Numerous articles have defined the factors that cause the delays in the construction projects. The construction delay argument can be found in several countries, including Malaysia, Portugal, the United States, the United Kingdom, and India. Moreover, the main two articles studied the construction delay in Cambodia; however, they focused on certain particular construction projects. Construction delay is the most common thing that occurs in the construction sector. Firstly, this article will start by discovering the construction delays in other countries before working on the previous report in Cambodia.
1.2.1. Global
A report by Assaf and Al-Hejji [
7], studied the cause of delay in large construction projects in Saudi Arabia by collecting the data from three parties: the owners, consultants, and contractors. In the report, a factor was found which was agreed on by all the three parties: the scope change by the owner is the most important factor that leads to construction delay. The other factors were agreed on by two parties. Frimpong et al. [
8] also collected the data from owners, consultants, and contractors; however, there were five most influential factors which were agreed on by all the three parties in the Ghana construction industry, which are “monthly payment complications from agencies, poor contractor management, material procurement, poor technical performances, and escalation of material prices”. Assaf and Al-Hejji [
7] also pointed out the slightest critical aspects, such as the “effect of social and cultural factors, traffic control and restrictions at the site, accidents during construction, and changes in government regulations”. Finally, the authors stated that contractors and laborers are the leading causes of construction delay from the consultants’ and owners’ perspectives, while the contractors claimed that the owners and consultants are the main causes of a construction delay. Faridi and El-Sayegh [
5] agreed with the perspective of the Saudi Arabian owners and consultants. Their study identified that the contractors are the most significant group that causes a delay in the UAE construction industry. They located the first five significant factors in this group. Gunduz et al. [
9] also found a similar result. Rao et al. [
10], however, partially accepted that the contractor group is the main group causing the delay. Their study only found two factors in the contractor group among the first ten factors, while they recognized three factors in the owner group among the first ten factors which lead to the delay in construction. Those three factors are delay in payment, variations during construction, and slow decision making. Later, Mpofu et al. [
11] strongly agreed on two factors that were discovered by Rao, Shekar, Jaiswal, Jain, and Saxena [
10]. They recognized that scope change and changes in orders and slowness in the owners’ decision-making processes are the top ten significant factors in construction delays. They also pointed out another factor in the first ten important factors, which is the unrealistic contract duration imposed by the client. Moreover, this is also known as the first significant factor that leads to construction project delays.
Doloi et al. [
12] researched the factors causing delays in Indian construction projects and found several factors, but the research team classed them into seven groups, including sub-standard contract, lack of communication, lack of clarity in the project’s scope, improper planning, poor site coordination, inefficient site management, and lack of commitment. In the study, they analyzed and ranked those factors by using the Relative Importance Index analysis method. Gunduz, Nielsen, and Ozdemir [
9], Matin [
13], Khair et al. [
14], and Shrivas and Singla [
15] adopted the same analysis method in their studies. With this analysis, the lack of commitment is found to be the number one group that leads to the delay in the Indian construction projects. They said that the cooperation of the projects’ stakeholders acts as a robust foundation that leads to the projects’ completion. A few years later, this factor was also confirmed by Aziz [
16], Bekr [
17], Bagaya and Song [
18], Durdyev et al. [
19], and Alhajri and Alshibani [
20].
Bagaya and Song [
18] demonstrated the factors that lead to time overrun in the public construction projects of Burkina Faso. In the study, the factors were indicated in three aspects: contractors, consultants, and owners. The authors presented five substantial factors that resulted in time overrun in the public construction projects. These were poor subcontractor performance, slow payments of completed work, equipment availability of the contractor, financial difficulties of the owners, and financial capability of the contractor. This study was a quantitative research method combined with three techniques, such as the frequency, severity, and importance index analysis method. Akogbe et al. [
21], Bekr [
17], Rao, Shekar, Jaiswal, Jain, and Saxena [
10], Santoso and Soeng [
22], Chiu and Lai [
23], Islam and Suhariadi [
24], and Yap et al. [
25] adopted similar analysis methods in their study. As the study has used several analysis methods, the authors also used Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient. The suggested tool aimed to reach the accuracy level between two parties [
20]. Moreover, the study was compared with other 11 countries, and it was discovered that the contractor’s financial capability was most often the time overrun factors in the other five regions and equaled over 45% among the major five factors.
Kog [
26] researched the factors that caused the delay in Iran’s construction projects. It was reported that there are nine main delay factors from fourteen studies presented by the author. Those delay factors are incompetent workforce, subcontractor issues, slow decisions by the owner, projects awarded to the lowest bid price, equipment failure and availability, financing issues of the contractor, inadequate planning and scheduling, inability of the contractor, shortage or late delivery of construction materials, poor site management and supervision, variation of orders or changes of the scope by the owner during construction, and finance and payments of finished work by the owners. Subsequently, Choong Kog [
27] carried out another study of the delay factors in construction projects. However, the authors compared the delay factors of three countries, Portugal, the United Kingdom (UK), and the United States (US), by collecting the previous studies reported between 1971 and 2015. It was reported that one of the most common delay factors which can be found among these three countries was the scope creep by the owner during construction. This factor was also determined in the previous studies. While other factors were found between the two countries, these include slow decisions from the owner, ineffective planning and scheduling by contractors, late delivery or shortage of construction materials, unqualified workforce or low-skilled labor, and government and regulation and permit approval. It indicates that the delay factors in both studies were found to be similar. Matin [
13] agrees that the additional work during the construction phase would mean taking extra time to complete the work. Amri and Marey-Pérez [
28] strongly agreed that a change of scope by the owner is the root cause of the client-related cause leading to the delay in the construction. Moreover, they also supported other factors found in the Kog [
26,
27] studies.
Mydin et al. [
29] conducted a study on the “Assessment of Influential Causes of Construction Project Delay in Malaysian Private Housing from Developer’s Viewpoint”. Ten significant points caused the delay in the Malaysian private housing construction projects. The weather condition was stated to be the first factor. The main obstacle that prevents a high productivity result in the construction projects is the uncertain weather. It was indicated that there were other factors, such as lack of experience on the part of consultant site staff, incomplete documentation, poor site management by the contractors, poor site condition, and others.
In reported research on the construction delay in petrochemical projects in Saudi Arabia, over 80 people participated in a survey. Over 40% of the respondents had been working for more than ten years. The authors used the Relative Importance Index (RII) to define the most critical factors from 23 factors, precisely the same as the studies mentioned earlier. According to the Frequency Adjusted Importance Index (FAII), the most significant factor that led to delay in the petrochemical construction projects in Saudi Arabia was the late materials or equipment delivery, which resulted in over 50% [
20]. Doloi, Sawhney, Iyer, and Rentala [
12] strongly supported the finding that the delay in material delivery is the main delay issue. The material shortage results from the miscalculation of the lead time by the seller [
12].
Quraishi and Bashir [
30] researched factors causing a delay in the oil and gas construction projects by collecting the data resulting from questioning with closed-type questions. The seven most important factors were identified as poor interaction with vendors in the engineering and procurement stage, ineffective communication among project stakeholders, failure to deliver construction materials on time, poor management of the contractors’ schedule, inadequate planning and scheduling of the project by contractors, problems with subcontractors, and poor site management and supervision by contractors. Poor site management was found to be the majority delay factor in the study of Frimpong et al. [
8] and Yap, Chow, and Shavarebi [
25]. Yap, Chow, and Shavarebi [
25] argued that all construction projects need excellent site management because this will contribute to completing construction projects within the different aspects (cost, quality, and time).
Another article, by Ji et al. [
31], discussed the delay in the Chinese construction industry. Nonetheless, they only addressed the delay in prefabricated concrete building projects. Twenty-four delay factors were pointed out from several literature reviews. Within those 24 factors, the authors grouped them into seven categories, such as construction techniques (D1), workforce (D2), resources (D3), machinery (D4), clients (D5), contractors (D6), and external conditions (D7). D6, moreover, contains nine delay factors which are the largest factors among the other categories. Based on the research, this D6 is the most influential group leading to the delay in a prefabricated concrete building in Chinese construction projects. Six of the top ten significant delay factors were originally discovered from this group, such as wrong delivery requirements and routes, re-manufacturing due to component damage, poor planning and scheduling, the weak relationship among stakeholders, rehandling components, and incompetent structural connections.
Shrivas and Singla [
15] researched the “Factors Causing Delay in Marine Construction Projects in India”. The results of the study indicated results which were similar those of the other studies, which have been discussed before. The authors used the Relative Importance Index method to rank all the factors. After the analysis, the major delay factor causing the delay in the marine construction projects is poor project control. The poor project control was also agreed upon by Assaf and Al-Hejji [
7], Doloi, Sawhney, Iyer, and Rentala [
12], and Ruqaishi and Bashir [
30]. They found out that this factor is one of the first ten potential factors leading to a delay in the construction projects. Furthermore, the authors also mentioned other factors, such as lack of a defined project management plan, lack of proper construction methodology and sequencing, erroneous quantity survey and estimations, lack of contractual clarity, and others.
Chiu and Lai [
23] researched a project delay case study in electrical construction in Hong Kong. The authors highlighted and discussed the first ten main causes in the project delay, which are the lack of on-site coordination, poor workmanship and labor skills, lack of communication between parties, reworking due to error, change of client’s orders, the inadequate experience of consultants, the cash-flow problems of the electrical contractor, insufficient electrical contractors, late decision making of the client, and insufficient labor. Most of the articles above found that the lack of labor is not located among the first ten delay factors; however, it is the primary reason that is causing the delay in Hong Kong construction projects. They claimed that a lack of human resources is a common phenomenon that can be found in Hong Kong. According to the projection, there were 320,000 registered construction laborers but around 70,000 workers were active at the time. This results in low work productivity [
23].
Another article has discussed the delay in another construction industry, which is the highway construction projects in Thailand. In the article, eight significant factors out of 26 delay factors were found from ten project managers who had been working for over 20 years. Those eight factors include the shortage of materials, poor site management, lack of traffic safety during construction, delay in relieving the environment impact, shortage of project engineer experience, delay in relocating the existing utility structures, lack of equipment efficiency or financial status of contractors, and incomplete drawings [
32]. Four factors from those mentioned above have been found in other articles as well.
Mahamid et al. [
33] analyzed the factors causing the delay in the road construction projects in Palestine. The five most influential factors were highlighted: the shortage of equipment, progress payment delay by the owner, the award of the project to the lowest bid price, limited movement between areas, and the political situation. The project payment delay by the owners was strongly agreed upon by Rao, Shekar, Jaiswal, Jain, and Saxena [
10]. Moreover, Assaf and Al-Hejji [
7], Aziz [
16], Gunduz, Nielsen, and Ozdemir [
9], Ruqaishi and Bashir [
30], Bagaya and Song [
18], and Durdyev, Omarov, and Ismail [
19] have discovered this point in their studies. Aziz [
16] strongly agreed with the progress payment delay. This factor is the first issue leading to the delay in the construction projects in Egypt. Frimpong, Oluwoye, and Crawford [
8], Bagaya and Song [
18], and Islam and Suhariadi [
24] accepted that the selection of the lower bidder was one of the potential factors that caused the time overrun in the construction projects. Mahamid [
34] and Alhajri and Alshibani [
20], however, were the only researchers who found the political situation in their study, but it was found to be the least identical factor in their studies.
Khair, Mohamed, Mohammad, Farouk, and Ahmed [
14] were also the authors who discovered the delay factors in the road construction projects as well. They studied the delay factors in Sudan. The authors identified 66 delay factors, but they grouped them into six categories: external, technical skills, teamworking trust, knowledge competence experience, project management, and financial competence. The “finance competence group” is the most critical group leading to the time overrun in Sudan construction projects. Moreover, five factors come from this finance competence group: the inflation effect on material purchasing, inadequate client finance and payment for completed work, insufficient funds, delays in payment to the contractors, and cash flow problems (irregular payment). Mahamid [
35,
36], Amoatey and Ankrah [
37], Elawi et al. [
38], and Alfakhri et al. [
39] also discovered similar factors in their studies.
Based on the three articles that discuss road construction projects, it seems that some factors have been found in each study. Khair, Mohamed, Mohammad, Farouk, and Ahmed [
14] supported the finding that the progress payment delay by owners in the study of Mahamid, Bruland, and Dmaidi [
33] is one of the main issues that leads to the delay in the construction projects that were found in the study. Moreover, they also agreed with Thapanont, Santi, and Pruethipong [
32] on the management aspect. They claimed that management is the key to reducing the impact on construction project delays. Thapanont, Santi, and Pruethipong [
32] agreed with Mahamid, Bruland, and Dmaidi [
33] on the shortage of equipment. Equipment is a crucial item for road work. With a lack of supply and poor condition, the project will result in low productivity, causing a delay in the construction projects [
33].
It seems that most of the articles presented three parties contained in the construction sector Bekr [
17]; however, the authors included another party in the research: the external factors group. This research discovered “Causes of Delay in Public Construction Projects in Iraq”. This group was found to be the priority factor that caused the delay in the construction projects. The first three significant factors were in this group, including “security measure, government change of regulations and bureaucracy, and official and non-official holidays”. Nonetheless, the author did not detail any information on the security measure.