The Construction Sector Deal – investment in “bytes and mortar”
- 19 July 2018
- Construction
The Construction Sector Deal is part of the Government’s Industrial Strategy and is an ambitious partnership with the construction industry, through the Construction Leadership Council. The construction sector, including the supply chain and professional services, had a turnover of £370 billion in 2016 and employed around 3.1 million workers, or around 9% of the UK workforce. The sector also exported over £8 billion of products and services. However, it is widely recognised that the potential of the sector has been held back by its productivity especially as compared to other sectors. The Farmer Review in 2016 recommended that transforming the industry would need shared leadership by the industry, clients and the Government. The Construction Sector Deal is intended to achieve this goal and also build on ‘Construction 2025’ published in 2013.
The Construction Sector Deal will deliver:
The Construction Leadership Council will lead on the implementation of the Deal and publish an annual report. The Construction Leadership Council, government and various subgroups will also work on a delivery plan.
The Construction Sector Deal is part of the Government’s Industrial Strategy and is an ambitious partnership with the construction industry, through the Construction Leadership Council.
Comment
This is an ambitious programme so will it deliver?
The Construction Sector Deal is the biggest investment in the industry in a decade and it is thought that digital techniques and offsite manufacturing will revolutionise construction and address the productivity issue. The commitment to innovation and improvement is also intended to help industry respond to the recommendations in the Independent Review of Building Regulations and Fire Safety published in May 2018 to improve the sector’s health and safety culture to deliver high quality, safe buildings.
The investment is significant. However, the Deal recognises that the construction industry itself needs to move to new business models based on collaboration and more efficient and better integrated supply chains to achieve its goals.
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