Mississippi and California Rack up the Largest 12-Month
Gains, Montana and Ohio Have Biggest Declines; Indiana and California Top
Monthly Rankings, While Kentucky and Arizona Shed the Most Jobs in November
Construction firms added jobs in 39 states over the past 12
months, while employment nearly stabilized in the remainder, according to an
analysis released today by the Associated General Contractors of America of
Labor Department data. Association officials cautioned that the industry’s
recovery was still relatively fragile, noting that a number of states
experiencing large annual gains lost jobs during the past month.
“The widespread job gains seen in most states for the past
few months continued in November, while no state recorded a year-over-year loss
of more than 4 percent,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist.
“But progress remains fragile, with some states having results in the latest
month that diverge sharply from their year-over-year outcomes.” He added that
every state remains below its previous construction employment peak.
Mississippi led all states with a 17 percent rise (8,000
jobs) in construction employment between November 2012 and November 2013. Yet
the state ranked 49th out of 50 states plus D.C. between October and November,
with a loss of 2.3 percent or 1,300 construction jobs. Conversely, Indiana
topped the monthly rankings, adding 4.8 percent (5,400 construction jobs), but
lost 3.4 percent (-4,100 jobs) over 12 months. Only Montana (-4.0 percent, -900
jobs) and D.C. (-3.7 percent, -500 jobs) had steeper 12-month declines,
Simonson pointed out.
States with strong 12-month percentage gains besides
Mississippi included Connecticut (11 percent, 5,600 jobs), Missouri (9.8 percent,
10,100 jobs) and Georgia (9.5 percent, 13,200 jobs). California added the most
jobs over the year (31,500, 5.2 percent), followed by Florida (24,300, 7.0
percent), Texas (13,300, 2.2 percent), Georgia and Missouri.
A total of 10 states plus D.C. shed construction jobs
between November 2012 and November 2013, while employment was constant in
Delaware. The largest number of losses occurred in Ohio (-5,200, -2.9 percent),
followed by Indiana, Alabama (-2,500, -3.2 percent) and North Carolina (-2,500,
-1.5 percent).
For the month, 30 states added construction jobs, 16 lost
jobs, and employment held steady in four states plus D.C. In addition to
Indiana, the steepest one-month gains occurred in New Hampshire (3.5 percent,
800 jobs) and Alaska (3.4 percent, 600 jobs). California added the most
construction jobs in November (6,600, 1.1 percent), followed by Illinois
(6,100, 3.3 percent) and Indiana. The steepest losses for the month occurred in
Kentucky (-3.1 percent, -2,100 jobs), Louisiana (-2.6 percent, -3,700 jobs) and
Mississippi. Louisiana lost the most jobs over the month, followed by Ohio
(-3,600, -2.1 percent) and New York (-2,900, -0.9 percent).
Association officials noted that the job gains occurred
following an unusual spike in public construction spending experienced in
October that masked softening private sector demand. They cautioned that as public spending
declines, construction employment is likely to weaken in many parts of the
country. As a result, they urged
Congress and the Obama administration to finalize water resources legislation
and to act swiftly next year to renew long-term highway and transit
legislation.
“At this point, it is hard to predict whether construction
employment will continue to expand in many states next year,” said Stephen E.
Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer. “Passing vital
infrastructure measures will help protect construction employers from any
softening in private sector demand, while giving the economy a needed boost.”
Source: AGC
of America
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