Construction Employment Drops Most in 2 Years as Construction Spending Rises

Heavy and civil engineering suffers largest employment decline, reflecting April's 1.4% decrease in public construction activity

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Construction employment fell in May by 28,000, the largest decline in two years, and is now at the lowest level since last August, according to an analysis of new federal data released today by the Associated General Contractors of America. The drop in construction employment comes as new figures show a 1.4 percent decrease in public construction spending restrained overall construction activity growth to 0.3 percent.

“With construction employment shrinking for the fourth month in a row, the industry is clearly having a difficult start to the year,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist. “In particular, cuts to public sector investments in construction are taking their toll, given that heavy and civil engineering construction experienced the largest employment decline within the sector.”

Total construction employment now stands at 5,516,000, or 0.5 percent lower than a month earlier but 18,000 higher (0.3 percent) than in May 2011, the economist said. Meanwhile the industry’s unemployment rate is at 14.2 percent, nearly double the national average. He added that overall construction employment is still far below its peak level of 7,726,000 in April 2006.

The nonresidential construction sector lost 17,400 construction jobs in May, Simonson noted. Heavy and civil engineering construction firms – which perform a large share of publicly funded construction work – shed 11,200 jobs while nonresidential specialty trade contractors lost another 7,700. Nonresidential building contractors added 1,500 for the month. Residential construction lost 11,000 total jobs as the residential specialty trade contractors shed 10,000 jobs and residential builders lost 1,000 positions in May.

Meanwhile, construction spending in April increased by 0.3 percent compared to March 2012 and 6.8 percent compared with April 2011 and is now at an annualized rate of $820.7 billion. Private sector demand for construction expanded by 1.2 percent for the month and 12.5 percent year-over-year, but overall growth was held back by a 1.4 percent monthly decline in public construction activity and a 3.2 percent drop from the April 2011 level.

Association officials said the new construction employment and spending figures underscore the need for quick Congressional action on a number of long-term infrastructure measures, including reauthorizing clean water and surface transportation programs. They said members of Congress participating in a conference committee negotiating what could possibly be a new highway and transportation bill should feel a new sense of urgency given the grim construction employment figures.

“Getting a highway and transit bill passed would certainly help counter any possible backslide in construction employment,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer. “While the overall economy will need to be much stronger before private sector construction activity and employment begin to approach pre-recession levels, investments in infrastructure will certainly help put more construction workers back on the job.”

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