Source:Statistical Department Malaysia.
This is a blog managed by Construction, Engineering and Infrastructure Management (CEIM) at Asian Institute of Technology, Thailand. In this blog, CEIM shares our activities in providing excellent professional project management education at Master and Doctoral levels in Thailand, Indonesia and Vietnam. http://www.set.ait.ac.th/ceim/
Wednesday, 10 October 2012
Sunday, 7 October 2012
CONSTRUCTION STATISTICS JAPAN
The construction industry, accounting for about 10 percent of both GDP and all employed persons, is one of the core industries in Japan. However, it faces a series of challenges, including rapidly shrinking construction investment and increasingly fierce price wars. The business environment surrounding the industry is now harsher than ever before. In fiscal 2011, the industry employed (excluding Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures) 4.74 million persons, and investment in construction stood at approximately 42.0 trillion yen.
Investment in
construction in fiscal 2011 showed a year-on-year increase of 2.7 percent at
current prices and a year-on-year increase of 2.0 percent at constant prices,
for the reference year 2005. Construction investment in fiscal 2011 was down
50.0 percent compared to fiscal 1992, when it hit a peak of approximately 84.0
trillion yen.
A breakdown of
construction investment shows that building construction totaled 23.1 trillion
yen (up 4.5 percent from the previous fiscal year), while civil engineering
works amounted to 18.9 trillion yen (up 0.6 percent).
In terms of public and
private construction investment in fiscal 2011, public investment amounted to
16.9 trillion yen (up 0.2 percent from the previous fiscal year), while private
investment totaled 25.1 trillion yen (up 4.5 percent). Public investment
accounted for 40.3 percent of total construction investment, while private
investment accounted for 59.7 percent.
The 2011 total floor
space of building starts was 126.5 million square meters, up 4.2 percent from
the previous year. In particular, the floor space of buildings for medical,
healthcare and welfare use increased by 46.5 percent compared to the previous
year, to 10.9 million square meters. Meanwhile, the number of housing
construction starts (in the case of an apartment building, the number of
apartment units was counted) fell in rental housing but increased in owned
homes and built-for-sale housing, adding up to 0.83 million units. This was a
2.6-percent increase from the previous year, and increased for two fiscal years
continuously.
Source : Statistics Bureau Japan
Thursday, 4 October 2012
SEMINAR
CURRENT PRACTICE IN JAPANESE CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT
by
Dr. Takayuki Minato, Associate Professor, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Mr. Le Hoang Nguyen, Engineering Manager, Nakano Corporation, Vietnam
On 04th October 2012, MPM program has organized a seminar on Current Practice in Japan Construction Management at AITVN-Ho Chi Minh city with participating of over 50 participants. Dr. Minato shared the phylosophy and practices of Japanese Construction Management, while Mr. Nguyen has presented about case study in NAKANO Corporation in Vietnam.
CURRENT PRACTICE IN JAPANESE CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT
by
Dr. Takayuki Minato, Associate Professor, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Mr. Le Hoang Nguyen, Engineering Manager, Nakano Corporation, Vietnam
On 04th October 2012, MPM program has organized a seminar on Current Practice in Japan Construction Management at AITVN-Ho Chi Minh city with participating of over 50 participants. Dr. Minato shared the phylosophy and practices of Japanese Construction Management, while Mr. Nguyen has presented about case study in NAKANO Corporation in Vietnam.
Presentation from Dr. Minato |
Presentation from Mr. Le Hoang Nguyen |
Thank you gift from MPM Program to Mr. Nguyen |
Thank you gift from MPM Program to Dr. Minato |
Wednesday, 3 October 2012
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