Engineering & Construction
Construction industry signals mixed: jobs rise, spending splits and labor shortage costs mount
Nonresidential construction added 15,700 jobs in May and job openings rose by 25,000 in April, even as private spending fell and labor costs stayed hidden.
Key takeaways
Nonresidential construction added 15,700 jobs in May.
Job openings in the industry rose by 25,000 in April.
There is a decline in private spending despite job growth.
Nonresidential construction closed the spring hiring season on solid footing, adding 15,700 jobs in May 2026 after job openings across the broader construction sector climbed by 25,000 in April, according to data reported by ABC through Construction Executive. The back-to-back workforce figures suggest contractors are actively staffing up even as broader economic signals remain mixed heading into the second half of the year.
Public spending carries the load as private investment retreats
Nonresidential construction spending edged higher in April, but the gain was narrowly driven by public sector activity, according to ABC. Private nonresidential spending fell again in the same period, marking a continuing soft patch for commercial and industrial investment.
The divergence between public and private spending creates an uneven demand environment for contractors, with government-funded work absorbing capacity that the private market is not yet replacing at scale. Firms heavily weighted toward private commercial work face a tighter pipeline than their public-sector-focused peers.
Skilled labor shortage quietly inflates project budgets
Beyond the headline hiring numbers, Construction Executive reports that the ongoing skilled labor shortage is concealing costs that do not always surface in conventional project accounting. Delays, rework, productivity drag and the management overhead of a thinner workforce are among the factors that can erode margins without appearing as discrete line items.
Information management — capturing, organizing and analyzing project data in real time — is identified as a practical tool for making those costs visible, according to Construction Executive contributor Dave Wagner. Contractors who cannot measure the financial drag of a workforce gap are, by extension, unable to price it accurately or mitigate it systematically.
Hiring resilience sits alongside cautious sentiment
The April job openings data carries an additional signal: construction companies were doing relatively little hiring or firing that month, according to Construction Executive's framing of the ABC report. That kind of labor market stasis can reflect either confidence that existing headcount is right-sized or reluctance to commit to new hires amid uncertain forward revenue.
Construction Executive's May 2026 economic roundup described volatile industry markers signaling uncertainty for contractors nearing the mid-year mark. The combination of a healthy jobs print in May and a cautious hiring posture in April points to a sector managing carefully rather than expanding aggressively.
Stadium boom and operational discipline add context
Separate reporting from Construction Executive flags a resurgent North American stadium construction cycle as a significant but risk-laden source of demand, describing current projects as bigger, more complex and riskier than prior boom periods. For contractors evaluating where to deploy capacity, the stadium pipeline represents both a high-value opportunity and an elevated exposure to cost overruns and schedule risk.
Industry commentary from Brian Bohman, published by Construction Executive, frames 2026 broadly as a year that rewards operational discipline rather than volume growth. The advice aligns with the spending and hiring data: firms that tighten cost visibility, workforce planning and project controls are better positioned than those chasing revenue in a market that remains neither clearly expansionary nor contractionary.
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