Steel Products
AGC: Construction Jobs Increase in 42 States in December
Written by Sandy Williams
January 23, 2018
Construction employment continues to grow in the United States. The Associated General Contractors of America notes that 42 states added construction jobs between December 2016 and December 2017. From November to December, 32 states and the District of Columbia added jobs.
“Construction employment is expanding in many parts of the country in large part because of strong private-sector demand,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist. “Any new public-sector investments, particularly for infrastructure projects, would help accelerate job gains in many parts of the country.”
California added the most construction jobs (56,000 jobs, 7.1 percent) during the past year. Other states adding a high number of new construction jobs for the past 12 months include Florida (43,900 jobs, 9.1 percent); Texas (27,900 jobs, 4.0 percent); Pennsylvania (13,100 jobs, 5.4 percent) and Washington (11,500 jobs, 6.0 percent). Nevada (12.8 percent, 10,400 jobs) added the highest percentage of new construction jobs during the past year, followed by Rhode Island (11.3 percent, 2,100 jobs); Oklahoma (10.7 percent, 8,200 jobs); Oregon (10.5 percent, 10,000 jobs) and Alaska (9.7 percent, 1,500 jobs).
Eight states shed construction jobs between December 2016 and December 2017, while construction employment was unchanged in the District of Columbia. Missouri lost the highest number of construction jobs (-8,800 jobs, -7.2 percent), followed by Iowa (-7,500 jobs, -9.2 percent); North Carolina (-2,100 jobs, -1.0 percent) and Connecticut (-1,900 jobs, -3.3 percent). Iowa lost the highest percentage for the year, followed by Missouri, North Dakota (-4.1 percent, -1,300 jobs), Connecticut and Nebraska (-1.2 percent, -600 jobs).
{loadposition reserved_message}
Among the 32 states and the District of Columbia that added construction jobs between November and December, California added more than any other state (7,000 jobs, 0.8 percent), followed by Minnesota (5,700 jobs, 4.7 percent); Pennsylvania (4,800 jobs, 1.9 percent); Florida (4,600 jobs, 0.9 percent) and Texas (4,300 jobs, 0.6 percent). Montana added the highest percentage of construction jobs for the month (5.5 percent, 1,500 jobs), followed by Minnesota, Oklahoma (3.5 percent, 2,900 jobs), Alaska (3.0 percent, 500 jobs) and Wyoming (3.0 percent, 600 jobs).
Fifteen states lost construction jobs between November and December, while construction employment was unchanged in three states. New Jersey lost the most construction jobs as well as the highest percentage for the month (-4,300 jobs, -2.7 percent), followed by Alabama (-1,800 jobs, -2.0 percent), Missouri (-1,800 jobs, -1.6 percent), Ohio (-1,700 jobs, -0.8 percent) and Iowa (-1,300 jobs, -1.7 percent).
Association officials said the best way to ensure construction employment continues to expand is for Congress and the administration to work together to enact new infrastructure investments. They noted that, according to a sector survey the association released earlier this month, many firms appear to be counting on new federal infrastructure funding as they plan to expand headcount this year.
“Many construction firms are counting on the president to deliver on his promise to boost infrastructure funding,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, chief executive officer for the association. “Passing a new infrastructure measure will support more job growth where construction firms are already hiring and help reverse declines in the states where employment is falling.”

Sandy Williams
Read more from Sandy WilliamsLatest in Steel Products
CRU: Excessive global supply could hit rebar mill investments in US
Following the onset of the war in Ukraine in March 2022, concerns about import availability and expectations of rising demand from President Biden’s Infrastructure Bill pushed US rebar prices to record highs. In response, a flurry of new mills and capacity expansions were announced to meet the rise in demand from growth in the construction […]

Steel buyer spirits tempered by soft spot market conditions
Steel sheet buyers report feeling bogged down by the ongoing stresses of stagnant demand, news fatigue, tariff negotiations or implementation timelines, and persistent macroeconomic uncertainty.

CRU: US stainless prices to rise on expanded S232 tariffs
Stainless prices in the US market will rise, following price increases by major US producers. Our base case scenario incorporates higher US prices in the near term, despite the initial negative reaction by the market. US stainless prices will go up in 2025 H2 and will stay elevated in 2026 as tariffs on stainless […]

Galvanized steel demand unsteady amid lingering buyer fatigue: HARDI
Uneven demand for galvanized steel in June reflects a market that remains mired in uncertainty, according to industry sources.

OCTG industry salutes Customs for catching trade crooks
The US OCTG Manufacturers Association is commending US Customs for intercepting another Thai company's attempt to illegally transship Chinese oil pipe to the US.