For further information contact BCIS at contactbcis@bcis.co.uk or call +44 0330 341 1000
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LoginPublished: 08/11/2023
Construction indices, also known as construction cost indices or construction price indices, are tools used to measure and track changes in the cost of construction, labour, materials and other expenses over time. These indices provide valuable information to various stakeholders in the construction industry, such as contractors, project owners, and government agencies, to understand and manage the economic dynamics of the construction sector.
Indices are published for two main purposes:
BCIS indices are all examples of the latter as they attempt to measure the movement of construction costs and prices, generally assuming constant quality and specification. We do this in a variety of ways.
An index number does not ‘mean’ anything, it is purely a measure of the changes in something.
Indices are usually published relative to 100. This is referred to as the ‘base’, so you should see a statement of the base of an index wherever an index is referred to. BCIS indices generally have a base of 1985 mean = 100. There are exceptions to this where the index wants to show a greater gradation of movement – for example, the FTSE 100 index has a base of 1000 in January 1984.
When an index gets too far away from its base it is less easy to interpret, so indices are often ‘rebased’ to a more recent date, i.e. they are recalibrated to 100. However, there are indices that are never rebased for contractual or continuity purposes, so our PAFI series are always based on the period when they were introduced.
If indices have moved a long way from their base, or other series are difficult to interpret, you may see movement described as ‘Basis’ points. These are a unit of measure, used particularly in finance, to describe the rate change in an index or other benchmark – one basis point is equivalent to 0.01% (1/100th of a percent) or 0.0001 in decimal form.
Prices and Costs
In any transaction, price and cost are the same thing – ie, the seller’s price is the buyer’s cost. The convention at BCIS is to use ‘Price’ to mean what the client pays to a contractor and ‘Cost’ to mean what a contractor pays for the resources required to complete the work.
Indices and Indexes
At BCIS we use ‘Indices’ as the plural of ‘Index’.
For further information contact BCIS at contactbcis@bcis.co.uk or call +44 0330 341 1000