Summary
The nation’s nonresidential construction sector lost 5,600 jobs in June, on a seasonally-adjusted basis, according to the July 3 employment report by the U.S. Labor Department. However, the loss of jobs in June was less than the job losses recorded in May, which was revised upward to 7,400 in the most recent employment report. The 6-month job losses for nonresidential construction now stands at 29,100 and a 12-month net loss of 43,900 jobs since June 2007.
Residential construction continues to lose jobs more rapidly than nonresidential construction with reported job losses in June of 6,700 since May. Between June 2007 and June 2008, residential construction has lost nearly 115,000 jobs.
Total construction employment in June 2008 is down 452,000 since June 2007, a decline of nearly 6 percent. On a monthly basis, total construction employment has recorded 43,000 job losses since May. And, since the employment peak in September 2006, construction has now lost more than 500,000 positions, with building construction representing about 26.5 percent of the losses on a seasonally-adjusted basis.
Overall, the national unemployment rate in June has remained steady at 5.5 percent, unchanged from May. The last time the unemployment rate was this high was October 2004. Total nonfarm employment continues to contract as it netted another loss of 62,000 jobs since May.