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Special
Report
Hurricane Katrina: Implications for the Construction Industry
By Robert A.
Murray
Chief Economist
McGraw-Hill Construction
(construction.com - 09/20/05)
By size and scope, Hurricane Katrina
ranks as the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history. The
total cost of the devastation is expected to be $125 billion
or more, substantially greater than the damage caused by 1992's
Hurricane Andrew, estimated to be $37 billion (adjusted to
2005 dollars).
The Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) indicates that as many as one million people were displaced
by Hurricane Katrina. Prior to the hurricane, 484,000 people
lived in the city of New Orleans (making it the nation's 35th
largest city). The evacuation virtually emptied the city,
except for several thousand holdouts and the small number
of volunteers and military personnel who remained to deal
with the crisis. In Mississippi, the combined population of
Gulfport and Biloxi was about 125,000 prior to the hurricane.
The population of Harrison County (the county that connects
these two cities dotting the Mississippi coast) was 185,000.
Whole towns within this county were completely leveled by
wind and water damage. Harrison County officials estimate
that a quarter to a third of the county's population were
made homeless, and that as many as 30,000 jobs dependent on
the gambling and related industries have been lost. Another
indeterminate number of jobs dependent on the area's fishing
and cargo industries have been lost.
In both Louisiana and Mississippi, people's
homes and livelihoods were completely demolished. The state
of Texas has taken in more than 230,000 people left homeless
by Katrina. Other evacuees have been sent to nearby states
such as Georgia and Arkansas, and evacuees have been relocated
across the nation as far away as Cape Cod, MA and San Francisco,
CA. Closer to the impacted area, the city of Baton Rouge quickly
doubled in size from its pre-Katrina population of 250,000
to about one-half million people.
Assessing the effects from Katrina is
a complex process - new information becomes available each
day, leading to a re-evaluation of prior assessments. In a
broad sense, it's helpful to look at Katrina from two vantage
points - the impacted area on the Gulf of Mexico, and then
the broader implications for the U.S. economy and construction
industry. Briefly, here are some of the main points to be
derived from a mid-September assessment:
- The loss of life will be less
than initially feared. As of September 15, the death toll
from Katrina stood at 700. This number will of course rise
in coming weeks, but should remain well below the 10,000 deaths
estimated in the first days after the hurricane.
- Cleanup work in the impacted
area is progressing, including repairs to the levees in New
Orleans. Repairs to essential infrastructure, such as roads,
bridges, sewers and water systems will be the priority in
coming weeks. The criticism directed at the slow response
by local, state, and federal officials in the first week after
the hurricane may turn out to be a near term plus for construction,
as government officials strive for even greater effectiveness
in dealing with the cleanup process and rebuilding. The address
by President Bush on September 15 gave further emphasis to
the federal role in the rebuilding process, as he stated explicitly,
"Our goal is to get the work done quickly."
- The broader aspects of reconstruction
in the Gulf region, including rebuilding housing and commercial
structures, will be spread out over the next several years.
Political debate over the direction and control of the rebuilding
will be a critical factor in how fast the work progresses.
- The U.S. economy will see growth
dampened by 0.5% to 1.0% during the latter half of 2005, discernible
but not enough to tip the economy into recession. Reconstruction
efforts will be a net positive to GDP growth in 2006.
- Energy prices spiked immediately
after Katrina, and are now receding. At the same time, it's
expected that overall price levels going into 2006 will be
higher due to Katrina, offsetting some of the benefits to
economic growth arising from reconstruction efforts.
- Building materials will see continued upward pressure
on prices, as well as constraints on availability.
The Impacted Region on the Gulf of
Mexico
The area impacted by Katrina in the
Gulf of Mexico was defined by the U.S. Census Bureau in a
September 6 release to include 31 parishes in Louisiana, 15
counties in Mississippi, and 3 counties in Alabama.
With regard to construction, some perspective
is gained by looking at the size of the impacted area relative
to the U.S. During 2004, total construction in the impacted
area was reported at $7.1 billion, or 1.2% of last year's
national total of $589.2 billion. Of this 49-county region,
the heaviest damage was experienced in five counties - Orleans
Parish, LA; St. Bernard Parish, LA; Jefferson Parish LA; Harrison
County, MS; and Hancock County, MS. In 2004, these five counties
reported $1.7 billion in new construction starts, or 0.3%
of the national total. The necessity for cleanup work over
the next few months means that most new construction in the
nonresidential and residential sectors will be deferred for
the time being. This will be a negative to the overall level
of U.S. construction starts, but only to a very modest degree.
As for the extent of the destruction,
the three parishes in Louisiana not only received the wind
damage typical of most hurricanes, but they were also hit
by flooding due to breaches in the flood walls of three major
canals: the Industrial Canal (which borders Orleans and St.
Bernard Parish), the 17th Street Canal (which borders Orleans
Parish and Jefferson Parish) and the London Avenue Canal.
The areas surrounding these canals suffered extensive damage.
Most of the flooding occurred
in primarily residential areas. These three parishes alone
contain nearly 431,000 housing units; recent estimates suggest
that over 60% of Orleans Parish and nearly 100% of St. Bernard's
housing stock will have to be rebuilt. While Jefferson Parish,
particularly the area close to the Orleans Parish border,
also suffered flooding damage, most of the area's homes are
largely intact. Nearly 80%
of Orleans Parish and almost 100% of St. Bernard Parish were
flooded; in contrast, only about 15% of Jefferson suffered
the same fate.
The devastation wrought by the hurricane
is likely to increase housing construction substantially in
these Louisiana areas over the next few years. The poorly
growing economy of New Orleans was hampering housing construction
in the first eight months of 2005. The pre-hurricane estimate
for 2005 called for a 9% decline in single-family housing
starts for these three parishes combined. In the post-hurricane
period, the emphasis on cleanup work means not much new construction
is anticipated through the end of this year. In 2006, homebuilding
will begin to accelerate and should stay at elevated levels
for the foreseeable future. Overall, flood damage will require
the rebuilding of an estimated 184,000 housing units in just
these three parishes alone, nearly seven times the number
of homes destroyed by Hurricane Andrew in 1992.
In Orleans Parish, about 60% of the
housing stock are apartments or two family units, compared
to 35% in Jefferson and 23% in St. Bernard. Whether this higher
ratio of multifamily units continues after the rebuilding
effort is an open question. Prior to the hurricane, multifamily
apartment construction was on the upswing, in sharp comparison
to the weaker single-family housing market. One of the largest
multifamily projects to begin in 2005 was the $10 million
Guste Redevelopment. On the drawing board and scheduled to
start in November was the Poydras Condominium project, a 500-unit
apartment complex that would be the tallest in New Orleans.
This project's immediate prospects are uncertain.
On the nonresidential side, the damage
is less intense. As previously mentioned, most of the damage
occurred in residential areas, with the downtown/tourist areas
of Orleans Parish having missed most of the major flooding.
Some downtown attractions will undergo major renovation work.
Estimates for an overhaul of the Superdome are at $400 million,
while the $250 million planned expansion of the Ernest Morial
Convention Center has been shelved for now. On the plus side,
reports suggest that most of the area's hotels have been relatively
spared, with damage mostly to windows and ground floor levels.
Already, the Royal Sonesta Hotel in the historic French Quarter
has reopened for business. Marriott International also reported
that all fourteen of its New Orleans hotels have no structural
damage.
With the total devastation of St. Bernard
Parish, reconstruction is likely to occur in both the residential
and nonresidential sectors. All state offices have been damaged,
and the Louisiana Department of Education reports that all
of the K-12 schools in the parish may have to be completely
rebuilt. This mostly rural, marshy area however is primarily
residential; 75% of the total building stock is residential,
compared to 67% for the state of Louisiana.
While the parishes of Orleans, Jefferson
and St. Bernard sustained the most damage, the city of Slidell
in St. Tammany Parish also faces reconstruction needs. This
city with a population of 27,000 sits across from Orleans
Parish and was hit with storm surges from Lake Pontchartrain.
According to the Wall Street Journal, 50% of this city's 10,133
homes were completely destroyed and will have to be rebuilt.
The rest of St. Tammany was relatively unscathed and the floodwaters
have now completely receded. The K-12 schools in the parish
were also in relatively good shape; only five of the 51 schools
were deemed unusable and the 2,500 displaced students will
be easily absorbed into other districts.
As for Harrison and Hancock counties
in Mississippi, there's concern about the Katrina's impact
to that state's gambling sector. Estimates of damage to Biloxi's
all important casinos have begun to surface -- the storm may
have put at least eight of the casinos out of business permanently
and caused millions of dollars in damage to the other four.
The Biloxi Hard Rock Café hotel and casino, which was
set to open September 8,
has sustained damage to 50% of its structure. No date has
been set as to when the new casino will officially open. The
casino barge for Harrah's Grand Casino Biloxi was pushed onshore
by the hurricane and washed across US Highway 90. Meanwhile,
the president of the Treasure Bay Casino in Biloxi estimates
that his casino is a "total loss", with a cost of
at least $100 million to replace it.
The damage
to the housing stock along Mississippi's Gulf coast is considerable.
With the major employers located along the coast, the areas
near the Gulf were the most densely populated of the counties.
It's been estimated that possibly one-quarter of the housing
stock in Harrison County will need to be rebuilt. That would
translate into 20,000 new housing units. Additionally, estimates
from the city of Biloxi are that at least 20% of all structures
in the area will have to be reconstructed.
Of the 95,000
housing units in Hancock and Harrison counties, 76% were single
family. While multifamily represents a smaller percentage
of the total stock, the lure of waterside condos and the booming
casino market engendered a rise in new apartment and condo
projects, the viability of which are now uncertain for the
present. Large condo projects that were in the pipeline included
the $20 million Portofino in Biloxi and the $20 million Hathaway
Condos in Gulfport.
Fortunately,
while a large part of the state experienced hurricane force
winds, the damage outside the Gulf Coast is less devastating.
Early FEMA estimates peg the number of homes in Mississippi
(excluding the Gulf Coast) with major damage or totally destroyed
at 3,261, far less than originally feared.
Rebuilding the Infrastructure
Turning now to infrastructure in the
impacted region, reconstruction work has been estimated to
cost $3.5 billion. That would cover shoreline protection,
repair to roads and bridges, cleanup and repairs to drinking
water and waste water systems, and repair to power stations
and communications lines.
The big ticket items for transportation
infrastructure will cost about $1.5 billion. They include
the rebuilding of US Route 90, which once ran for more than
thirty miles along the coast of Mississippi next to the Gulf
of Mexico, the replacement of the twin spans of US Route 10
that cross Lake Ponchartrain from New Orleans to Slidell,
and the rebuilding or selected repair of major bridges along
US Route 10 in Mississippi, and across Mobile Bay.
In addition, there will be significant
costs for repairing environmental projects, with an estimated
cost of $500 million required for cleaning up drinking water
systems in New Orleans, rehabilitating the flood water pumping
systems, and repairing the levees and dams that gave way in
the city. Finally, there are general cleanup costs for removing
debris and related materials, for which the U.S. Corps of
Engineers has already allocated $1.5 billion.
That money is really just a down payment,
a marker for funding coastline restoration, the construction
of additional levees and dams, and the relocation of residential
and commercial areas from some parts of the city. The existing
facilities at New Orleans, and along the Gulf Coast in general,
were designed to protect people and property from fast-moving
Category 3 hurricanes. That proved inadequate with Katrina,
and it's expected that new construction will enhance the capability
of the region to withstand stronger storms.
For Louisiana specifically, there
is storm-related destruction along northeastern Lake Pontchartrain
near Slidell, flooding related to levee breaks in New Orleans
proper - Lakeview, Gentilly, Mid-City and Uptown, and flooding
related to the overtopping of levees in East New Orleans and
St Bernard Parish.
It's estimated that 40% of the twin
spans of US Route 10 crossing Lake Ponchartrain were destroyed
by the storm surge. The Louisiana State Department of Transportation
and Development awarded a $31 million contract to Boh Brothers
Construction to repair the bridge, although it will be accomplished
by shifting undamaged spans from one bridge to the other and
then using temporary spans on the more damaged bridge. The
description suggests that more work will be needed. During
first quarter 2006, the state of Louisiana will take bids
for a new double span.
Much of the damage, both in Slidell
and on the south side of Lake Ponchartrain, was due to the
15 to 20 foot storm surge that raised lake levels and breached
levees. Near term construction will focus on rebuilding the
levee system. Other proposals have been made to limit the
storm surge into the lake with mechanical doors or dikes,
which would require construction of levees and reconfiguration
of outlets from the lake into the Gulf of Mexico. This would
presumably be a multi-billion dollar project, but could lessen
the need to raise the levels of dikes and levees along the
Lake Ponchartrain shoreline.
With regard to New Orleans, sections
of major highways, bridges, and local roads were flooded,
but damage was not caused by the storm surge and should be
repairable at reasonable cost. Damage to water and waste water
systems is likely more serious. New Orleans was in the middle
of efforts to increase the capacity and integrity of its waste
water system, as a result of a 1998 consent decree with the
EPA. Construction had been completed on underground pipelines,
and design work had been completed for upgrading or replacing
50 of the city's 83 pumping stations. The waste water pumping
stations alone will now cost $150 million more.
The Port of New Orleans survived in
fairly good shape, benefiting from being on higher land near
the Mississippi. Its main problems have been blockages to
the river and lack of electricity, which should be fully corrected
over the next few weeks.
As for Mississippi, long sections of
Route 90 extending along the coast will need to be completely
rebuilt. Also along the coast there appears to be washouts
and some damage to railroad lines. The coast of Mississippi
is exceptionally vulnerable to hurricanes and other storms,
as development has taken place nearly up to the beaches. In
Biloxi, significant public structures, including hospitals
and convention centers, are near the Gulf waters. Reconstruction
and redesign at the current site will need to be part of a
more extensive coastline protection plan.
The Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina
In the immediate aftermath of Katrina,
Congress passed two relief packages. There was the initial
$10.5 billion to assist FEMA in meeting the needs of the local
area, and then a second package of $51.8 billion that pushed
the total amount of federal money to more than $62 billion.
Of the money authorized so far, $23.2
billion is designated for temporary housing and other financial
assistance to individuals. Another $11 billion will be directed
to FEMA for "mission assignments" such as debris
removal. FEMA search and rescue operations will consume another
$4.7 billion, and the Army Corps of Engineers has been allotted
$3 billion for repairs to broken levees.
The federal government hired five private
contractors to begin the process of rebuilding homes in devastated
areas. Bechtel National, Fluor Corp, Shaw Group, CH2M Hill,
and Dewberry Technologies were the first recipients of what
is expected to be a long list of federal rebuilding contracts
awarded in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Given the enormous
scope of damage, this effort is expected to be the largest
U.S. rebuilding effort ever launched after a natural disaster.
Shaw, Bechtel, and Fluor reported that their contracts were
valued at as much as $100 million and are primarily designed
to create temporary housing for displaced families and individuals.
In his address on September 15 to the
nation, President Bush gave added emphasis to the federal
role in the reconstruction efforts. At the outset, he emphasized
that New Orleans would be rebuilt, stating that "there
is no way to imagine America without New Orleans." He
called for the creation of a Gulf Opportunity Zone, covering
the impacted region in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama,
that would provide tax incentives and loans for small businesses.
He requested that Congress pass an Urban Homesteading Act,
which would provide building sites on federal land through
a lottery to low-income citizens.
With such proposals, it's expected the
federal aid that already totals $62 billion may well end up
exceeding $200 billion. The federal budget deficit will be
much higher than the $333 billion the Bush Administration
estimates for the current fiscal year ending September 30
and the $340 billion for fiscal 2006. How this plays out with
Congress remains to be seen - some members of Congress have
pointed out that increased spending for reconstruction in
the Gulf must be offset to some extent by reduced spending
from other accounts. One area to watch in coming months is
whether there will be any impact on the increased spending
in the new federal transportation bill, enacted in August.
That bill offered funding increases to all states - it's possible
that some of the increases for states outside the Gulf region
may be reduced to help pay for reconstruction efforts.
The Implications to the U.S. Economy
In the two weeks since Katrina, the
general view is that economic growth for the U.S. economy
will be reduced during the second half of 2005, but the first
half of 2006 will see a net gain for the economy. The Congressional
Budget Office in early September estimated that economic growth
for the U.S. economy will be reduced 0.5% to 1.0% during the
second half of 2005, relative to expected growth of 3% to
4% prior to Katrina.
There's not been much in the way of
negative information to change this view - in fact, restoration
of oil refining capacity and shipping lanes have taken place
somewhat more quickly than initially thought. For the month
of August, payroll employment growth was reported at 169,000
new jobs, a clip suggesting that the economy had decent forward
momentum prior to Katrina. The employment numbers will take
a hit for September and much of the fourth quarter, but job
growth for the year as a whole is still expected to remain
positive. In short, the slowdown will be discernible, but
not enough to tip cause the U.S. economy to slide into recession.
For all of 2005, real GDP growth is still anticipated to be
around 3.5%. In 2006, it had been expected that economic growth
would settle back closer to 3%, but activity related to Katrina
reconstruction should help GDP stay around the 3.5% mark.
Crude oil prices spiked immediately
after Katrina, reaching $70 per barrel. With refining capacity
coming back on line, the price of oil retreated over the next
two weeks to the range of $60 to $65 per barrel. Gasoline
prices appear to have peaked and are beginning to recede slightly.
The disruption to shipping has eased, helped by the greater
use of alternate shipping routes. There will be upward pressure
on prices, although not to the full extent feared at the start
of September. The consumer price index for August, reflecting
pre-Katrina conditions, showed overall prices up 3.6% on a
year-over-year basis, the highest reading so far this year
due to rising energy costs. At the same time, the core rate
of inflation (excluding food and energy) was up a still manageable
2.1% (year-over-year), indicating that rising energy prices
had yet to feed through to the broader price structure. It's
expected that in coming months some of the higher energy costs
will feed through to the core rate, placing pressure on the
Federal Reserve to continue its regimen of monetary tightening.
At its September 20 meeting, the Fed
raised the federal funds another quarter point to 3.75%. In
its accompanying statement, the Fed acknowledged that there
would be near term disruption to the economy as a result of
Katrina, but this was not viewed as being a "persistent
threat." Of greater importance to the Fed, "higher
energy and other costs have the potential to add to inflation
pressures." Once again, the Fed stated its belief that
"policy accommodation can be removed at a pace that is
likely to be measured," meaning additional rate hikes
are coming that will bring the federal funds rate up to the
4% to 5% range.
At the same time, long-term interest
rates have stayed low for the present. The 30-year fixed mortgage
rate had edged up to 5.9% in mid-August, but has since receded
to 5.7%, providing continued support to the robust homebuilding
market. The pickup in inflation is expected to cause long-term
rates to eventually see some upward movement, most likely
to take place during the first half of 2006. The greater federal
budget deficit will also place upward pressure on long-term
rates over a period of several years. There's not expected
to be much negative impact on homebuyer demand in the near
term, and in 2006 the residential sector will derive some
benefit from additional homebuilding related to post-Katrina
reconstruction. However, the pickup in both price levels and
mortgage rates over the next year is expected to cause homebuilding
at the end of 2006 and into 2007 to see a steeper decline
than what was anticipated prior to the hurricane.
The Impact on Building Materials
As rebuilding efforts get underway,
construction should increase in the local Gulf area - with
activity well above pre-Katrina forecast scenarios. The fear,
however, is that this very concentration of activity could
raise prices and diminish availability of construction materials
and skilled labor - and not only in the affected area, but
across the entire United States.
The reason for this fear is that many
construction materials and many types of skilled construction
labor are currently in short supply, due in part to the robust
expansion for housing that is now reaching its peak.
On the positive side, wholesale prices
(as measured by the Bureau of Labor Statistics' producer price
index) rose more moderately than expected in August, gaining
0.6% for the month after a 1.0% increase in July. The index
of construction materials actually peaked in February then
declined 2.8% through August. And while many complain that
the BLS statistics do not capture "spot" prices
or the true price paid by the construction industry, these
spot prices are much more volatile and will likely return
to more "normal" levels once panic buying subsides.
Thus, a look at longer-term wholesale prices might be more
telling about what to expect in the months to come.
Some wholesale prices, such as those
for steel mill products, peaked in February of this year and
have declined 13.2% in the months since (through August).
Steel product prices shocked the construction industry with
their 2004 increases, but have shown much more restraint (and
actually eased back) since the beginning of 2005. Unfortunately,
the Gulf of Mexico is a major port of entry for steel imports,
and thus the still-reduced capacity of the port may have a
negative impact on steel prices over the next few months.
Steel-related imports through the port totaled 15 million
metric tons last year, including scrap iron and coke. Even
if steel prices do rise once again in the near term, it's
expected that the upward movement will be temporary, with
prices then stabilizing or slightly declining.
The prices of several other construction
materials, by contrast, have continued to rise steadily in
2005. The price of gypsum, for example, has climbed 9.9% since
February, cement is up 5.6%, and construction machinery prices
are up a more modest 3.5%. Over the year (August through August),
price gains were slightly higher: gypsum up 12.4%, cement
up 12.7%, and machinery up 7.0%.
According to the Portland Cement Association
(PCA), cement remained in short supply in 32 states and the
District of Columbia - even before the advent of Katrina.
The disruption to transportation systems and loss of power
to cement plants in the Gulf region further cut into supplies,
while the need to rebuild roads, buildings, and other infrastructure
will increase demand. That adds up to continued increases
in cement prices during 2005 and 2006 - unless, as urged by
the AGC, the Commerce Department and the Southern Tier Cement
Committee reach an agreement to allow Mexican cement into
the Gulf states without the 55% duty now in place.
Softwood lumber and plywood prices have
fluctuated widely over the past two years, but through August,
both remained well below their mid-2004 peaks. In fact, overcapacity
drove prices down sharply over the past year: softwood lumber
prices in August 2005 were 15.5% below their year-earlier
levels, while plywood prices were 13.0% lower. In the week
following Katrina, however, wholesale prices spiked due to
the fact that 22 lumber mills were shuttered because of storm
and flood damage.
Assuming most of those mills return
to operation within the next few months, the overall price
of lumber is not expected to rise dramatically thanks to those
plentiful supplies. At the same time, the price of Southern
yellow pine, dominant in the Gulf area, could rise over the
next few months since existing stocks - at both local lumber
mills and building materials retailers - were largely washed
away.
Overall, a greater risk to lumber prices
may reside less with the impact of Katrina than with NAFTA
negotiations between the U.S. and Canada over softwood lumber
tariffs. A NAFTA panel determined that the U.S. should remove
tariffs on imports from Canada, but the Bush Administration
has ignored that ruling. In response, Canada has threatened
to discontinue its exports to the U.S., although that position
is likely to soften over time given how important the U.S.
market is to Canadian lumber.
Despite individual differences in the
availability of construction materials, the strong demand
from the fast-growing Chinese construction economy has been
and will continue to be a significant drain on available stocks
of construction materials. Multiple industry analysts have
forecast that construction in China will grow at a double-digit
pace over the next several years. This dynamic rate of growth
suggests that China will continue to consume an ever-growing
share of the world's construction materials - shrinking availability
and placing upward pressure on prices.
Moreover, the very real issue of skilled
labor shortages could dwarf concerns over materials prices.
A rule of thumb holds that construction labor is virtually
half of the total cost of a building. That share could rise
unless labor shortages can be ameliorated. Because subcontractors
are quick to relocate to where the demand is greatest, some
analysts fear that if labor converges on the Gulf region,
shortages of skilled workers will develop in other areas of
the U.S.
The Broad Impact on Construction Starts
For the U.S. construction industry,
the higher cost of building materials contributed to a sluggish
performance for nonresidential building during the early months
of 2005. Nonresidential building appeared to be regaining
some momentum at mid-2005, but a jump in materials prices
has the potential to extend the pause experienced by this
sector. At the very least, the heightened demand for materials
and skilled labor arising from rebuilding efforts in the Gulf
region means reduced availability, which will be a constraint
on further growth for construction activity.
The post-Katrina environment has both
positives and negatives for U.S. construction activity. The
major positive is that the U.S. economy appears capable of
absorbing the shock from Katrina, without slipping into recession.
Continued employment growth will help the market fundamentals
for such income property types as offices, hotels, and multifamily
housing over the long-term. The continuation of low mortgage
rates supports single family housing this year, and total
construction starts for the U.S. are still expected to rise
6% to 7% in 2005, even with the loss of new construction start
activity in the Gulf region.
A major plus for next year will relate
to reconstruction efforts, and the near term estimates for
infrastructure work are substantial. Furthermore, there is
now added emphasis that the cleanup and reconstruction process
will be efficiently carried out. Rebuilding the housing stock
in the impacted area will follow the start of infrastructure
work, while reconstruction involving nonresidential structures
will take longer as patterns of development are debated by
local and state groups. The major uncertainty for the overall
U.S. construction industry in the post-Katrina environment
remains the price and availability of building materials,
meaning that the industry as a whole will continue to adjust
to a higher cost structure.
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