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US construction employment increased by 23,000 in June, says ABC

US construction industry employment increased by 23,000 in June, according to an Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC) analysis of new data released by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Industry employment has risen by 198,000 jobs since June 2022, an increase of 2.6%, to 7.947 million. 
By Guy Woodford July 10, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
The US construction industry employment was up 23,000 in June, says ABC. Pic: Mike2focus Dreamstime.com

Nonresidential construction employment rose by 12,200 positions on net, with positive growth in two of the three subcategories. Heavy and civil engineering added 7,300 positions, while nonresidential building added 5,400 jobs. Nonresidential specialty trade contractors lost 500 jobs on net.

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ABC analyses US Bureau of Labor Statistics to determine American construction industry employment trends. Pic: ABC

The construction unemployment rate increased to 3.6%. Unemployment across all industries decreased from 3.7% in May to 3.6% in June.

“Theory suggests that the roughly 500-basis point increase in the federal funds rate over the past year would weigh on the demand for construction workers, yet the industry continues to add thousands of jobs each month,” said ABC Chief Economist Anirban Basu. "Contractors have collectively added jobs in 15 of the past 16 months, and ABC’s Construction Confidence Index suggests they will continue to increase staffing levels through the remainder of the year.

“The June jobs report, along with yesterday’s JOLTS data, confirm that labour shortages will continue to provide a stiff headwind to hiring,” said Basu. “The construction unemployment rate inched up to 3.6% in June, but that’s still the second-lowest rate on record. Across all industries, unemployment remains near a 50-year low, and the prime age (24-54) employment-to-population ratio rose to the highest level since 2001. High-interest rates and the cumulative effects of inflation will eventually catch up with the economy. For now, however, the labour market remains overheated.”

 

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