Economics for the Modern Built Environment

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building
building life-cycle management
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construction
construction Economics
construction Economics books
construction industry economic forecasting
Construction Markets
Construction Sector
cycles
Cyclical Indicators
Economics for the Modern Built Environment
ECRI
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fiscal policy impacts
forecasting
Gdp Growth
GFCF
global
Global Construction Market
Industry Technology Assumption
Knowledge Spillovers
Leading Economic Indicators
Leighton Holdings
Leontief Model
macroeconomic modelling
market
markets
Measuring Investment Performance
Modern Built Environment
Output Multipliers
property sector analysis
Real Estate Investment
Reverse Knowledge Transfer
sector
short
Short Term Economic Forecasting
Si Te
sustainable development economics
term
Turkish Contractors
UK Building Regulation
UK Input Output
UN
urban design economics
World Development Report

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415454247
  • Weight: 710g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Oct 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Recent decades have seen a major social and economic changes across the developed world and consequent changes in the construction and property industries. The discipline of construction economics needs to respond to this. For instance, the importance of sustainable development has become recognised, as has the need to increasingly master the medium and long-term consequences of construction, not only in the production but also in the management of buildings across their whole life-cycle. And the new focus on the service rendered by buildings, as distinct from the buildings themselves, has prompted a new approach to the construction and property industries. Any economic analysis of these sectors has to take account of all the participants involved in the life-cycle of building structures – not only in the design and construction, but also in the operation, maintenance, refurbishment and demolition of property.

This innovative new book draws on the work of the Task Group of the CIB (International Council for Research and Innovation) on Macroeconomics for Construction. It pulls together discussions of mesoeconomic and macroeconomic models and methodologies in construction economics and presents an exciting approach to the analysis of the operation and function of the construction and property sector within the economy. Graduate students and researchers will find it an invaluable work.

Les Ruddock is Professor of Construction and Property Economics, and Associate Dean for Research in the Faculty of Business, Law and the Built Environment, at the University of Salford. He is the Co-ordinator of the CIB (Conseil International du Bâtiment) Task Group on Macroeconomics for Construction.