Construction Sector Adds 13,000 Jobs In March, According To AGC
Industry
Adds Jobs at Faster Rate than Overall Economy as Average Hourly Wages
Outpace Rise in Private Sector Earnings; Construction Unemployment Rate
of 5.4 Percent Matches Year-Ago Level
Arlington, VA - Construction
sector employment increased by 13,000 positions in March as rising
wages enabled the industry to add workers more rapidly than other
sectors, according to an analysis
of new government data the Associated General Contractors of America. Association officials cautioned that newly announced
tariffs and potential retaliatory measures from U.S. trading partners
have the potential to undermine future employment growth in the sector.
“Contractors
added employees at a faster clip than other sectors in March, as pay
for construction craft workers outpaced wages for production workers in
the overall private sector,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief
economist. “However, as steep new tariffs and foreign countries’
retaliatory measures take effect, building costs will rise and projects
will be put on hold, posing a threat to employment.”
Construction
employment in March totaled 8,313,000, seasonally adjusted, an increase
of 13,000 from February. Headcount rose by 143,000 jobs or 1.8 percent
during the past 12 months, topping the 1.2 percent growth rate in total
nonfarm payroll employment.
In
March, nonresidential construction firms added 22,300 workers, with
gains of 19,300 among specialty trade contractors and 3,400 in heavy and
civil engineering construction firms, which offset a dip of 400 workers
at nonresidential building construction firms. Residential construction
employment declined by 9,800, as homebuilders and other residential
building construction firms added 3,100 positions but residential
specialty trade contractors shed 12,900 workers.
Average
hourly earnings for production and nonsupervisory employees in
construction—covering most onsite craft workers as well as many office
workers—climbed by 4.1 percent over the year to $36.79. per hour. That
gain exceeded the 3.9 percent rise in pay for such workers in the
overall private sector.
The
unemployment rate among workers with recent construction experience was
5.4 percent in March, unchanged from a year earlier. That suggests
contractors are holding on to current employees, even though other
recent data shows a slowdown in hiring, job openings, and project
spending, Simonson noted.
Association
officials welcomed the employment gains in March but noted that new
tariffs on virtually every country announced on April 2 are likely to
undermine demand for construction in the short-term as developers and
public officials evaluate whether to proceed with planned projects amid
rising materials prices and construction costs. Yet to be determined is
whether those short-term impacts will be offset by longer-term increases
in manufacturing construction, officials added
“The
construction sector grew at a steady clip in March, buoyed in large
part by robust public-sector investments in construction activity,” said
Jeffrey D. Shoaf, the association’s chief executive officer. “The real
question is how the newly announced tariffs will impact the industry in
the short and long-term.”
View the construction employment data.
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.