Construction spending rises 0.5 percent

Construction spending in September recovers a little after hitting a 10-year low.

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Seth Perlman/AP/File
In this Sept, 13 photo, construction worker Randy Shreves begins building a new residential home in Springfield, Ill. Construction spending edged above $800 billion in September, but is 34 percent below its 2006 peak.

U.S. construction spending, after having fallen to the lowest level in a decade, edged up slightly in September as a gain in residential activity and government projects helped offset weakness in commercial projects.

The Commerce Department said Monday that spending on building projects rose 0.5 percent in September after having fallen 0.2 percent in August to the lowest point since July 2000.

Even with the small September gain, construction activity remains 34 percent below the peak hit in 2006 when builders were enjoying a boom in residential housing. That boom turned into a bust that helped drag the country into a severe recession.

In September, total spending edged up to $801.7 billion at a seasonally adjusted annual rate, compared to spending of $1.21 trillion at an annual rate in March 2006 at the peak of the housing boom.

Residential activity rose 1.8 percent to an annual rate of $231.7 billion in September, the first gain after four straight declines. That weakness reflected the end of a popular government tax credit for homebuyers which had spurred construction before it ended in April.

Private non-residential building projects posted a decline of 1.6 percent to an annual rate of $250.3 billion in September after a 0.8 percent rise in August. The August increase had followed four straight monthly declines in this category, reflecting the deep recession and the trouble builders are having in obtaining financing for shopping centers and other commercial projects.

Spending on government projects rose 1.3 percent to an annual rate of $319.7 billion. That reflected a 6.1 percent jump in federal spending and a more modest 0.8 percent rise in spending by state and local governments.

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