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Home » Construction Employment Remains Below Pre-Pandemic Levels In 21 States And D.C. As Spiking Materials Prices Hinder Sector’s Recovery
Economics

Construction Employment Remains Below Pre-Pandemic Levels In 21 States And D.C. As Spiking Materials Prices Hinder Sector’s Recovery

March 14, 2022Updated:December 4, 2023No Comments3 Mins Read
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New York & North Dakota Have Worst Losses Since February 2020, While Utah and Montana Added the Most, Illinois Registers Worst One-Month Job Loss, North Carolina & Mississippi Top Monthly Gains

Construction employment remains below pre-pandemic levels in 21 states and D.C. while 29 states now employ more construction workers than in February 2020, according to a new analysis of federal employment data released by the Associated General Contractors of America. Association officials said the new figures underscore how spiking materials prices and tight labor markets are undermining the sector’s recovery.

“Employment has risen in most of the nation over the past year, but contractors are having an increasingly hard time finding all the workers they need as unemployment hits record lows in more states,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist. “The scramble for workers is likely to drive wages and overtime costs even higher at the same time rising materials prices are cutting into already tight margins.”

From February 2020—the month before the pandemic caused projects to be halted or canceled—to January 2022, construction employment decreased in 21 states and D.C., and increased in 29 states. New York shed the most construction jobs over the period (-32,000 jobs, -7.8 percent), followed by Texas (-29,400 jobs, -3.8 percent), California (-28,600 jobs, -3.1 percent), and Pennsylvania (-10,500 jobs, -4.0 percent). The largest percentage losses were in New York, North Dakota (-7.8 percent, 2,200 jobs), Oklahoma (-6.7 percent, -5,500 jobs), and New Mexico (-5.8 percent, -3,000 jobs).

Utah added the most construction jobs since February 2020 (10,400 jobs, 9.1 percent), followed by Indiana (8,600 jobs, 5.8 percent), and Missouri (7,100 jobs, 5.5 percent). The largest percentage gains were in Montana (11.4 percent, 3,500 jobs), followed by Idaho (10 percent, 5,500 jobs), and Utah.

From December to January construction employment decreased in 19 states and D.C., increased in 27 and was unchanged in Delaware, Idaho, Nebraska and South Carolina. Illinois lost the most jobs (-7,100 jobs, -3.1 percent), followed by Texas (-5,000 jobs, -0.7 percent) and New York (-2,900 jobs, -0.8 percent). Illinois also had largest percentage decline, followed by New Mexico (-2.2 percent, -1,100 jobs), Louisiana (-2.1 percent, -2,800 jobs), and Rhode Island (-2.0 percent, -400 jobs).

North Carolina added the most construction jobs between December and January (2,900 jobs, 1.2 percent), followed by Ohio (2,800 jobs, 1.2 percent) and Mississippi (2,100 jobs, 4.5 percent). Mississippi had the largest percentage gain, followed by Maine (2.2 percent, 700 jobs) and Vermont (2.0 percent, 300 jobs).

Association officials said that many contractors are struggling to cope with rapidly rising prices for a broad range of key construction materials. They cautioned that anyone procuring construction services should expect to pay more as costs for steel, diesel and many other products rise rapidly. They also urged public officials to look for ways to help construction firms offset losses from spiking materials prices on existing projects.

“Construction firms are going to have to pass along the rising materials prices to remain successful,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer. “And construction firms should not be punished for failing to foresee a Russian invasion, spiking oil prices and soaring inflation when preparing public works bids.” View state February 2020-January 2022 data and 23-month rankings, 1-month rankings.

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