By contrast, self-employed construction workers showed a different pattern. Declines were less severe during the financial crisis (3% in 2009 and 1% in 2010), but more pronounced during the pandemic, with numbers falling by 11% in 2020 and 6% in 2021.
These trends suggest that self-employed construction workers may be more resilient during traditional economic downturns, but more vulnerable to acute shocks such as the pandemic.
While current uncertainty may have less of an impact on self-employment, the reduced size of the self-employed workforce compared to previous years means that employee layoffs could intensify future capacity constraints in the wider sector.
Against a backdrop of resource fragility, the overlap between rising employment costs and ongoing disruption leaves construction in a challenging position. Whether demand stagnates or strengthens, there are cost implications, either squeezing business margins or increasing prices for clients.
For those involved in cost planning and procurement, this reinforces the importance of closely monitoring labour cost forecasts and using up-to-date indices to track and account for inflation. While materials prices remain elevated and sensitive to geopolitical shocks, recent experience shows that labour costs can continue to sustain inflationary pressure even after materials costs begin to stabilise.
Adding further complexity, insights from recent meetings of the BCIS Tender Price Index Panel highlight that demand conditions are not uniform. Growth sectors such as the data centre market are intensifying competition for key trades – particularly MEP subcontractors – creating the potential for localised labour pressures even within an otherwise subdued market.
This is likely to become a more prominent feature of the market as government policy continues to emphasise place-based investment. Growth corridors such as Oxford–Cambridge, alongside regional investment zones and mayoral funding programmes, are expected to concentrate construction activity geographically.
While this may support overall demand, it also introduces the potential for delivery constraints. Where multiple large schemes progress simultaneously within the same locations, local labour markets may struggle to respond, increasing competition for specialist skills and driving up costs, although labour mobility may help to alleviate some of these pressures.
That said, subdued demand remains the more likely scenario overall. Renewed Israeli strikes in Lebanon, failed talks over Iran’s nuclear ambitions and the US’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz have raised doubts about the possibility of a resolution to the conflict in the near term.
In this confidence-sapping environment, contractors may face increased pressure to absorb cost risk in order to secure work, with mechanisms such as fluctuation clauses and index-linked adjustments increasingly used to manage uncertainty.
Ultimately, the key challenge for the sector is not focusing on either materials or labour cost movements, but recognising that both may act together. Materials may drive short-term volatility, but minimum wage increases, uneven demand and skills shortages mean labour will continue shaping the longer-term cost base of construction.
For clients and contractors alike, this reinforces the need for more proactive cost planning, greater collaboration and a clearer understanding of how labour market constraints could influence pricing, procurement and project viability in the years ahead.
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