International comparisons of construction industry performance: further investigations
conference contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00authored byR Best, Craig Langston
While there have been many attempts at comparisons of construction performance over the past 50 years, the results have generally been inconclusive and/or contradictory.
Such comparisons are of great interest to industry, governments and theorists alike but there is little agreement as to how they are best done. A variety of methodologies have been used, however, the lack of satisfactory outcomes has been due largely to one factor, the lack of a truly reliable method for comparing construction costs in different currencies
Exchange rates are recognised as being unsuitable, and while purchasing power parity (PPP) has a long history, the method still has many critics. In addition, the nature of the building industry and its products makes the establishment of reliable construction PPPs very difficult. Both the UN’s International Comparison Program (ICP) and the European Union gather data for the production of construction-specific PPP indices, but neither body publishes them, as there is too much doubt about their reliability.
New approaches are being developed and some are soon to be trialled. This paper looks at the problems, describes and discusses some new approaches, and assesses their potential.
History
Event
Queensland University of Technology Research Week International Conference
Pagination
1 - 15
Publisher
Queensland University of Technology
Location
Brisbane, Qld.
Place of publication
Brisbane, Qld.
Start date
2005-07-04
End date
2005-07-08
ISBN-13
9781741071016
ISBN-10
1741071011
Language
eng
Notes
QUT Research Week 2005
Publication classification
E1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2005, Queensland University of Technology, School of Engineering Systems
Editor/Contributor(s)
A Sidwell
Title of proceedings
Queensland University of Technology Research Week International Conference: Conference Proceedings