Construction Employment And Pay Rises In December
Arlington, VA - Construction
firms added 28,000 employees in December and continued to raise wages
for hourly workers more than other sectors as the industry’s
unemployment rate fell to a record low for the month, according to an analysis
by the Associated General Contractors of America of new government
data. Association officials said the data align with their newly
released survey,
which found the majority of contractors are optimistic about demand for
most construction types, despite reporting difficulty filling
positions.
“There
are more people working in construction today than ever before, and
those figures are likely to continue to increase,” said Ken Simonson,
the association’s chief economist. “But as optimistic as contractors are
about 2023, they remain worried about their ability find enough workers
amid record-low unemployment.”
Construction
employment totaled a record 7,777,000, seasonally adjusted, in
December, an increase of 231,000 or 3.1 percent from a year earlier.
Nonresidential firms—comprising nonresidential building and specialty
trade contractors along with heavy and civil engineering construction
firms—added 17,900 employees in December. Residential building and
specialty trade contractors together added 9,500 employees.
Pay
levels in the construction industry continued to increase in December
at a faster pace than in the overall private sector. Average hourly
earnings for production and nonsupervisory workers in
construction—mostly hourly craft workers—climbed by 6.1 percent, from
$31.25 in December 2021 to $33.15 last month. That increase exceeded the
5.0 percent rise in average pay for all private sector production
workers. Such workers in construction now earn an average of 18.1
percent more per hour than in the private sector as a whole.
The
unemployment rate among jobseekers with construction experience
declined from 5.0 percent in December 2021 to 4.4 percent last month,
while the number of unemployed construction workers fell by 11 percent,
from 497,000 in December 2021 to 443,000. Last month’s figures were the
lowest ever for December.
Simonson
noted that the association’s 2023 Construction Hiring & Business
Outlook survey, conducted with Sage, found 69 percent of the more than
1,000 responding construction firms expect to increase their headcount
in 2023, compared to 11 percent that expect a decrease. However, 80
percent of firms report having a hard time filling positions, compared
to only 8 percent that report no difficulty.
Association
officials urged Congress and the Biden administration to work on
immigration reform measures that will allow more people with
construction experience to legally enter the country and work in the
sector. They also urged officials to close a federal funding gap that
currently invests $5 in students planning to attend college for every
dollar it invests in preparing students for high paying careers in
sectors like construction.
“Considering
where federal officials put their money, it is no surprise that
contractors are having a hard time finding workers to hire,” said
Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer. “As much
as they talk about rebuilding our economy, federal officials still
don’t seem ready to invest in the people needed to do all that
building.”
View the construction employment data and graphs. View the AGC/Sage Outlook Survey.
About The Associated General Contractors Of America
The Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) is a leading association for the construction industry. AGC represents more than 26,000 firms, including over 6,500 of America’s leading general contractors, and over 9,000 specialty-contracting firms. More than 10,500 service providers and suppliers are also associated with AGC, all through a nationwide network of chapters. To learn more, visit www.agc.org.