Mace, the global company of delivery consultants and construction experts, has published its latest quarterly Market View with the first report of 2025 revising its tender price forecast up for the year due to surging labour costs.
With vacancies jumping to their highest level in 18 months, labour shortages remain a hurdle for the industry, and labour costs rose by 1.6% in the last quarter of 2024 alone, putting them 6.5% higher than at the end of 2023.
Construction pay is now rising faster than in all but one other sector and is growing at its second highest rate since coming out of the pandemic. Even though pay growth across the whole economy spent most of last year between 5% and 6%, construction pay growth more than doubled from March to the year end.
With pressure from material prices currently low, a consideration is this may also have an impact over the coming months with higher energy prices and the rise in National Insurance and National Living Wage pushing up costs.
Wage pressures, the economy, the construction sector’s productivity weakness and the uncertainty around global logistics have all combined for Mace to revise up its tender price inflation forecast for this year. Nationally, Mace’s updated forecast has risen from 3.5% to 4% for 2025, while 2026, 2027 and 2028 has been left unchanged. In London, the forecast is up from 3% to 3.5% in 2025 with 2026, 2027 and 2028 also remaining the same.
Although it remains an uncertain time, as output and the wider economy awaits the impact of policy changes that are expected to have a positive long-term impact, the report concludes that growth in construction in 2025 should comfortably beat that of 2024.
Oliver North, Director of Cost and Commercial Management, Europe, Mace Consult said:
“Driven by labour costs as vacancies continue to rise, Mace has increased its latest tender price forecast. However, with vacancies on the agenda to solve, this can be met in part with a focus on productivity, which remains low. The welcome recent government funding announcement, incorporating £600m to train 60,000 more construction workers, will be crucial in addressing shortages and supporting the industry’s growth also.
“However, economic and political uncertainties remain, and whilst the steps being made when it comes to planning, devolution and funding for the Building Safety Regulator will have a long-term impact, processes need to speed up to boost confidence, help secure pipelines and encourage investment”.
Building, Design & Construction Magazine | The Choice of Industry Professionals