Construction firms added 14,000 new jobs in April, the
second consecutive month of employment gains for the industry, according to an
analysis of new federal figures released by the Associated General Contractors
of America. After more than two years of job losses, the construction industry
is once again adding jobs, thanks primarily to the increasing number of
stimulus-funded projects now underway, the association noted.
“As today’s report makes clear, the impacts of the stimulus are now being felt
across a much broader section of the construction industry,” said Ken Simonson,
the association’s chief economist. “The good news is the stimulus is for now
turning the tide on construction employment; the bad news is the stimulus is
temporary while the construction downturn will be
protracted.”
Simonson noted that the construction industry has added 40,000 new jobs since
February. Those increases follow more than three years of employment declines
that cost over 2 million construction workers their jobs. Even after the two
months of job growth, the industry’s unemployment rate was 21.8 percent, more
than twice the national average and the highest April rate since the series
began in 1976.
The economist said the job growth appears driven by the stimulus, noting that
construction firms are reporting a surge in projects funded by the Recovery
Act. He added that the nonresidential construction sector, where most stimulus
construction funds were targeted, added 24,600 jobs in April and 36,500 jobs in
March. Heavy and civil engineering construction, which includes highway and
many public works projects that benefitted from the stimulus, alone added 9,000
new jobs last month, the fourth pickup in the past six
months.
Simonson cautioned that stimulus funding for construction was likely to end
before private-sector and state and local government demand for construction
resumes, citing high vacancy rates and declining tax receipts. He said enacting
the long-delayed highway and aviation bills, passing the Water Resources
Development Act and the Building Star legislation, establishing a Clean Water
Trust Fund and National Infrastructure Bank and keeping tax rates unchanged
were the best way to avoid post-stimulus job losses in the construction
industry.
“Without long-term federal investment programs in place, construction
employment is likely to suffer significant new declines once the stimulus runs
its course,” Simonson noted. “The best way to build on today’s momentum is by
enacting the long-term investment programs that are crucial to the nation’s
continued economic prosperity.”
CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY ADDS ANOTHER 14,000 JOBS IN APRIL
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