Opinion: Budget disguises long haul ahead

Aaron Morby 14 years ago
Share

It may have been the toughest Budget for a century, but the construction industry  breathed a sigh of relief, at least for now.

An austerity Budget of this scale inevitably deals hammer blows to the economy that will negatively impact on our industry.

The increase in VAT is a good case in point because it  puts cowboys builders firmly back in the saddle.

Surely the temptation grows for cash-strapped home owners to make cash-in-hand payments on domestic building works, undercutting law-abiding, tax-paying builders.

What should be applauded is the Chancellor’s acknowledgement that the dire state of the nation’s finances isn’t down to capital spending but the public sector’s cost base being too high.

His decision to turn the knife on the bloated state and spare the country further capital spending cuts is welcome news that augurs well for the tough times ahead.

Contractors are among the hard working people of this country who need to be treated favourably again while the axe comes down on the work-shy who have exploited Labour’s lax benefits system for too long.

The Chancellor deftly said the door remained open to well-judged projects that could deliver far-reaching economic benefits.

This is what civil engineers are best at and is a positive challenge for all those specialising in value engineering.

The flurry of rail projects mentioned in the Budget offers a clear pointer to the way this Government is thinking on infrastructure. Road builders, judging by earlier project cuts, will far less well.

What there is no escaping, even with this smidgen of “less bad” news, is that we are in for very tough times ahead.

Taken at face value the pledge to maintain overall capital spending levels is misleading.

It disguises the swathe of projects that have already been cut. What’s more the coalition Government is in effect following Labour’s headline capital spending plans, which already built in huge cuts over coming years.

It is a brutal fact that over the next five years total capital spending will be down by £100bn against today’s levels. This monumental figure amounts to just less than a year’s UK construction output.

The expectation is that the private sector will rush in to meet the public demand shortfall. This is a big ask when banks still seem reluctant to fund even relatively low risk projects at the moment.

But it is also an opportunity to resurrect some old business models, perhaps the return of the developer/builder.

The public sector austerity programme is likely to change local auhtority attitudes to the private sector and pave the way for new private sector partnerships.

Certainly outsourcing firms like Interserve stand to gain as local authorities focus spending money more efficiently.

But what does the future hold for the thousands of local and regional building companies?

There have already been misleading reports that the Building Schools for the Future programme is safe because there will be no more spending cuts.

This couldn’t be further from the case. The pledge to maintain capital spending is about the headline figure not departmental spending.

Each Government department’s spending plan will now be means tested against the new house rules demanding significant benefits to the economy.

In the main this means favouring job creation projects in areas that are suffering from high unemployment. It also probably favours low carbon and energy projects.

Whether that leaves any head room for our school builders remains to be seen when the Comprehensive Spending Review is announced on 20 October.

Latest news

100 jobs axed as Geoffrey Osborne confirms administration

Chairman Andrew Osborne calls it a 'sad day' as board loses fight for survival
11 hours ago

£117m-turnover contractor files administration notice

ARJ Construction lodges court notice
17 hours ago

£1bn London Blackfriars tower blocks approved

Trio of buildings rising to 45, 40 and 22 storeys approved by Southwark Council
18 hours ago

Council decides to end Balfour deal after 13 years

Contractor has been maintaining roads across Herefordshire since 2013
18 hours ago

Six civils clients to switch to low carbon concrete and steel

National Highways, Northumbrian Water and Sellafield sign fresh decarbonising pledge
1 day ago

Fortem extends homes repair deal across Birmingham

Willmott Dixon owned firm adds another two years to deal worth £170m
17 hours ago

Kier wins £118m civil service Darlington hub

Work is expected to start towards the end of this year
2 days ago

Green light for 34-storey Digbeth apartments tower

480 flats will be delivered for Clarion housing association
18 hours ago

LHC starts race for major retrofit and decarb framework

Hunt starts for firms to help with 6.1m social homes upgrade target
2 days ago

Windows giant Everest crashes into administration

Around 350 jobs at risk while hunt starts for a buyer to salvage business
2 days ago

Green light for £500m Newcastle health complex

Mixed use scheme will promote healthy living across all stages of life
2 days ago

Olympian Homes gets go-ahead for Bristol’s tallest building

Work on student and co-living towers to start this summer
2 days ago

ISG gets nod to start £20m Glamorgan school job

Ysgol y Deri specialist needs school is to built at Cosmeston, near Penarth
2 days ago

Walker Modular lands £5m bathroom pod contract

Specialist to work with Graham and Watkin Jones on major build-to-rent scheme

Banned building boss jailed for fraud

Court hears how disqualified director siphoned off cash from new housing company
2 days ago

Osborne staff start looking for new jobs

"Open to Work" flags appear on LinkedIn profiles
5 days ago

Plan rejected for 42-storey tower above historic building

Councillor describes as ludicrous plan to build 300 flats above Georgian mansion
5 days ago

Ventilation deal could hike product prices for contractors

Watchdogs at CMA launch probe after duct firm acquires rival
5 days ago

Tide gets go-ahead for London 412 student flats scheme

Volumetric developer secures planning for West Ealing project
5 days ago

Green light for £75m Friar Gate Goods Yard in Derby

Construction set to start this summer on revamp of historic buildings
5 days ago

Robertson to deliver £45m Newcastle NHS Trust works

Capital works will be focused on Freeman Hospital and the Royal Victoria Infirmary sites
5 days ago

Winners named for £2bn Healthy Homes framework

CHIC reveals line-up of over 40 firms for net zero and building safety works
5 days ago

Plan lodged for tallest skyscraper outside London

Developer Salboy submits plan for 76-storey Manchester resi tower
6 days ago

Curo starts £170m race for new homes framework

Bath housing association plans to build up to 300 homes a year
6 days ago

Gove approves major Cambridge North mixed-use scheme

Government backs controversial scheme of 424 flats and 600,000 sq ft of tech and lab space
6 days ago

Pontins holiday park to house Sizewell C builders

Suffolk holiday park to house 500 nuclear construction workers
6 days ago

Adrian Bloor targets 1,000 homes-a-year

Expansion plans after major investment into challenger house building business HarperCrewe
6 days ago

Housing firm fined £528,000 after cable strike

Maintenance workers given no information on underground services
6 days ago

Berkeley subbies face six weeks without payments

Introduction of new finance software means payment hiatus for suppliers
7 days ago

Pagabo reveals 56 winners of latest £1.6bn retrofit deal

Decarbonisation Solutions Framework launched: Full list of winners
7 days ago

Contractor services