High demand and low supply ‘likely to drive up tender price inflation’

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TURNER & Townsend is warning clients to plan for the return of rising construction inflation, as the UK Government’s ambitions for housebuilding and infrastructure become threatened by falling capacity.

The professional services company’s Winter 2024 UK Construction Market Intelligence report (UKMI), predicts that high demand and low supply across real estate and infrastructure is likely to drive tender price inflation back up.

Turner & Townsend is forecasting TPI rates over the next two years will increase from 3% to 3.5% for real estate, and from 4.5 to 5% for infrastructure.  This reverses the trend of softening inflation seen since the end of the pandemic.

Construction demand is expected to be driven by key government pledges, such as £100 billion of capital spending announced in the autumn budget, and its ambition to build 1.5 million homes in five years. Turner & Townsend said the industry could be set to be the enabler of important economic growth across the country’s priority sectors, but is being ‘constrained’ by challenges in the supply chain.

The report highlights construction employment has fallen by 6.6% since Q2 2022, and levels are now 11% lower than before Covid. Recent insolvencies including ISG have contributed to this. As a consequence, wage inflation is rising, with average rates 6.5% higher over the year to September 2024, and even greater for skilled workers.

Turner & Townsend added that one reason overall inflationary predictions are not higher, is that while government targets are ambitious, in practice, new work orders in segments like housebuilding are falling – seeing a 22% decrease from Q2 to Q3 2024.  The high costs of labour and materials, together with planning system barriers, are said to be challenging viability for new housing schemes.

Given the scale of the challenge, Turner & Townsend is calling on clients to view contractors as ‘true partners’ rather than just suppliers – sharing risk and reward to avoid further insolvencies and encourage training and investment.

James Darrie, director and strategic lead for Scotland at Turner & Townsend, said, “It’s no surprise to those in the sector that overall activity and capacity is falling – but this is particularly impactful at a moment when construction should be at the very centre of driving economic revival and enabling growth across Scotland. Every key sector identified by the UK Government in its industrial strategy relies on construction to build and grow, and this is equally true for Scotland’s key industries such as renewable energy, life sciences, and advanced manufacturing.

“To achieve this, we need to stem the wave of insolvencies and shrinking labour force. We must make sure talent is not lost as contractors close – recruiting or reskilling them to bring them back into the workforce. At the same time, we need investment in the next generation of skills – looking beyond traditional construction and education routes, across to tech sectors and different pools of talent that will help revolutionise the sector, embrace digital solutions, and drive productivity.

“We also need to break down the barrier that can often exist between clients and suppliers – working collaboratively as partners to share risk, discuss potential problems, and deliver projects successfully.”