Construction Employment Rises in 41 States; Carolinas Flat
Forty-one states added construction jobs between October 2016 and October 2017, while 26 states added construction jobs between September and October, continuing a pattern of widespread but uneven growth in industry employment, according to an Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) analysis of Labor Department data.
In the Carolinas, construction employment was flat. North Carolina registered a drop of 100 construction jobs, and South Carolina gained 200 from September to October 2017.
The shortage of qualified construction workers continues to plague the construction industry. The AGC’s chief economist Ken Simonson suggested that recent job gains would have been more widespread if enough qualified workers were available.
“Although construction employment has risen over the past year, many contractors report difficulty finding workers with the right skills,” said Simonson. “Last month, construction employment increased in only half the states, a total that would probably have been higher if workers were available.”
California added the most construction jobs (44,400 jobs, 5.7%) during the past year. Other states adding a high number of new construction jobs for the past 12 months include:
• Florida (35,600 jobs, 7.4%)
•Texas (17,200 jobs, 2.4%)
•Oregon (10,700 jobs, 11.5%)
•Nevada (10,600 jobs, 13.6%)
•Washington (10,500 jobs, 5.5%)
Nevada added the highest percentage of new construction jobs during the past year, followed by: Rhode Island (12%, 2,200 jobs), Oregon (11.5%, 10,700 jobs), New Hampshire (9.7%, 2,500 jobs).
Industry employment reached an all-time high in three states: Massachusetts, Oklahoma, and Texas.
Nine states and the District of Columbia shed construction jobs between October 2016 and October 2017. Missouri lost the highest number of construction jobs (-5,800 jobs, -4.8%) followed by:
• Iowa (-5,300 jobs, -6.6%)
•Illinois (-3,500 jobs, -1.6%)
•North Carolina (-3,300 jobs, -1.6%)
Iowa lost the highest percentage for the year, followed by:
• Missouri (-4.8%, -5,800 jobs)
• North Dakota (-3.9%, -1,300 jobs)
• Nebraska (-2.1%, -1,100 jobs)
• North Carolina (-1.6%, -3,300 jobs)
• Illinois (-1.6%, -3,500 jobs)
Among the 26 states that added construction jobs between September and October, Florida added the most (23,800 jobs, 4.8%) followed by:
• New York (5,700 jobs, 1.5%)
• Georgia (5,500 jobs, 3.2%)
• Texas (4,500 jobs, 0.6%)
Florida also added the highest percentage of construction jobs, followed by:
• Connecticut (3.9%, 2,200 jobs)
• Montana (3.4%, 900 jobs)
• West Virginia (3.3%, 1,000 jobs)
• Georgia (3.2%, 5,500 jobs)
Twenty-three states and D.C. lost construction jobs between September and October, while construction employment was unchanged in Kansas. Louisiana lost the most construction jobs of the month (-3,300 jobs, -2.2%) followed by:
• Indiana (-2,400 jobs, -1.8%)
• Minnesota (-2,300 jobs, -1.9%)
• Nebraska (-1,800 jobs, -3.4%)
Nebraska lost the highest percentage of construction jobs, followed by:
• Alaska (-3.1%, -500 jobs)
• North Dakota (-2.2%, -700 jobs)
“The pickup in construction jobs in Florida and Georgia reflects a rebound from decreases in September, when Hurricane Irma shut down projects and displaced workers,” Simonson commented. “Similarly, the increase in Texas indicates ongoing recovery from Hurricane Harvey, which hit that state in late August. Aside from those three states, there was no net increase in construction employment from September to October, which could indicate how tight the job market is, rather than a drop-off in demand for workers.”
View the state employment data by rank and state.