building permits continue their impressive fall

The number of building permits continued to decline in March in France, reaching a historic low since at least 2015, according to provisional data published Tuesday by the Ministry of Ecological Transition.

Between April 2023 and March 2024, 358,600 housing units were authorized for construction, i.e. 19.8% less than in the previous 12 months.

New construction is caught in a serious crisis. Construction costs have increased significantly due to more expensive materials and stricter environmental standards. At the same time, buyers benefited from the rise in interest rates and the reduction in public support measures for new real estate.

It begins to have effects on employment, several promoters having announced social plans while smaller players are filing for bankruptcy. The French Building Federation fears 90,000 job losses by the end of 2024 then 150,000 by mid-2025.

Hauts-de-France and Brittany are doing a little better

In detail, individual houses were the subject of 129,200 authorizations (-22.2%), while collective housing obtained 229,300 (-18.4%). Within collective housing, residences (students, seniors, etc.) are doing a little better with a drop of only 8.8%.

Hauts-de-France and Brittany are doing a little better than the other regions of France, with drops of 4.8% and 8.7% respectively. The most extensive regions, le-de-France and Provence-Alpes-Cte d’Azurexperienced significant drops in permits issued with -26.1% and -28.8% respectively.

The number of construction sites started, which traditionally follows that of building permits, also continues to plunge, with 283,200 construction starts between April 2023 and March 2024, a drop of 23.3%, a historically low number. The minister warns, however, that this last figure is more subject to caution due to a more fragmented collection of data on construction starts.

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source site-96