The AEC Lens Alex Carrick, Chief Economist at ConstructConnect
Alex Carrick is Chief Economist for ConstructConnect. He is a frequent contributor to the Daily Commercial News and the Journal of Commerce. He has delivered presentations throughout North America on the Canadian, United States and world construction outlooks. A trusted and often-quoted source for … More » U.S. December Jobs Creation ‘Weakish’, but Construction Compensation BullishJanuary 5th, 2018 by Alex Carrick, Chief Economist at ConstructConnect
Article source: ConstructConnect U.S. net total jobs creation in the final month of last year was a tepid +148,000, according to the latest Employment Situation report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). The ‘weakish’ December result caused the monthly average throughout all 2017 to pull back slightly to +171,000 Just the same, +171,000 as a monthly average in 2017 signifies a more than satisfactory performance, although it was down from 2016’s comparable figure of +187,000. The U.S. unemployment rate in December remained the same as in November, at an exceptionally tight 4.1%. The seasonally adjusted (SA) number of U.S. construction jobs recorded a nice gain in December of +30,000. Such a substantial increase in employment for on-site workers was the biggest leap since February 2017’s +54,000. Construction’s average monthly gain in jobs in 2017 was +18,000, which compared favorably with 2016’s average monthly rise of +13,000. The latest monthly construction jobs hike centered mainly in residential (+10,000) and non-residential (+14,000) specialty trade contracting. But the biggest news for construction lay in the compensation figures. For all construction workers, including supervisory personnel, average weekly earnings soared +4.0% year over year, the best gain for that ‘metric’ since December 2015’s +4.0%. For construction workers excluding bosses, the average weekly earnings climb was an even more impressive +4.7%. The last time +4.7% was matched or exceeded occurred in September 2016, at +5.2%. Year-over-year hourly earnings for construction workers in December were +3.0% including bosses and +3.1% leaving out bosses. Wages for all U.S. workers economy-wide, however, continued to be subdued in the latest month. Including supervisory personnel, average hourly earnings were +2.5% and average weekly earnings, +2.8%. Omitting bosses, average hourly earnings for all workers were +2.3% and average weekly earnings, +2.9%. The bottom line is that wage gains for most jobs are still meeting resistance at the +3.0% level. Another sector registering significant month-to-month jobs growth in the latest month was manufacturing, +25,000. Over the past five months, production-line firms have expanded their payrolls by +132,000 jobs. Monthly average manufacturing sector employment in 2017 was +16,000. In the prior year, 2016, manufacturing sector employment stayed flat, on average, throughout the 12 months. Other major industrial sub-sectors with sizable month-to-month jobs hikes in December were ‘leisure and hospitality’, +29,000, and ‘education and health services’, +28,000. The former was particularly bolstered by ‘food services and drinking places’, +25,000, while the latter was all driven by ‘health care and social assistance’. Within health care, ‘ambulatory services’, 15,000, and ‘hospitals’, +12,000, provided the hiring momentum. ‘Professional and business services’ jobs creation in the latest month was disappointing, only +19,000. Employment in ‘accounting and bookkeeping services’ took an especially bad turn, -15,000. On average in 2017, ‘professional and business services’ provided +44,000 net new jobs each month, exactly the same as in 2016. Shocking on the downside in December was a -20,000 month-to-month jobs performance in the retail trade sector. The contraction in staffing at ‘general merchandise stores’ was -27,000. But keep in mind that the foregoing two declines are expressed in seasonally adjusted (SA) numbers. Thanks to gift-giving over the winter-break holiday season, December is the busiest shopkeeper month of the year. The month-to-month not seasonally adjusted (NSA) retail trade employment number in December 2017 was +59,000. Canada’s Unemployment Rate Lowest since 1976 North of the border, December was another banner month for employment, according to Statistics Canada. The latest Labour Force Survey records a shrinkage in the unemployment rate from 5.9% in November to 5.7% in December. December’s 5.7% jobless level is the lowest since January 1976, over fifty years ago. Net total jobs creation in Canada in December was +79,000, coming directly on the heels of +80,000 in November. The latest two months have generated nearly +160,000 new jobs, a stunningly upbeat increase. The December 2017 over December 2016 climb in total jobs in Canada was +423,000. By comparison, America’s December 2017 over December 2016 addition to total jobs was +2.1 million − but the population of the U.S. is nine times bigger than Canada’s. Part-time work in Canada soared in December, +55,000, but the increase in full-time work was also respectable, +24,000. At the same time, the private sector was more active in hiring than the public sector, +57,000 compared with +22,000. Canadian construction employment in December was +7,000 month to month, while manufacturing employment was -4,000. On a year-over-year basis, manufacturing employment has made more headway than construction employment, +85,000 compared with +51,000. Regionally, every province saw a drop in its unemployment rate in December 2017 relative to the same month of the year before. Quebec (moving from 6.5% in December 2016 to 4.9% in December 2017) and Alberta (from 8.5% to 6.9%) had the greatest improvements. It’s British Columbia, however, that can boast of having the lowest jobless rate in the land, at 4.6%. As for year-over-year jobs growth, the leaders among the provinces have been: Prince Edward Island, +3.9%; B.C., +3.4%; and Ontario, +2.5%. U.S. Labor Situation Report: https://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/empsit.pdf Labour Survey Report Canada: http://www.statcan.gc.ca/daily-quotidien/180105/dq180105a-eng.pdf Tags: Alex Carrick, build, ConstructConnect, Construction industry, Construction services, Economy, market, money, US Category: ConstructConnect |