investment generally and a slowing pace of private nonresidential construction spending growth. If it not for an enormous amount of foreign money coming to our shores, private nonresidential construction growth would have been even softer in early 2016. While falling energy-related investment and seasonal factors represent important parts of the story, there are indications of a broader malaise."
The following segments highlight the first quarter GDP release:
- Personal consumption expenditures rose 1.9% on an annualized basis during the first quarter of 2016 after growing 2.4% during the fourth quarter of 2015.
- Spending on goods inched 0.1% higher during the first quarter after expanding by 1.6% during the fourth quarter.
- Real final sales of domestically produced output increased 0.9% in the first quarter after rising 1.6% in the fourth.
- Federal government spending fell by 1.6% in the year's first quarter after expanding 2.3% in the fourth quarter of 2015.
- Nondefense spending increased by 1.5% in both the first quarter of 2016 and the fourth quarter of 2015.
- National defense spending fell by 3.6% in the fourth quarter after registering a 2.8% increase in the previous quarter.
- State and local government spending increased by 2.9% in the first quarter after falling 1.2% during the prior quarter.
Related Stories
| Aug 11, 2010
More construction firms likely to perform stimulus-funded work in 2010 as funding expands beyond transportation programs
Stimulus funded infrastructure projects are saving and creating more direct construction jobs than initially estimated, according to a new analysis of federal data released today by the Associated General Contractors of America. The analysis also found that more contractors are likely to perform stimulus funded work this year as work starts on many of the non-transportation projects funded in the initial package.
| Aug 11, 2010
Broadway-style theater headed to Kentucky
One of Kentucky's largest performing arts venues should open in 2011—that's when construction is expected to wrap up on Eastern Kentucky University's Business & Technology Center for Performing Arts. The 93,000-sf Broadway-caliber theater will seat 2,000 audience members and have a 60×24-foot stage proscenium and a fly loft.
| Aug 11, 2010
Citizenship building in Texas targets LEED Silver
The Department of Homeland Security's new U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services facility in Irving, Texas, was designed by 4240 Architecture and developed by JDL Castle Corporation. The focal point of the two-story, 56,000-sf building is the double-height, glass-walled Ceremony Room where new citizens take the oath.
| Aug 11, 2010
Carpenters' union helping build its own headquarters
The New England Regional Council of Carpenters headquarters in Dorchester, Mass., is taking shape within a 1940s industrial building. The Building Team of ADD Inc., RDK Engineers, Suffolk Construction, and the carpenters' Joint Apprenticeship Training Committee, is giving the old facility a modern makeover by converting the existing two-story structure into a three-story, 75,000-sf, LEED-certif...
| Aug 11, 2010
Wisconsin becomes the first state to require BIM on public projects
As of July 1, the Wisconsin Division of State Facilities will require all state projects with a total budget of $5 million or more and all new construction with a budget of $2.5 million or more to have their designs begin with a Building Information Model. The new guidelines and standards require A/E services in a design-bid-build project delivery format to use BIM and 3D software from initial ...
| Aug 11, 2010
News Briefs: GBCI begins testing for new LEED professional credentials... Architects rank durability over 'green' in product attributes... ABI falls slightly in April, but shows market improvement
News Briefs: GBCI begins testing for new LEED professional credentials... Architects rank durability over 'green' in product attributes... ABI falls slightly in April, but shows market improvement
| Aug 11, 2010
University of Florida's traditionally modern graduate building
The University of Florida's Hough Hall Graduate Studies Building was designed by Rowe Architects, Tampa, and Sasaki Associates, Boston, to blend with the school's traditional collegiate gothic architecture outside, but reflect a 21st-century education facility inside. Tallahassee-based Ajax Building Corporation is constructing the $19 million facility, which will have traditional exterior detai...
| Aug 11, 2010
Florida International University's cantilevered design
Suffolk Construction's Miami-Dade business unit is serving as GC for the $14 million School of International and Public Affairs building at the University Park Campus of Florida International University. Designed by Arquitectonica, Miami, the five-story, 58,408-sf building will have a café and three auditoriums on the ground level; the largest auditorium will have a 40-foot cantilever abov...