This audio is automatically generated. Do us know if you have comments.
Commercial construction project owners and developers may hesitate to move forward with new works after President Donald Trump collected new rates in more than 180 countries, according to industry sources.
Trump on Wednesday announced a 10% reference fee for all US commercial members with additional reciprocal rates for select nations, such as another 34% to Chinese imports and 20% to imports from the European Union.
There will be many key construction materials, such as steel, aluminum, wood and copper exempt from these reciprocal ratesAccording to a white house launch. But steel and aluminum importers have paid 25% of rates in these materials Since March 12, while Canadian Importers of soft wood 14.5% of anti-abocement rate and anti-subsidiaAccording to the National Association of Housing Builders. This has been pressing up the costs, said Anirban Basu, an economist in chief of builders and associated contractors.
“Material prices are likely to increase in the coming months,” said Basu. “In the non -residential part, monitor the prices of steel and iron products, as well as aluminum. Mostly, steel domestic prices have already increased significantly.”

Anirban Basu
Permission granted by ABC
Price increases are expected, but time will take time to work on the system. Contractors usually cause products such as concrete, plaster and other raw materials nationwide, so they are less likely to be affected, said Tim Jed, a supply chain leader at the DPR Construction.
“However, even if the products occur nationally, rates could affect domestic prices or lead times,” said Jed. “Ultimately, what is important is, where we buy and where these materials are imported, but it is not an easy information to get there.”
Future expense at risk
The prices of non -residential materials jumped to Annualized rate of 9% During the first two months of 2025, the builders rushed to gather materials. According to the ABC, general construction inputs are 41% higher in February 2020.
This costs leap mixed with uncertainty on how markets will react to the new trade policy will begin to curb construction investment activity, said Jeannine Cataldi, an associate director of global construction at S & P Global Market Intelligence. This will have an impact on non -residential construction, specifically private funding projects.
“Most of the construction activity will show these effects delayed, as projects have already begun to a large extent,” said Cataldi. “Future spending is more at risk.”
Non -residential construction expenditure reached 1.26 trillion dollars in February highest level of recordAccording to an ABC analysis of data from the US Census Office published on Tuesday. However, public construction projects took into account this impulse, and even this can begin to fade -said Cataldi.
“The infrastructure will be affected if the funding is remembered, this is currently pending, if the increase in the prices of the materials affect the budgets and the labor force is restricted by immigration policies,” said Catali.
Work problems
Together with prices, economists monitor the recruitment rate. If reciprocal rates contribute to the layoffs of construction and if companies do not expand their levels of staff, it will be difficult for the economy to maintain growth, Basu said.
Thus, although contractors have escaped with additional rates on steel, aluminum and copper, labor problems caused by Trump’s policies could be put into activity, Michael Guckes, chief economist in Cincinnati, said.
“We are very concerned about the construction labor market,” said Guckes. “With the real possibility of contraction at work due to the most authoritative deportations of unauthorized workers, we could see that the greatest concern of the costs for the industry in 2025 does not come from materials but from labor.”
The way the market moves after what Trump calls its liberation day rates should provide a strong indication of how companies will approach the new commercial environment, said Basu.
For the contractors of the data center and the manufacture, for example, the activity will be high regardless of the fares, said Basu. Construction companies can also expect a substantial additional expense on road and railway projects, and possibly broadband internet construction in poorly connected areas, said Ken Simonson, an economist in none of the General Associated General Contractors of America.