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Posted September 5, 2014

Construction Industry Employment Hits 5-Year High 

Construction industry employment reached a five-year high in August as the sector added 20,000 jobs and its unemployment rate fell to 7.7 %, the lowest rate for August in seven years, according to an analysis by the Associated General Contractors of America. Association officials cautioned, however, that the latest figures reinforce survey results the association recently released showing many contractors are having a tough time finding enough qualified workers.


"Construction employment growth has been accelerating and is broad-based," said Ken Simonson, the association's chief economist. "The increase in the past 12 months was the largest since 2006 and was spread among residential, nonresidential building and heavy construction."

Construction employment is growing at twice the rate of non-farm employment and totaled 6,068,000 in August, the highest total since May 2009, with a 12-month gain of 232,000 jobs or 4.0 percent, more than double the 1.8 percent growth rate for total nonfarm employment, Simonson noted. Residential building and specialty trade contractors added a combined 13,200 employees since July and 123,100 (5.7 percent) over 12 months. Nonresidential building and specialty trade contractors hired a net of 5,500 workers for the month and 76,200 (2.8 percent) since August 2013. Heavy and civil engineering contractors increased their headcount by 900 in August and 32,400 (3.7 percent) over the year.

"These job numbers, along with data this week on construction spending in July and reports from the Federal Reserve and the Institute of Supply Management, point to continued recovery by the construction sector," Simonson commented. "However, the fact that the number of unemployed experienced construction workers is now at the lowest August level since 2007 means more contractors may soon have trouble filling key positions."

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