Construction spending increased 1 percent to an
annual rate of $934.4 billion, the highest level since March
2009, the Commerce Department said on Thursday. It was the
eighth straight month that construction spending increased.
Economists polled by Reuters had expected a gain of 0.6 percent
in November. Construction spending in October was revised to
show a 0.9 percent rise instead of the previously reported 0.8
percent increase.
The report added to data ranging from employment to consumer
spending that have suggested resilience in the economy even as
growth is expected to step down from the third-quarter's brisk
4.1 percent annual rate.
Construction spending in November was lifted by a jump in
private construction projects to their highest level since
December 2008. Private construction spending rose 2.2 percent
after being flat in October.
The increase reflected strong gains in spending on both
residential and nonresidential projects. Private residential
spending hit its highest level since June 2008 and outlays on
nonresidential structures, which include factories and gas
pipelines, touched an 11-month high.
Public construction spending fell 1.8 percent as both outlays on
federal and state and local government projects declined.
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani;
editing by Andrea Ricci)
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