Construction Jobs Growing at Twice the Rate of Total
Nonfarm Jobs as Sector’s Unemployment Rate Hits 10-Year March Low; Several
Spending Segments Jump 20 Percent for the Year Despite Dip in Monthly Total
Construction employment rose sharply in March by 37,000
for the month and 301,000 for the year, while construction spending in February
logged a solid year-over-year increase despite a dip compared with January,
according to an analysis by the Associated General Contractors of America.
Association officials said the new jobs and spending indicate that the industry
is steadily expanding to meet growing demand.
“These two reports confirm that demand for construction
is robust and well-balanced among residential, private nonresidential and
public segments,” said Ken Simonson, the association's chief economist.
“Compared with the same month a year ago, the industry is adding workers at
more than double the rate of the overall economy, and construction spending
continues to rise at a double-digit pace.”
Construction employment totaled 6,672,000 in
March, the most since December 2008, and is up by 301,000 jobs compared to a
year ago, a 4.7 percent increase. That rate of increase was more than double
the 2.0 percent rise in total nonfarm payroll employment since March 2015.
Residential construction—comprising residential building
and specialty trade contractors—increased by 13,400 jobs in March and by
166,000, or 6.8 percent, compared to a year ago. Nonresidential
construction—building, specialty trades, and heavy and civil engineering
construction firms—added 23,900 jobs for the month and 134,800 jobs compared to
March 2015, a 3.4 percent increase.
Meanwhile, the number of unemployed jobseekers in March
who last worked in construction totaled 768,000, the lowest March total since
2001. The unemployment rate for such workers was 8.7 percent, a 10-year low for
March.
Construction spending in February totaled $1.144 trillion
at a seasonally adjusted annual rate, 0.5 percent below the upwardly revised
January total but 10.3 percent higher than in February 2015, Simonson said.
Private residential spending rose 0.9 percent for the month and 10.7 percent
compared to February 2015. Spending on multifamily residential construction
increased 0.9 percent for the month and 24.1 percent year-over-year, while
single-family spending climbed 1.2 percent from January and 10.6 percent
compared to February 2015.
Private nonresidential construction spending slipped 1.3
percent for the month but gained 10.6 percent from a year earlier. Simonson
observed that nearly every segment increased from 12 months before, with gains
of more than 30 percent each for private office and lodging construction and
more than 20 percent for amusement and recreation and private educational
construction.
Public construction spending declined 1.7 percent from a
month before but rose 9.2 percent from 12 months earlier. Spending on highway
and street construction—the biggest public segment—slipped 2.1 percent for the
month, following an exceptionally large increase in January, but was up 24.5
percent compared to February 2015.
“Construction firms are finding a way to add staff to
keep pace with growing demand for their services,” said Stephen E. Sandherr,
the association’s chief executive officer. “But the pool of available
experienced labor is small and getting smaller, which is why we will continue
to push for measures to expand recruiting and training opportunities for future
workers.”
Source: AGC
of America
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