
The construction industry added 17,000 jobs on net in May,
according to an Associated Builders and Contractors analysis of
data released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. On a
year-over-year basis, industry employment has increased by
68,000 jobs, up 0.8%.
Nonresidential construction employment increased by 15,700
positions, with gains in all three subcategories. Nonresidential
specialty traded added the most jobs, increasing by 11,400
positions. Heavy and civil engineering and nonresidential
building added 2,600 and 1,700 jobs, respectively, in May.
The construction unemployment rate was 4.1% in May. Unemployment
across all industries remained unchanged at 4.3% and is also
unchanged from a year ago.
“The construction industry posted healthy job gains in May,
especially within the nonresidential segment,” said ABC chief
economist Anirban Basu. “The industry’s recent job growth,
driven by insatiable demand for data centers and ongoing growth
in publicly funded construction activity, appears set to
continue over the coming months. Contractors also remain broadly
optimistic about growing their staffing levels over the next six
months, according to ABC’s Construction Confidence Index.
“The bigger story in the May jobs report, however, is the
surprising strength of the broader labor market,” said Basu.
“Economywide job growth has accelerated, rising to a pace not
seen since the early months of 2024, and the unemployment rate
held steady at a perfectly acceptable 4.3% in May. This is an
indication of broader economic resilience, albeit one that is
not necessarily encouraging for the construction industry.
“The combination of a stable labor market and resurgent
inflation suggests that rate hikes are now more likely than rate
cuts over the next several quarters, and high borrowing costs
and tight lending standards will continue to weigh on
construction activity during the months ahead,” said Basu.
Source:
floordaily.net