A misspelling of conjecture.
Yes, of course.
To show that a conjecture is false, one must provide a counterexample—an instance or case where the conjecture does not hold true. This counterexample must be specific and clearly demonstrate that the conjecture fails under certain conditions. Additionally, it's important to ensure that the counterexample is within the scope of the conjecture's claims to effectively disprove it.
Mostly GDP growth and GDP per capita (as conjucture in construction industry is highly correlated with economic growth), interest rates (cost of credits for companies and their clients), inflation (if costs of energy and materials rises so the costs of construction services grow as well -> demand for them falls), private income and investments volume (mainly government) (if higher -> demand rises). Interest rates and stability of exchange rates encourage more FDI so the cash from them may be transferred into construction industry.Hope I'm right, I'm writing thesis about construction industry :).