Andrei.Hicks wrote on Jan 5
th, 2013 at 6:38am:
adelcrow wrote on Jan 5
th, 2013 at 6:33am:
Andrei.Hicks wrote on Jan 5
th, 2013 at 3:04am:
If you think the economy is in good shape adel then you are either ignorant or lying to yourself.
It's not. People are doing it tough out there and some of you should have a bit of respect for that.
By any measure Australia is still going gang busters...the economy may not be over heating as it was in Howards last term in power but in the long run sustainable growth is way better than run away house prices, record household debt and a govt propping up surpluses by record taxation and slashing public heath, education and infrastructure spending...All of which created a massive burden on households, local councils and state govts.
A managing director of a construction company in Melbourne tells me a very different story.
He said several guys are going to the wall every week, the mining boom masks a serious issue across Australian industry and many projects are being funded now by cheap supply from China.
I think you'll find the economic reality out there behind your headlines is quite worrying.
Building industry crumbling, with companies going broke each day!; AV Jennings faces $32m loss
Topic Started: 23 Jul 2012, 10:27 AM (5,351 Views)
four20 23 Jul 2012, 10:27 AM Post #1
06/05/2012
Industry gradually crumbling
AUSTRALIA'S building industry is in survival mode, with official s
tatistics revealing that at least two companies a day are going to the wall as labour costs continue to rise, profit margins flatline and banks play hardball on funding.
The latest statistics on liquidations and voluntary administrations show that since January 1 more than 363 companies in the building industry, excluding mining, have collapsed, more than 200 of them from New South Wales and 95 from Victoria.
What is even more alarming is the trend seems to be getting worse, with 30 building companies failing in March, 33 in April, 51 in May, 63 in June and a whopping 40 collapsing in the first 10 days of July.
Profit margins have shrunk to between zero and 2 per cent.
It isn't a pretty picture and supports the general economic statistics, which show that as a proportion of nominal gross domestic product (GDP) building activity in Australia is close to a 35-year low. Outside mining, Australia is in the midst of a downturn in residential, commercial and public sector infrastructure activity.
A survey by Evans & Partners in May and June of private companies, consultants, service providers and customers in the construction sector to identify emerging issues, revealed a bleak outlook for the sector, ex-mining.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/business/industry-gradually-crumbling-20120722-22i8v.html#ixzz21OuMARpL