Construction employment in July remained below the levels reached before the pre-pandemic peak in February 2020 in 36 states, according to an analysis by the Associated General Contractors of America of government employment data released today. Association officials said construction employment would benefit from new federal infrastructure investments and urged the House to quickly pass the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
“This data shows that full recovery remains elusive for construction in most states,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist. “In fact, the fast-spreading COVID-19 delta variant may make it harder to find employees eligible to work on restricted sites and may also depress demand if some owners defer projects.”
From February 2020—the month before the pandemic caused project shutdowns and cancellations—to last month, construction employment increased in only 14 states and was flat in the District of Columbia. Texas shed the most construction jobs over the period (-56,200 jobs or -7.2%), followed by New York (-52,600 jobs, -12.9%) and California (-35,100 jobs, -3.8%). Louisiana recorded the largest percentage loss (-15.3%, -21,000 jobs), followed by Wyoming (-13.5%, -3,100 jobs) and New York.
Of the states that added construction jobs since February 2020, Utah added the most (7,900 jobs, 6.9%), followed by North Carolina (5,700, 2.4%) and Idaho (4,400 jobs, 8.2%). The largest percentage gain was in Idaho, followed by South Dakota (7.5%, 1,800 jobs) and Utah.
From June to July construction employment decreased in 18 states, increased in 30, and was unchanged in Kansas, Tennessee, and D.C. The largest decline over the month occurred in Colorado, which lost 1,600 construction jobs or 0.9%, followed by a loss of 1,500 jobs each in Oklahoma (-1.9%), Texas (-0.2%), and Pennsylvania (0.6%). The steepest percentage declines since June occurred in New Hampshire (-2.2%, -600 jobs), followed by 1.9% losses in Oklahoma and Arkansas (-1,000 jobs).
North Carolina added the most construction jobs between June and July (4,300 jobs, 1.8%), followed by New Jersey (4,000 jobs, 2.7%) and Illinois (3,700 jobs, 1.7%). The largest percentage gains were in New Jersey and Connecticut (2.7%, 1,500 jobs), followed by South Carolina (2.4%, 2,600 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.
“New federal infrastructure investments will help put more people to work in high-paying construction careers,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer. “The House can help put Americans back to work by immediately approving the infrastructure measure that passed the Senate with broad, bipartisan support.”
View state February 2020-July 2021 data and rankings, 1-month rankings.c
Related Stories
Market Data | Oct 24, 2018
Architecture firm billings slow but remain positive in September
Billings growth slows but is stable across sectors.
Market Data | Oct 19, 2018
New York’s five-year construction spending boom could be slowing over the next two years
Nonresidential building could still add more than 90 million sf through 2020.
Market Data | Oct 8, 2018
Global construction set to rise to US$12.9 trillion by 2022, driven by Asia Pacific, Africa and the Middle East
The pace of global construction growth is set to improve slightly to 3.7% between 2019 and 2020.
Market Data | Sep 25, 2018
Contractors remain upbeat in Q2, according to ABC’s latest Construction Confidence Index
More than three in four construction firms expect that sales will continue to rise over the next six months, while three in five expect higher profit margins.
Market Data | Sep 24, 2018
Hotel construction pipeline reaches record highs
There are 5,988 projects/1,133,017 rooms currently under construction worldwide.
Market Data | Sep 21, 2018
JLL fit out report portrays a hot but tenant-favorable office market
This year’s analysis draws from 2,800 projects.
Market Data | Sep 21, 2018
Mid-year forecast: No end in sight for growth cycle
The AIA Consensus Construction Forecast is projecting 4.7% growth in nonresidential construction spending in 2018.
Market Data | Sep 19, 2018
August architecture firm billings rebound as building investment spurt continues
Southern region, multifamily residential sector lead growth.
Market Data | Sep 18, 2018
Altus Group report reveals shifts in trade policy, technology, and financing are disrupting global real estate development industry
International trade uncertainty, widespread construction skills shortage creating perfect storm for escalating project costs; property development leaders split on potential impact of emerging technologies.