Construction employment in August remained below the levels reached before the pre-pandemic peak in February 2020 in 39 states, according to an analysis by the Associated General Contractors of America of government employment data released today. Association officials urged the House of Representatives to quickly pass the bipartisan infrastructure bill to avoid further cutbacks in construction activity and jobs.
“Construction employment slipped or stagnated from July to August in half the states as the delta variant of COVID-19 affected workers and caused some owners to delay projects,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist. “In addition, more than half of the respondents in our latest workforce survey reported experiencing projects that have been canceled, postponed, or scaled back.”
From February 2020—the month before the pandemic caused project shutdowns and cancellations—to last month, construction employment increased in only 11 states and the District of Columbia. Texas shed the most construction jobs over the period (-56,700 jobs or -7.3%), followed by New York (-50,700 jobs, -12.4%) and California (-34,900 jobs, -3.8%). Wyoming recorded the largest percentage loss (-16.6%, -3,800 jobs), followed by Louisiana (-14.4%, -19,700 jobs) and New York.
Utah added the most construction jobs since February 2020 (7,400 jobs, 6.5%), followed by North Carolina (4,500, 1.9%), Idaho (3,700 jobs, 6.7%), and South Carolina (3,700 jobs, 3.5%). The largest percentage gains were in South Dakota (7.1%, 1,700 jobs), followed by Idaho and Utah.
From July to August construction employment decreased in 22 states, increased in 25 states and D.C., and was unchanged in three states. The largest decline over the month occurred in Kansas, which lost 2,400 construction jobs or 3.7%. Georgia lost the second-most jobs (-2,300 jobs, -1.1%). The second-largest percentage decline since July, -2.1%, occurred in Alabama (-1,900 jobs) and Wyoming (-400 jobs).
Nevada added the most construction jobs between July and August (3,000 jobs, 3.3%), followed by New York (2,600 jobs, 0.7%) and Tennessee (2,600 jobs, 2.0%). New Hampshire had the largest percentage gain (4.4%, 1,200 jobs), followed by Nevada and Oklahoma (2.3%, 1,800 jobs).
Association officials warned that construction employment was being impacted in many parts of the country because of supply chain challenges and growing market uncertainty caused by the resurgent Delta variant. They said new federal infrastructure investments would provide a needed boost in demand and help put more people to work in construction careers.
“It is vital that Congress complete work on the bipartisan infrastructure bill before the end of month,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer. “Otherwise, funding will stop for much-needed highway and other public works projects and many more construction workers will lose their jobs.”
View state February 2020-August 2021 data and rankings, 1-month rankings. View AGC’s survey results.
Related Stories
Coronavirus | Mar 20, 2020
Pandemic has halted or delayed projects for 28% of contractors
Coronavirus-caused slowdown contrasts with January figures showing a majority of metro areas added construction jobs; Officials note New infrastructure funding and paid family leave fixes are needed.
Market Data | Mar 17, 2020
Construction spending to grow modestly in 2020, predicts JLL’s annual outlook
But the coronavirus has made economic forecasting perilous.
Market Data | Mar 16, 2020
Grumman/Butkus Associates publishes 2019 edition of Hospital Benchmarking Survey
Report examines electricity, fossil fuel, water/sewer, and carbon footprint.
Market Data | Mar 12, 2020
New study from FMI and Autodesk finds construction organizations with the highest levels of trust perform twice as well on crucial business metrics
Higher levels of trust within organizations and across project teams correlate with increased profit margins, employee retention and repeat business that can all add up to millions of dollars of profitability annually.
Market Data | Mar 11, 2020
The global hotel construction pipeline hits record high at 2019 year-end
Projects currently under construction stand at a record 991 projects with 224,354 rooms.
Market Data | Mar 6, 2020
Construction employment increases by 43,000 in February and 223,000 over 12 months
Average hourly earnings in construction top private sector average by 9.9% as construction firms continue to boost pay and benefits in effort to attract and retain qualified hourly craft workers.
Market Data | Mar 4, 2020
Nonresidential construction spending attains all-time high in January
Private nonresidential spending rose 0.8% on a monthly basis and is up 0.5% compared to the same time last year.
Market Data | Feb 21, 2020
Construction contractor confidence remains steady
70% of contractors expect their sales to increase over the first half of 2020.
Market Data | Feb 20, 2020
U.S. multifamily market gains despite seasonal lull
The economy’s steady growth buoys prospects for continued strong performance.
Market Data | Feb 19, 2020
Architecture billings continue growth into 2020
Demand for design services increases across all building sectors.