Technical Papers
Jan 29, 2019

New Metric of Workforce Availability among Construction Occupations and Regions

Publication: Practice Periodical on Structural Design and Construction
Volume 24, Issue 2

Abstract

American, European, and Australian construction markets are facing a shortage in quality and quantity of skilled craft workers. There are initial indications that the shortages are already having a significant impact on project performance in the industrial construction sector. With construction craft workers becoming a critical commodity whose supply can impact a project performance, an accurate metric is needed to estimate the supply. Unfortunately, labor supply metrics based on publicly available data are rate and often inaccurate. This paper’s contribution to the overall body of knowledge is to create and apply a new multi-indicator metric, using a public dataset, to measure national and regional craft worker availability in the construction industry. The metric can be applied for any country using the country’s respective public datasets. The metric is demonstrated using data from the United States. Of the many available indicators for identifying the shortage, the authors of this paper focused on three: employment growth, wage growth, and unemployment. The multi-indicator metric’s ranking scale is applied using the US Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Current Population Survey (CPS) dataset. The findings show that craft worker availability at the national level is different than the craft worker availability at the regional level for different occupations. The most affected occupation among the observed data was “pipelayers, plumbers, pipefitters, and steamfitters,” which is related to industrial projects, and the most affected regions were the West and South regions of the United States.

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Go to Practice Periodical on Structural Design and Construction
Practice Periodical on Structural Design and Construction
Volume 24Issue 2May 2019

History

Received: Sep 24, 2018
Accepted: Oct 18, 2018
Published online: Jan 29, 2019
Published in print: May 1, 2019
Discussion open until: Jun 29, 2019

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Authors

Affiliations

Mohammed A. Albattah, Ph.D. [email protected]
Assistant Professor, Dept. of Architectural Engineering, United Arab Emirates Univ., P.O. Box 15551, Al Ain, United Arab Emirates (corresponding author). Email: [email protected]
Paul M. Goodrum, Ph.D. [email protected]
P.E.
Nicholas R. Petry Professor of Construction Engineering and Management, Dept. of Civil, Environmental, and Architectural Engineering, Univ. of Colorado Boulder, 1111 Engineering Dr., UCB 428, Boulder, CO 80309-0428. Email: [email protected]
Timothy R. B. Taylor, Ph.D. [email protected]
P.E.
Associate Professor, Terrell-McDowell Endowed Chair of Construction Engineering and Project Management, Dept. of Civil Engineering, Univ. of Kentucky, 151A Raymond Building, Lexington, KY 40506. Email: [email protected]

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