WASHINGTON, D.C., Dec. 4- Construction employment expanded by 46,000 net new jobs in November after adding 34,000 jobs in October (revised upward by 3,000), according to an analysis of today’s employment release from the U.S. Department of Labor provided by Associated Builders and Contractors Chief Economist Anirban Basu. Nonresidential construction employment increased by 9,300 jobs in November after adding 19,400 jobs during the prior month (revised downward from 20,100). The residential construction sector added 32,100 positions in November after adding just 8,500 jobs in October.
In the aggregate, construction employment increased by 0.7 percent for the month, more than in any other industry. Leisure and hospitality was a distant second at 0.3 percent. The construction industry’s unemployment rate was unchanged, holding steady at 6.2 percent in November.
“Today’s jobs release clearly shows that various construction segments continue to gain momentum and that contractors will continue to scramble to secure properly trained human capital,” said Basu. “. The combination of November’s strong performance and the upward revision to job creation estimates for prior months tells us that the brief slowdown in economy-wide hiring during the late summer is no longer a source of significant concern and serves as confirmation that the Federal Reserve will begin raising rates later this month.
“There are a number of additional implications,” said Basu. “One is that construction wage pressures will continue to build in 2016. Construction is hardly alone, with a growing roster of industries reporting hiring challenges. It has now become quite common for corporations to shut down operations in smaller communities because of an inability to properly staff offices or other facilities.
“One of the most interesting aspects of today’s report was additional evidence of public sector support for nonresidential construction’s recovery,” said Basu. “A year ago, the segment’s recovery was almost entirely driven by expansion in private funding for construction projects. With state and local government finances improving, the nonresidential construction sector has acquired an additional source of momentum. This is reflected in part in the 4,600 jobs added in the heavy and civil engineering segment in November.”