Hudson Contract made a total of 117,591 payments to freelance operatives in August, compared to a peak of 149,067 in February and a trough of 80,625 in April.
Managing director Ian Anfield said that the bounce-back pointed to a V-shaped recovery for the UK construction sector.
鈥淭here is no shortage of work for highly skilled tradespeople, whether they are groundworkers, bricklayers, plasterers or plumbers,鈥 he said. 鈥淏uilding sites are becoming more productive per head and the quality of work is improving because they only have the best lads working on them.
鈥淏uilding firms have been tightening up on surplus labour because their margins are being squeezed by main contractors asking for discounts, social distancing measures on site and larger projects splitting into smaller schemes.鈥
Mr Anfield added that the remaining proportion of people are choosing not to return to work as a result of state support schemes or seeking opportunities in other sectors.
Overall, average weekly earnings for subcontractors slipped by 1.3% to 拢877 during the month of August, a similar drop to last year鈥檚 holiday season.
The best-performing regions were the northwest (up 5.6%), the northeast (up 2%) and London (up 0.3%).
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