Construction Employment Declines in 49 States and Washington, D.C.

Oct. 27, 2009
Construction employment again declined in large numbers in all but one state this September compared to last year

Construction employment again declined in large numbers in all but one state this September compared to last year, according to figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics as analyzed by the Associated General Contractors of America (AGC), Arlington, Va., which also found that the number of states gaining construction jobs from August to September 2009 declined after increasing during the two previous months.

"While there’s little doubt construction employment would have been worse without the stimulus, there’s no question that the industry continues to shed jobs at an alarming rate,” says Ken Simonson, chief economist for the association. "The stimulus remains an important measure, but until private-sector demand for construction resumes, there’s little chance the current construction employment decline will turn around or even stop."

The five biggest percentage losses in construction employment over the year occurred in Nevada (27.8%, or 31,100 jobs), Arizona (25.3%, or 45,900 jobs), Michigan (22.3%, or 15,700 jobs), Tennessee (21.5%, or 28,400 jobs) and Kentucky (19.5%, or 16,500 jobs). Simonson noted that 41 states saw double-digit percentage decreases in construction employment for the year. Meanwhile, construction employment only expanded in Louisiana during the past year, with a 2.1% increase, totaling 2,800 jobs.

Simonson noted that when compared to the previous month, the construction employment picture deteriorated slightly this September with 36 states shedding construction jobs, 13 (including Washington, D.C.) adding construction jobs, and two states remaining stable, compared to 30 states losing, 16 adding, and 5 (including Washington, D.C.) remaining stable in August.

The largest monthly percentage gains were a 2.4% rise in Connecticut (1,200 jobs); 1.7% each in Oklahoma (1,200 jobs) and Washington, D.C. (200 jobs), 1.5% in Alabama (1,300 jobs), and 1.4% in New Hampshire (300 jobs). The largest percentage losses for the month were a 4.1% decline in Nevada (3,500 jobs) and Arkansas (2,200 jobs), a 3.2% decline in North Dakota (700 jobs), a 3% decline in Florida (12,800 jobs), and 2.8% declines each in Michigan (3,400 jobs), New York (9,500 jobs), and New Jersey (4,000 jobs).

“These figures should serve as a sobering reminder that public investments alone are not going to turn around a trillion-dollar construction industry,” says Stephen E. Sandherr, AGC's CEO. "The three most important issues in Washington, D.C., ought to be jobs, jobs, and jobs, which is why we need pro-growth measures like those we outlined in our blueprint for recovery."

For more information on AGC's September 2009 state-by-state construction employment report, visit the AGC Web site. Get details on AGC's recovery plan, “Build Now for the Future: A Blueprint for Economic Recovery.”

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