Building Materials Price Inflation

March 7, 2000

  Nov-99 Dec-99 Jan-00 Annual % Change
1999
Annual % Change
2000
Annual % Change
2001
Total Construction Materials 142.9 143.2 143.9 1.0 1.4 1.7
Lumber 184.1 186.7 188.2 4.7 2.8 3.4
Structural Steel 141.1 141.5 141.8 1.5 2.5 1.6
Gypsum 223.2 227.4 227.5 17.2 5.5 3.0
Concrete 143.8 143.3 145.0 2.6 2.2 2.5
Roofing 93.5 94.1 93.8 -1.0 1.3 0.6
Ceramic Tile 134.2 133.9 133.6 0.4 -0.7 0.5
Historical Data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Forecast: Professional Builder

The Labor Department’s construction materials composite price index rose by 0.5% between December 1999 and January of this year. This brought the January 2000 composite index to a level 2.4% above its reading for the first month of 1999. On an annual average basis, the construction materials price index moved up 1.0% between 1998 and 1999 after declining by 0.5% over the previous year, so the current inflation rate represents a significant acceleration above recent trends.

Gypsum product price inflation did finally show some sign of stabilizing during the first month of this year. Average prices were essentially unchanged between December and January, but gypsum product prices were still 19.7% higher at the beginning of 2000 than during January 1999.

Average lumber prices moved up another 0.8% during the first month of 2000, however. Lumber prices rose by a cumulative 2.8% between October 1999 and the first month of 2000, and were 6.1% higher this January than during January of 1999.

Prices of roofing materials and of structural steel products used in buildings were little changed in between December and January. For the year as a whole, average roofing material prices declined by 1.0% from their 1998 level - but began this year 1.2% higher than during January 1999. The average price for fabricated structural metal used in building construction was 2.9% higher during January 2000 than during the same month a year ago after registering modest inflation of 1.5% for full-year 1999..

Average ready-mixed concrete prices rose by a sharp 1.2% between December 1999 and this January, and were 2.0% higher during the first month of 2000 than in January of 1999. The only major construction product group to register a price decline between December and January was ceramic tile. Average tile prices moved lower for the fifth consecutive month in January 2000. For 1999 as a whole, tile prices were a marginal 0.4% higher than during 1998. But average January 2000 tile prices had moved down to a level 1.6% below the January 1999 average.

Also See:

Housing Starts

Consumer Confidence by Region

New Residential Building Permits by Region

Recent Trends In New Residential Permits for 1999’s Top 25 Metro Areas

 
 

Comments on: "Building Materials Price Inflation"



 

See all videos

Search Our Buyer's Guide

Reference Library

Professional Remodeler’s annual Market Leaders list, which identifies the top...

Using the kitchen as a social space is just one of Professional Remodeler's Top

With demand for custom design, remodeling, and renovations at its highest level since 2005, ...

A 78-inch long, 36-inch high island outfitted with granite countertop and built-

Normandy Remodeling converts confined kitchen into sprawling galley.

Each year, the National Kitchen and Bath Association surveys its members to identify the latest...

Each year, the National Kitchen and Bath Association surveys its members to identify the latest...