Construction employment increased by 228,000 jobs over the past year despite a weather-related dip last month, and the industry's unemployment rate fell to 7.4%, the lowest yet for March, according to an analysis of new government data by the Associated General Contractors of America. Association officials called for revitalizing and adequately funding career and technical education and training programs to ensure that employment in the high-paying industry would continue to grow.
"Construction employment indicators are still signaling strong demand on an annual basis, even though unusually bad weather in several regions probably depressed hiring in March," said Ken Simonson, the association's chief economist. "Employment is rising twice as fast as for the overall economy, pay rates and growth are outpacing the private sector as a whole, and the industry's unemployment rate was the lowest ever for March."
Construction employment totaled 7,150,000 in March, a dip of 15,000 for the month but an increase of 228,000, or 3.3%, over 12 months. The economist pointed out that the year-over-year growth rate in industry jobs was more than double the 1.5% rise in total nonfarm payroll employment.
Hourly earnings in the industry averaged $29.43 in March, a rise of 2.9% from a year earlier. That put average pay in construction 9.7% higher than the average for all nonfarm private-sector jobs, which rose 2.7% in the past year, to $26.82, the economist noted.
The unemployment rate in construction dropped from 8.4% a year earlier to 7.4% last month—the lowest March rate since the series began in 2000. The number of unemployed job seekers with recent construction experience declined to 696,000 in March 2018, which was the lowest total for March since 2001, Simonson said.
Residential construction—comprising residential building and specialty trade contractors—shrank by 7,000 jobs in March but added 114,200 jobs, or 4.3%, over the past 12 months. Nonresidential construction (building, specialty trades, and heavy and civil engineering construction) employment also increased by 114,200, or 2.7%, over 12 months, despite a drop of 8,200 jobs in March.
Construction officials said the new employment figures show the industry continues to create high-paying, long-term jobs but that there is a critical need for more workers. They urged officials at all levels of government to re-invigorate and adequately fund career and technical education programs.
"Construction offers great careers, with above-average pay both for entry-level workers and for the industry as a whole compared to the private-sector average," said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association's chief executive officer. "To make sure students and workers displaced from other jobs have the chance to gain the skills needed to succeed in growing sectors like construction, government officials must do their part. That means funding up-to-date career and technical education and training, and allowing the industry to collaborate in providing opportunities."
Related Stories
Market Data | Jan 5, 2021
Barely one-third of metros add construction jobs in latest 12 months
Dwindling list of project starts forces contractors to lay off workers.
Market Data | Jan 4, 2021
Nonresidential construction spending shrinks further in November
Many commercial projects languish, even while homebuilding soars.
Market Data | Dec 29, 2020
Multifamily transactions drop sharply in 2020, according to special report from Yardi Matrix
Sales completions at end of Q3 were down over 41 percent from the same period a year ago.
Market Data | Dec 28, 2020
New coronavirus recovery measure will provide some needed relief for contractors coping with project cancellations, falling demand
Measure’s modest amount of funding for infrastructure projects and clarification that PPP loans may not be taxed will help offset some of the challenges facing the construction industry.
Market Data | Dec 28, 2020
Construction employment trails pre-pandemic levels in 35 states despite gains in industry jobs from October to November in 31 states
New York and Vermont record worst February-November losses, Virginia has largest pickup.
Market Data | Dec 16, 2020
Architecture billings lose ground in November
The pace of decline during November accelerated from October, posting an Architecture Billings Index (ABI) score of 46.3 from 47.5.
AEC Tech | Dec 8, 2020
COVID-19 affects the industry’s adoption of ConTech in different ways
A new JLL report assesses which tech options got a pandemic “boost.”
Market Data | Dec 7, 2020
Construction sector adds 27,000 jobs in November
Project cancellations, looming PPP tax bill will undercut future job gains.
Market Data | Dec 3, 2020
Only 30% of metro areas add construction jobs in latest 12 months
Widespread project postponements and cancellations force layoffs.
Market Data | Dec 2, 2020
New Passive House standards offers prescriptive path that reduces costs
Eliminates requirement for a Passive House consultant and attendant modeling.