Construction output decline slows







Output in the UK construction industry fell in October, down 5.1% from the same month last year, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).






Compared with the previous month, construction output rose 8.3%.


Construction is a component of gross domestic product (GDP), which measures the value of everything produced in the economy.


This figure is the first contributor to the eagerly-awaited fourth quarter GDP, which will be released next month.


The year-on-year construction output figure has fallen for 14 of the past 15 months, although October’s fall was the smallest decline since February.


Output had dropped 13.2% in September, compared with September 2011.


Figures for each of the 12 previous months were revised by the ONS, although it said the revisions had had a “negligible” effect on GDP figures.


The month-on-month growth mirrors the result of the Markit/CIPS Construction Purchasing Managers’ Index for October, which was released last month and suggested fractional growth in the sector.


At the time, Markit economist Tim Moore said: “The bigger picture remains bleak,”


The Office for Budget Responsibility has predicted that the UK economy will contract slightly in the whole of 2012, which would mean a negative reading for GDP for the last three months of the year.


The construction sector reading has a relatively small weighting in the GDP figures.


It is outweighed by the service sector, the October figures for which are due to be released on Friday 21 December.


BBC News – Business


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