Industry
Association Officials Say New Career Center and Workforce Development Plan Can
Help As Contractors Report They Have Plenty of Projects to Work on but Not
Enough Experienced Workers to Hire
Construction
employment dipped for the second consecutive month in May, but rising industry
pay and plunging unemployment suggest contractors would be hiring more workers
if they were available, according to an analysis by the Associated General
Contractors of America. Association officials cautioned that worker shortages
may be reaching the point where they undermine the sector’s growth.
“Although
construction employment slipped in April and May, the industry has added
workers in the past year at double the rate of the overall economy,” said Ken
Simonson, the association's chief economist. “Average pay in construction is
rising faster than in the rest of the private sector, and the number of
unemployed construction workers was at the lowest May level in 16 years. These
facts support what contractors tell us: they have plenty of work but are
struggling to find qualified workers to hire.”
Construction
employment totaled 6,645,000 in May, a drop of 15,000 from April. The change
from March to April was revised to a 5,000-employee decline from an initial
estimate of a 1,000-job gain. Even with the back-to-back decreases, industry
employment increased by 219,000, or 3.4 percent, compared to a year ago. Total
nonfarm payroll employment increased 1.7 percent over the year.
Average
hourly earnings, a measure of wages and salaries for all workers, increased 2.6
percent in construction to $28.04 in May. That was nearly 10 percent higher
than the private-sector average, which rose 2.5 percent over the past 12
months, Simonson said. He added that the number of unemployed jobseekers who
last worked in the construction industry decreased for the seventh year in a
row, to 461,000, the lowest total for May since 2000.
Residential
construction—comprising residential building and specialty trade
contractors—declined by 4,400 jobs in May but is up by 127,700, or 5.2 percent,
compared to a year ago. Nonresidential construction—building, specialty trades,
and heavy and civil engineering construction firms—shed 10,300 jobs for the
month but added 91,400 employees compared to May 2015, a 2.3 percent increase.
Association
officials said the new AGC Career Center and the measures outlined in
the association’s Workforce Development Plan could help address
worker shortages in the short and long term. The new Career Center can
help firms in the short term who are looking to find qualified workers.
And the Workforce Development Plan measures, which include increasing funding
for the Perkins Act, can help rebuild the pipeline for recruiting and preparing
future workers over the longer term.
“Tight
labor markets are beginning to undermine the construction industry’s ability to
expand,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive
officer. “And while we are taking steps to provide short-term relief, we
need public officials to provide the funding and flexibility needed to allow
for more career and technical education in this country.”
Source: AGC
of America
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