Back to Top

How is the CSO doing?

Your feedback can help us improve and enhance our services to the public. Tell us what matters to you in our online Customer Satisfaction Survey.

 Skip navigation

Background Notes

Building and Construction output down 2.4% in Quarter 1 2022

Online ISSN: 2009-5228
CSO statistical release, , 11am

Production in Building & Construction Index

Introduction of updated series with base year 2015=100

The Production in Building and Construction Index provides quarterly statistics on output in the sector. The index monitors trends in the value and the volume of production in building and construction. The index is primarily intended to function as a short-term indicator. For long term analysis, the annual Building and Construction Inquiry is recommended.

The principal difference between the value and volume indices is that the value index measures changes in the value of work done while the volume index tracks the quantitative volume of production by excluding the effect of price changes using a price deflator. The Capital Goods price index for Building and Construction is used as the price deflator for this series.

This series is also available using the interactive tables in PxStat, the CSO’s Main Data Dissemination Service.

Reference Periods

The Production in Building and Construction Index is carried out on a quarterly basis (i.e. the first quarter covers January, February and March etc.).

Base Year

The set of indices, based on the Laspeyres Index, has been compiled with reference to base year 2015=100. The underlying structural weighting system for the output categories (Residential Building, Non-Residential Building and Civil Engineering) is based on the annual Building and Construction Inquiry, which provides Building and Civil weights, combined with the new Dwelling Completions data to generate Residential weights. The sample for the index is stratified by size class based on number of persons employed: A (0 – 4), B (5 -19), C (20-99) and D (>99). Size class weights were produced using the Building and Construction Inquiry 2015 and the Quarterly National Household Survey Q2 2015.

Legal Basis

The Quarterly Survey of Construction (QSC) is carried out in accordance with S.I. No. 141 of 2022 Statistics (Quarterly Survey of Construction) Order 2022, made under the 1993 Statistics Act. The statistics are also required for EU comparisons under Council Regulation (EC) No. 1165/98 which has been amended by Regulation (EC) No. 1893/2006 with the introduction of NACE Rev. 2.

Scope and Coverage

The Production in Building and Construction Index covers, on a sample basis, the production of all firms in the private (i.e. non-State) sector whose main activity is building, construction or civil engineering i.e. firms classified to division F of the Statistical Classification of Economic Activities in the European Community (NACE Rev. 2). Approximately 2,400 firms are surveyed each quarter.

Seasonal Adjustment

Seasonal Adjustment is conducted using the direct seasonal adjustment approach. Under this approach, each individual series is independently adjusted. Each individual seasonally adjusted series is calculated based on working day adjusted data.

The seasonal adjustments are implemented using the X-13-ARIMA methodology. This is applied using the Win X-13 software package, developed by the U.S. Census Bureau. This methodology estimates seasonal factors while also taking into consideration factors that impact on the quality of the seasonal adjustment such as outliers and level shifts in the series.

Additional information on the use of X-13-Arima see Monsell B. C., Lytras, D., and Findley, D. ‘Getting Started with X-13 ARIMA SEATS Input Files’, March 2016 is available here.

Methodology

A description of the methodology is available within the Methods area on the CSO website here.

Comparison with other national series

There are differences (due to timing, definitions and other factors) between the quarterly and annual trends measured by this survey and by other national data sources. In particular the quarterly series from the QSC show considerable volatility. Table A, below, compares the main annual results of the survey with national employment and house building indicators. 

The series shows an increase of 14.9% in the annual volume of production in building and construction between 2017 and 2018. In the same period, employment in the sector, as measured by the Labour Force Survey, rose by 13.8%. 

For residential buildings, the QSC shows an increase of 2.7% in the annual volume of production between 2017 and 2018. The New Dwellings Completions series shows an increase of 25.4% in the same period.

Data on house-building commencements, a relatively new leading indicator, are also included in Table A. This indicator shows an increase of 27.9% in residential building in 2018 when compared with 2017.

Table A: Comparison of Building and Construction sector indicators        
   CSO Series   Other Indicators
  Seasonally Adjusted Volume of Production in Building and Construction3

Seasonally Adjusted Volume of Production in Civil Engineering3

Seasonally Adjusted Volume of Production in Residential Building3   Persons  Employed in the Construction Sector1 New Dwelling Completions5
House Commencements2
  Index Index Index   No. No. No.
  2015=100 2015=100 2015=100        
2006 348.0 162.9 818.6   219,100 - 75,602
2007 301.9 170.3 645.5   240,000 - 48,876
2008 214.6 160.1 357.0   214,000 - 22,852
2009 135.5 139.6 150.0   132,800 - 8,599
2010 94.9 108.4 93.3   104,400 - 6,391
2011 78.7 82.5 68.1   86,800 6,994 4,365
2012 76.9 96.1 59.6   81,300 4,911 4,042
2013 85.4 100.9 66.0   86,200 4,575 4,708
20144 92.7 104.2 77.2   90,800 5,518 7,717
2015 100.0 100.0 100.1   109,000 7,219 8,747
2016 110.3 103.5 124.3   119,400 9,916 13,234
2017 126.3
108.7 146.6   128,000 14,407 17,572
2018 145.1 126.0 150.6   145,700 18,072 22,467
1 Labour Force Survey, April - June quarter, NACE Rev. 2.
2 Source: Department of Housing, Planning and Local Government.
3 Seasonally Adjusted series introduced in Q1 2015.
4 In 2014 there was a change in the methodology for the Housing data collated by the DHPCLG.  Previously the data was collated from 37 Building Control Areas by the DHPCLG. This was updated in 2014 with the data now being drawn from a database held by the Local Government Management Agency updated directly by developers/ builders on line or by the local authority.
5 New Dwelling Completions series introduced in Q1 2018 with coverage starting in 2011.

Why you can Trust the CSO

Learn about our data and confidentiality safeguards, and the steps we take to produce statistics that can be trusted by all.