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An industry structured for unsafety? An exploration of the cost-safety conundrum in construction project delivery

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-08-30, 17:04 authored by David Oswald, Dominic D. Ahiaga-Dagbui, Fred Sherratt, Simon D. Smith
Construction accidents can have major social, financial, reputational and legal implications. Hence, it is to be expected that safety is often presented as a key priority for construction organisations. However, existing evidence suggests that within the construction industry, safety often loses the battle when a trade-off is required with project cost. Improved understanding of the manifestations of the cost and safety interaction are needed. A three-year longitudinal study afforded the opportunity to investigate the safety implications of sub-economic bids on a large infrastructure project in the UK. While low-bidding to win tenders is not new, this paper presents empirical evidence of the consequential safety risk implications of such bidding at the project delivery stage. Faced with a perverse form of the tender ‘Winner's Curse’ where the successful bid is frequently the lowest, cost-saving strategies are often implemented to recoup lost pricing margins. Our investigation revealed several instances of consequentially elevated safety risks, through cheaper and poor-quality equipment, machinery and temporary structures. In addition, lower-paid migrant workers – who already experience a statistically greater safety risk than local workers – were employed on the project without appropriate investment in a safety management approach suitable for a multinational workforce. The study both contributes to the call to critically rethink the construction industry's competitive bidding practices, and highlights an industry structure that creates the conditions for high safety risks and accidents.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

122

Page range

104535

Publication title

Safety Science

ISSN

0925-7535

Publisher

Elsevier

File version

  • Accepted version

Language

  • eng

Legacy posted date

2020-03-17

Legacy creation date

2020-03-17

Legacy Faculty/School/Department

Faculty of Science & Engineering

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