Abstract

Persistent inflation has intensified uncertainty in the construction industry, particularly in volatile economies. Inflation-driven risks affecting Turkish residential projects are examined in this study, focusing on rising costs, fluctuating labor and material prices, and associated risks. The power-based linguistic hedges were used to quantify dominant severity levels under uncertainty based on descriptive statistics and standard deviation thresholds. Results indicate that inflation mostly impacts projects through budget overruns and wage inflation, which exhibit the highest severity and crisis-level risk behaviors. A number of factors drive material price volatility, particularly macroeconomic instability, currency depreciation, and supply-chain disruptions. There is a sustained pressure on contractor profitability due to wage inflation. In contrast, inflation-related effects on schedule, quality, safety, and contractual disputes are secondary and context-dependent. The findings indicate a structural shift in the risk profile of Turkish residential construction, indicating a need for inflation-resilient cost management, adaptive contracting, and proactive labor planning.

  • Kapsamı

    Uluslararası

  • Type

    Hakemli

  • Index info

    WOS.SCI,WOS.SSCI

  • Language

    English

  • Article Type

    None