Construction Sector Adds 9,000 Jobs in April

The construction industry added 9,000 jobs in April — the fewest since August 2022 — as a downturn among residential remodelers and subcontractors undercut job gains at nonresidential construction firms, according to an analysis of new government data released by the Associated General Contractors of America. Association officials noted that demand for workers remains high among nonresidential firms, and they urged government officials to enhance support for career development and more employment-based immigration.

“It appears that high interest rates are dragging down remodeling, homebuilding and apartment construction,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist. “But firms working on infrastructure, data centers, renewable energy and manufacturing projects are continuing to add workers and would like to hire more.”

Construction employment in April totaled 8,219,000, seasonally adjusted, a gain of 9,000 from March. Residential specialty trade contractors — firms that work on home remodeling and renovation, as well as new construction — shed 1,100 employees. That decline undercut an increase of 2,800 among residential building firms. The three types of nonresidential contractors added a total of 7,800 employees: 900 at nonresidential builders, 6,600 at nonresidential specialty trade contractors and 300 at heavy and civil engineering construction firms.

Average hourly earnings for production and nonsupervisory employees in construction — covering most onsite craft workers, as well as many office workers — climbed by 4.6% over the year to $35.47 per hour. Construction firms in April provided a wage “premium” of 18.9% compared to the $29.83 average hourly earnings for all private-sector production employees.

Two recent government reports suggest nonresidential demand remains strong, Simonson indicated. The Census Bureau reported that nonresidential construction spending increased 0.2% in March, in contrast to a monthly decline of 0.7% for residential spending. In addition, there was a steep decline in layoffs by construction firms in March, implying that contractors expect to need workers in the near future.

View the construction employment data.

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