The
U.S. Census Bureau reports that construction spending fell 1.8 percent in April
compared to the previous month. It rose 4.5 percent compared to April 2015.
Construction spending in the first four months of 2016 is 8.7 percent higher
than for the same period one year ago.
There
have been some pretty good signs of economic strength in the building industry
lately. New home sales have taken off this year— up 16.6 percent in April, the
highest level since January 2008 — which sends a message to builders:
"Build more homes!"
And
construction overall has been on a tear—up 8 percent year-over-year (as of
March 2016, according to the U.S. Census Bureau),
with the commercial side surging past residential and the building of new
hotels and offices up by double digits.
But
with all this activity, nine out of 10 contractors (89 percent) now say
they are having trouble filling open positions, according to a survey conducted in 2015
by the Associated General Contractors of America. The shortages are most acute
among skilled, and generally well-paid, craft workers such as carpenters,
electricians, sheet-metal and concrete installers, as well as among
construction managers and supervisors.
AGC
economist Ken Simonson pointed out that from 2007-2011, 2.3 million
construction jobs (out of 7.7 million at the peak in January 2007) were lost
during the housing crash, Great Recession and early years of the recovery. Only
about half — 1.2 million jobs — have been added back to the construction sector
since 2011. Many laid-off workers took early retirement, went on disability,
joined the oil-fields boom, or started other careers.
Meanwhile,
the pipeline of new workers in construction is thin. Both AGC and the Construction Industry Institute
have called for more recruitment and apprenticeship programs to attract young,
female and minority workers to construction, to replace an aging and mostly
white male workforce.
“An
awful lot of kids have been told: 'To get ahead you really need to go to
college," said Simonson, "'and you don’t want to do that difficult
outside work.” But Simonson said that prevailing construction wages are higher
than those in other occupations one can enter with just a high school diploma.
According
to analysis of the Labor Department's
monthly JOLTS data (Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey) by the Economic
Policy Institute, unemployed construction workers looking for
work still outnumber job openings by 4-to-1. That is higher than in most other
occupational groups. Economist Elise Gould at EPI said contractors might be
able to fill more of the positions that are going unfilled if they lowered
their expectations and raised pay for entry-level workers.
“Employers
don’t want to have to pay any more to get those workers," Gould said.
"And maybe there are some skills that employers are looking for, but
they’re unwilling to train those workers."
Ken
Simonson predicts that in coming quarters, as labor shortages worsen,
construction wages will spike higher and projects will take longer to complete
in many of the hottest building markets around the country.
Source: Marketplace
Economy
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