Supply House Times
  Home
  Subscribe
  Blogs
  Subscription Customer Service
  Subscribe to e-Newsletter
  Updates
  Today's Top News
  Calendar of Events
  PVF E-News Archives
  B&K Pro E-news Archives
  Latest News
  Milestones
  Events Photo Gallery
  Web Exclusives
  Current Issue
  Cover Story
  Features
  Columns
  Products
  Industry News
  ASA News
  Industrial PVF News
  Bath and Kitchen News
  Resources
  Career Center
  Premier 150
  Water Info Library
  AEC Store
  Archives
  Digital Edition Archive
  Free Product Info
  Ad Index
  B.I.G. Book
  Manufacturers' Rep Locator Directory
  Digital Radiant Flooring Guide
  Classified Ads
  Radiant Flooring Guide Directory
  Radiant Heating Report
  Industry Links
  Market Research
  Showrooms
  Webinars
  Video Archive
  Special Collections
  Economics Week in Review
  Supply HT Info
  Media Kit
  Contact Us
Search in: EditorialProductsCompanies
64,000 Construction Workers Laid Off In September

October 12, 2009

ARTICLE TOOLS
EmailEmailPrintPrintReprintsReprintsshareShare



The national unemployment rate for the construction industry rose to 17.1% as another 64,000 construction workers lost their jobs in September, according to the Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) as it analyzed new employment data. With 80% of layoffs occurring in nonresidential construction, Ken Simonson, AGC chief economist, said the decline in nonresidential construction has eclipsed housing’s problems.

“The housing industry may be stabilizing, but the broader construction crisis is only getting worse,” Simonson said. “While the stimulus is helping slow the decline, it’s clearly far from enough to reverse sweeping industry-wide layoffs on its own.”

Simonson said the new September employment data assembled by the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed 50,800 layoffs in the nonresidential construction sector this September, while there were 13,300 fewer workers in the residential construction sector during the same period. He added that over the last year, 649,800 nonresidential construction workers were laid off while 443,000 residential workers lost their jobs.

Since December 2007, residential and nonresidential construction employment shrank by 1.5 million. In other words, one out of every five people working in construction in 2007 has lost their job, Simonson added.

AGC CEO Stephen E. Sandherr said the association is calling for a series of tax credits, incentives and deductions designed to boost demand for private-sector construction activity that represents the bulk of the construction market. The plan also calls for programmatic new investments in infrastructure and policy revisions designed to jump-start needed work on highways and transit systems, water systems, federal building and new sources of renewable energy.

Click here to learn more about the recovery plan, “Build Now for the Future, A Blueprint for Economic Recovery.”

Source: AGC of America


|PrintEmail

Did you enjoy this article? Click here to subscribe to the magazine.


















BNP Media
© 2010 BNP Media. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy