Construction spending increases 4.3 percent year over year.
"Many communities are benefitting from growing demand from the private sector for new construction activity," said Ken Simonson, the association's chief economist. "Unfortunately, too many other areas are still coping with construction employment losses as the overall market remains relatively weak."
Lake County-Kenosha County, Ill.-Wis., added both the most and the highest percentage of new construction jobs (33 percent, 3,900 jobs). Other areas adding a large number of jobs included
The largest job losses were in
The Logan, Utah-Idaho area (-23 percent, -700 jobs) lost the highest percentage. Other areas experiencing large percentage declines in construction employment included Wilmington, N.C. (-20 percent, -1,800 jobs); Montgomery, Ala. (-17 percent, -1,100 jobs) and Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, Conn. (-14 percent, -1,500 jobs).
Simonson noted that total annualized construction spending rate increased from $782.9 billion in December 2010 to $816.4 billion in December 2011, a 4.3 percent annual increase and a 1.5 percent jump from November 2011. However, for the full year, construction spending fell 2 percent from the 2010 total. The increases were largely driven by growth in private sector demand, the economist said, noting that spending on private nonresidential construction activity increased by 2.4 percent compared to 2010, while residential construction slipped 1.1 percent and public construction declined 6.5 percent.
Association officials said that recent developments in Washington that could lead to passage of long-delayed highway, bridge, transit and aviation investment legislation could give a needed boost to construction employment in many areas. They added that they would continue pushing Congress to act on the measures as part of the group's "Make Transportation Job #1" campaign.
"Construction employment should increase once Congress finally acts on long-overdue infrastructure measures," said the association's chief executive officer, Stephen E. Sandherr. "After all Washington should be taking measures to help this industry recover, instead of holding it back."
Source: AGC