Young People Don’t Want Construction Jobs. That’s a Problem for the Housing Market.

cawacko

Member
Interesting topic. With the desire for more kids to go to college maybe construction work becomes less enticing. A lot of construction work was done by illegal immigrants so I don't know if that caused firms to spend less time looking for Americans as workers. Sitting inside working on a computer is definitely easier on the body than construction work. I'm just speaking off the top of my head here. Anyone here work in the industry or have first hand experience with why this trend is occurring?





Young People Don’t Want Construction Jobs. That’s a Problem for the Housing Market.

Disinterest in construction work is contributing to a labor shortage that has meant fewer homes built and rising prices—possibly for years to come


The construction business is having trouble attracting young job seekers.

The share of workers in the sector who are 24 years old or younger has declined in 48 states since the last housing boom in 2005, according to an analysis of U.S. Census data by Issi Romem, chief economist at construction data firm BuildZoom. Nationally, the share of young construction workers declined nearly 30% from 2005 through 2016, according to Mr. Romem.

While there’s no single reason why younger folks are losing interest in a job that is generally well-paid and doesn’t require a college education, their indifference is exacerbating a labor shortage that has meant fewer homes being built and rising prices, possibly for years to come.

The U.S. had 11.7 million construction workers in 2005, but that peak fell to 10.8 million in 2010 amid the housing crisis. Even as the economy and housing market recovered, the number of workers continued to fall, hitting 10.2 million in 2016, according to Mr. Romem. Declining numbers of immigrant construction workers have also sapped builders of unskilled labor.

The loss of young workers, in particular, is “a scar from which the construction industry has yet to recover,” he said.

A decade after the housing bust, home construction per household remains near the lowest level in 60 years of record-keeping, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. That is a big reason why U.S. home prices are rising much faster than incomes, and why the homeownership rate remains stuck a full percentage point below the 50-year average.

Construction’s inability to attract young workers is something of a mystery, industry executives say.

Some note that many high schools cut vocational training programs during the recession and are only now bringing them back. Others point to parents’ desire for their children to get a college degree, the allure of technology jobs and the high cost of living in areas where jobs are most plentiful.

Parents often think that “if your child does not go to college, you’ve failed them,” said Timothy Murphy, chief executive of the Sacramento Regional Builders Exchange. “We’re trying to educate parents that the opposite is very true.”

Some say builders’ rising costs are partly to blame. With rising material costs and wages, builders often don’t want to waste time and money on workers who aren’t already trained, said John Courson, president and chief executive of the Home Builders Institute, which trains at-risk youth, ex-offenders, high-school students and military personnel transitioning into the civilian workforce in the construction trade.

“Unlike they did in the halcyon days of the early 2000s, they aren’t going to hire workers who are going to come on the job and do on-the-job training with them,” he said.

Some economists say the construction industry could attract more workers if builders raised wages further to better compete with other industries. But builders say that rising land, material and regulatory costs are already squeezing their margins, and if they pay workers more it will raise the price of homes beyond what many people can afford.

But Mr. Courson added he has seen enormous demand for trained construction workers. Of the about 8,000 to 9,000 students moving through the Home Builders Institute program at any given time, 86% of them get placed in jobs in the industry despite the challenges of finding work for those who may have criminal backgrounds, he said.

Yulia Khandryka, 19 years old, took a construction class during her freshman year of high school in Rancho Cordova, Calif., even though she initially was so uncomfortable swinging a hammer that she sometimes made her partner do it. By her junior year, she had an internship offer from Lennar Corp. , the country’s largest home builder.

After graduating, Ms. Khandryka decided to pursue a degree in construction management at Cosumnes River College. This summer, she is working as a framer, helping build homes for a 55-plus community in Sacramento, clocking in for her shift at 6 a.m.

“If you work hard and you put in your effort, they’ll take you over somebody else who is muscle,” she said.

Sacramento, historically an affordable market, has some of the fastest rising rents in the country, due in part to a lack of new housing construction. The problem has been compounded as some local construction workers commute 90 minutes or more each way for jobs in San Francisco, where wages are higher, said Mr. Murphy, of the Sacramento Regional Builders Exchange. To help combat the issue, local high schools are bringing back construction classes, he said.

The dearth of construction workers across America has been well documented, but accurately measuring it at the local level has been more challenging. Mr. Romem, the economist, used job listings data from Greenwich.HR to drill down to the state level.

He found that states hit hardest by the housing bust saw on average the greatest decrease in the share of young workers between 2005 and 2010. Delaware and Vermont lost the largest share of young workers, followed by states such as Maryland, California and Arizona.

States where cost of living are high, such as Massachusetts, New Jersey and California, have the worst overall shortages of construction workers, as measured by the number of online construction job postings that stayed up for 45 days or longer in 2017, according to Mr. Romem’s analysis.

Those states lost tens of thousands of workers during the economic downturn, and many never returned. Workers retired, retrained for careers in energy and other sectors, or were immigrants who returned to their home countries. The industry has failed to replenish its ranks with newcomers even as construction has boomed.

Mike Holland, chief operating officer at Houston-based Marek Brothers Companies, said he has begun to search more broadly for workers. He talks to local nonprofits, such as the United Way, whose clients may be struggling to pay rent or buy food and can be recruited to higher-paying construction jobs.

“We were asleep at the wheel in making sure the supply [of workers] was coming,” said Mr. Holland. As a result, “we’ve got quality problems. We’ve got safety problems. We’ve got cost problems. There’s no place that it doesn’t have a collateral impact.”


https://www.wsj.com/articles/young-...he-housing-market-1533029401?mod=hp_lead_pos6
 
Gee, maybe the oligarchs should have left enough wealth out in society for folks to be able to afford housing. Oh well, at least Wall Street's doing well.
 
Gee, maybe the oligarchs should have left enough wealth out in society for folks to be able to afford housing. Oh well, at least Wall Street's doing well.

I don't follow what that has to do with young people not wanting to get into construction. As far as lack of new development just look at this board when it's been discussed before and it's one of the few bi-partisan issues we have, people don't want new development near their homes or in their neighborhoods.
 
It's a swamp. It need the distance of the future to provide a perspective. The only way to apprehend the viscosity of that quagmire is to realize it's incomprehensible, like at my shop cutting up a 68 buick
riviera....
 
its not about the ease of the job or the ability to sit at a desk for a job that entices most people to avoid labor positions. It's about the income. there is no way I could make the money doing construction jobs that i'm making in the IT field. The governmental control of the economy has made it so that only those who can't do high tech jobs or jobs that require more than basic intelligence do the laboring, a legal form of slavery.
 
It's a swamp. It need the distance of the future to provide a perspective. The only way to apprehend the viscosity of that quagmire is to realize it's incomprehensible, like at my shop cutting up a 68 buick
riviera....

Cutting up a '68 Buick is easy, rebuilding it takes some intelligence.
 
Interesting topic. With the desire for more kids to go to college maybe construction work becomes less enticing. A lot of construction work was done by illegal immigrants so I don't know if that caused firms to spend less time looking for Americans as workers. Sitting inside working on a computer is definitely easier on the body than construction work. I'm just speaking off the top of my head here. Anyone here work in the industry or have first hand experience with why this trend is occurring?

If the right didn't hate the evil, lib'rul media, tax dollar eating PBS (Public Broadcasting Service), they might know that they are already involved in trying to rectify the situation via their long running home improvement series This Old House, by sponsoring an initiative called Generation Next...

Generation NEXT

https://www.thisoldhouse.com/more/generation-next

Along with our charter partners, This Old House proudly supports the mikeroweWORKS Foundation through our Generation Next campaign. Together, we're working to close the skills gap by encouraging young people to master the vocational trades that built this country.

Generation NEXT: How to Get Involved

https://www.thisoldhouse.com/ideas/generation-next-how-to-get-involved

Learn more about how to share, participate, contribute and support our initiative to increase the pipeline of skilled tradespeople

By Claudia Jepsen

As you may have heard, This Old House has partnered with the mikeroweWORKS Foundation in a nationwide effort to increase the pipeline of skilled workers in America. We’re so deeply committed to this program, in fact, that we’re harnessing all of our media assets to elevate the building trades as a rewarding career path and to help raise money for the mikeroweWORKS Foundation’s Work Ethic Scholarship program.

Thanks to the generosity of our charter supporters, we’ve raised $500,000 for mikeroweWORKS scholarships to date. And we’re just getting started.

For the 2017-2018 season of This Old House, we’re buying a home and renovating it in real time across all of our platforms. Profit from the sale of this house will be used to fund more mikeroweWORKS scholarships. We’re also launching a nationwide casting call for the next generation of talent—three apprentices who will learn from and work alongside our TOH TV crew. We’ll fly them in, house them, pay them a stipend for a 10-week summer apprenticeship, and feature their stories on TOH TV.

The response to this new program has been astounding! We’ve received hundreds of letters from TOH fans wanting to learn more about our efforts and how they can help. There are lots of ways that individuals, associations, and businesses—large and small—can get involved:

Help spread the word by following us on Facebook and Twitter and sharing our Generation Next posts to your own social communities. Or, we can provide you with links to TOH-produced content if you send your email address to TOHGenNext@thisoldhouse.com

Read more about what other professionals are saying about the skilled labor shortage in the building industry on our Generation NEXT Letters page, and share your stories at thisoldhouse.com/GenNext-forum

Apply for a mikeroweWORKS Work Ethic Scholarship (starting in mid-March, 2017) at mikeroweWORKS.org/scholarship

Enter our Apprentice Casting Call for the chance to work with our pros at thisoldhouse.com/TOHapprentice

Become a major supporter (minimum $25,000) and receive recognition in TOH Generation Next promotional print, TV and digital media. For more information, email our CEO Eric Thorkilsen at eric@thisoldhouse.com

Contribute directly to mikeroweWORKS Work Ethic Scholarships (any size donation welcome!) at mikeroweworks.org/giving-page

To donate product needed for the renovation of our Generation Next Project House and featured in 16 TOH TV episodes, print and digital, contact claudia.jepsen@thisoldhouse.com
We welcome your involvement, and look forward to your support!

 
If the right didn't hate the evil, lib'rul media, tax dollar eating PBS (Public Broadcasting Service), they might know that they are already involved in trying to rectify the situation via their long running home improvement series This Old House, by sponsoring an initiative called Generation Next...




So young people aren't going into construction jobs because they are right wingers and don't watch PBS? Ok.
 
I don't follow what that has to do with young people not wanting to get into construction. As far as lack of new development just look at this board when it's been discussed before and it's one of the few bi-partisan issues we have, people don't want new development near their homes or in their neighborhoods.

It's not rocket science, if society can't come up with meaningful work with wages the population can live on, the Wall Street/donor/"job creator" class will turn to "illegals". Profit means more than a healthy society.
 
Interesting topic. With the desire for more kids to go to college maybe construction work becomes less enticing. A lot of construction work was done by illegal immigrants so I don't know if that caused firms to spend less time looking for Americans as workers. Sitting inside working on a computer is definitely easier on the body than construction work. I'm just speaking off the top of my head here. Anyone here work in the industry or have first hand experience with why this trend is occurring?





Young People Don’t Want Construction Jobs. That’s a Problem for the Housing Market.

Disinterest in construction work is contributing to a labor shortage that has meant fewer homes built and rising prices—possibly for years to come


The construction business is having trouble attracting young job seekers.

The share of workers in the sector who are 24 years old or younger has declined in 48 states since the last housing boom in 2005, according to an analysis of U.S. Census data by Issi Romem, chief economist at construction data firm BuildZoom. Nationally, the share of young construction workers declined nearly 30% from 2005 through 2016, according to Mr. Romem.

While there’s no single reason why younger folks are losing interest in a job that is generally well-paid and doesn’t require a college education, their indifference is exacerbating a labor shortage that has meant fewer homes being built and rising prices, possibly for years to come.

The U.S. had 11.7 million construction workers in 2005, but that peak fell to 10.8 million in 2010 amid the housing crisis. Even as the economy and housing market recovered, the number of workers continued to fall, hitting 10.2 million in 2016, according to Mr. Romem. Declining numbers of immigrant construction workers have also sapped builders of unskilled labor.

The loss of young workers, in particular, is “a scar from which the construction industry has yet to recover,” he said.

A decade after the housing bust, home construction per household remains near the lowest level in 60 years of record-keeping, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. That is a big reason why U.S. home prices are rising much faster than incomes, and why the homeownership rate remains stuck a full percentage point below the 50-year average.

Construction’s inability to attract young workers is something of a mystery, industry executives say.

Some note that many high schools cut vocational training programs during the recession and are only now bringing them back. Others point to parents’ desire for their children to get a college degree, the allure of technology jobs and the high cost of living in areas where jobs are most plentiful.

Parents often think that “if your child does not go to college, you’ve failed them,” said Timothy Murphy, chief executive of the Sacramento Regional Builders Exchange. “We’re trying to educate parents that the opposite is very true.”

Some say builders’ rising costs are partly to blame. With rising material costs and wages, builders often don’t want to waste time and money on workers who aren’t already trained, said John Courson, president and chief executive of the Home Builders Institute, which trains at-risk youth, ex-offenders, high-school students and military personnel transitioning into the civilian workforce in the construction trade.

“Unlike they did in the halcyon days of the early 2000s, they aren’t going to hire workers who are going to come on the job and do on-the-job training with them,” he said.

Some economists say the construction industry could attract more workers if builders raised wages further to better compete with other industries. But builders say that rising land, material and regulatory costs are already squeezing their margins, and if they pay workers more it will raise the price of homes beyond what many people can afford.

But Mr. Courson added he has seen enormous demand for trained construction workers. Of the about 8,000 to 9,000 students moving through the Home Builders Institute program at any given time, 86% of them get placed in jobs in the industry despite the challenges of finding work for those who may have criminal backgrounds, he said.

Yulia Khandryka, 19 years old, took a construction class during her freshman year of high school in Rancho Cordova, Calif., even though she initially was so uncomfortable swinging a hammer that she sometimes made her partner do it. By her junior year, she had an internship offer from Lennar Corp. , the country’s largest home builder.

After graduating, Ms. Khandryka decided to pursue a degree in construction management at Cosumnes River College. This summer, she is working as a framer, helping build homes for a 55-plus community in Sacramento, clocking in for her shift at 6 a.m.

“If you work hard and you put in your effort, they’ll take you over somebody else who is muscle,” she said.

Sacramento, historically an affordable market, has some of the fastest rising rents in the country, due in part to a lack of new housing construction. The problem has been compounded as some local construction workers commute 90 minutes or more each way for jobs in San Francisco, where wages are higher, said Mr. Murphy, of the Sacramento Regional Builders Exchange. To help combat the issue, local high schools are bringing back construction classes, he said.

The dearth of construction workers across America has been well documented, but accurately measuring it at the local level has been more challenging. Mr. Romem, the economist, used job listings data from Greenwich.HR to drill down to the state level.

He found that states hit hardest by the housing bust saw on average the greatest decrease in the share of young workers between 2005 and 2010. Delaware and Vermont lost the largest share of young workers, followed by states such as Maryland, California and Arizona.

States where cost of living are high, such as Massachusetts, New Jersey and California, have the worst overall shortages of construction workers, as measured by the number of online construction job postings that stayed up for 45 days or longer in 2017, according to Mr. Romem’s analysis.

Those states lost tens of thousands of workers during the economic downturn, and many never returned. Workers retired, retrained for careers in energy and other sectors, or were immigrants who returned to their home countries. The industry has failed to replenish its ranks with newcomers even as construction has boomed.

Mike Holland, chief operating officer at Houston-based Marek Brothers Companies, said he has begun to search more broadly for workers. He talks to local nonprofits, such as the United Way, whose clients may be struggling to pay rent or buy food and can be recruited to higher-paying construction jobs.

“We were asleep at the wheel in making sure the supply [of workers] was coming,” said Mr. Holland. As a result, “we’ve got quality problems. We’ve got safety problems. We’ve got cost problems. There’s no place that it doesn’t have a collateral impact.”


https://www.wsj.com/articles/young-...he-housing-market-1533029401?mod=hp_lead_pos6

Well there's a simple and novel solution to their problem that is truly a free market solution. They can pay higher wages to attract qualified construction workers. Illegal Immigrants have long undermined this industry and I know quite a few construction workers who got into different lines of work as they simply could not afford to support their families on the wages being offered.

So if demand exceeds supply......
 
Interesting topic. With the desire for more kids to go to college maybe construction work becomes less enticing. A lot of construction work was done by illegal immigrants so I don't know if that caused firms to spend less time looking for Americans as workers. Sitting inside working on a computer is definitely easier on the body than construction work. I'm just speaking off the top of my head here. Anyone here work in the industry or have first hand experience with why this trend is occurring?





Young People Don’t Want Construction Jobs. That’s a Problem for the Housing Market.

Disinterest in construction work is contributing to a labor shortage that has meant fewer homes built and rising prices—possibly for years to come


The construction business is having trouble attracting young job seekers.

The share of workers in the sector who are 24 years old or younger has declined in 48 states since the last housing boom in 2005, according to an analysis of U.S. Census data by Issi Romem, chief economist at construction data firm BuildZoom. Nationally, the share of young construction workers declined nearly 30% from 2005 through 2016, according to Mr. Romem.

While there’s no single reason why younger folks are losing interest in a job that is generally well-paid and doesn’t require a college education, their indifference is exacerbating a labor shortage that has meant fewer homes being built and rising prices, possibly for years to come.

The U.S. had 11.7 million construction workers in 2005, but that peak fell to 10.8 million in 2010 amid the housing crisis. Even as the economy and housing market recovered, the number of workers continued to fall, hitting 10.2 million in 2016, according to Mr. Romem. Declining numbers of immigrant construction workers have also sapped builders of unskilled labor.

The loss of young workers, in particular, is “a scar from which the construction industry has yet to recover,” he said.

A decade after the housing bust, home construction per household remains near the lowest level in 60 years of record-keeping, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. That is a big reason why U.S. home prices are rising much faster than incomes, and why the homeownership rate remains stuck a full percentage point below the 50-year average.

Construction’s inability to attract young workers is something of a mystery, industry executives say.

Some note that many high schools cut vocational training programs during the recession and are only now bringing them back. Others point to parents’ desire for their children to get a college degree, the allure of technology jobs and the high cost of living in areas where jobs are most plentiful.

Parents often think that “if your child does not go to college, you’ve failed them,” said Timothy Murphy, chief executive of the Sacramento Regional Builders Exchange. “We’re trying to educate parents that the opposite is very true.”

Some say builders’ rising costs are partly to blame. With rising material costs and wages, builders often don’t want to waste time and money on workers who aren’t already trained, said John Courson, president and chief executive of the Home Builders Institute, which trains at-risk youth, ex-offenders, high-school students and military personnel transitioning into the civilian workforce in the construction trade.

“Unlike they did in the halcyon days of the early 2000s, they aren’t going to hire workers who are going to come on the job and do on-the-job training with them,” he said.

Some economists say the construction industry could attract more workers if builders raised wages further to better compete with other industries. But builders say that rising land, material and regulatory costs are already squeezing their margins, and if they pay workers more it will raise the price of homes beyond what many people can afford.

But Mr. Courson added he has seen enormous demand for trained construction workers. Of the about 8,000 to 9,000 students moving through the Home Builders Institute program at any given time, 86% of them get placed in jobs in the industry despite the challenges of finding work for those who may have criminal backgrounds, he said.

Yulia Khandryka, 19 years old, took a construction class during her freshman year of high school in Rancho Cordova, Calif., even though she initially was so uncomfortable swinging a hammer that she sometimes made her partner do it. By her junior year, she had an internship offer from Lennar Corp. , the country’s largest home builder.

After graduating, Ms. Khandryka decided to pursue a degree in construction management at Cosumnes River College. This summer, she is working as a framer, helping build homes for a 55-plus community in Sacramento, clocking in for her shift at 6 a.m.

“If you work hard and you put in your effort, they’ll take you over somebody else who is muscle,” she said.

Sacramento, historically an affordable market, has some of the fastest rising rents in the country, due in part to a lack of new housing construction. The problem has been compounded as some local construction workers commute 90 minutes or more each way for jobs in San Francisco, where wages are higher, said Mr. Murphy, of the Sacramento Regional Builders Exchange. To help combat the issue, local high schools are bringing back construction classes, he said.

The dearth of construction workers across America has been well documented, but accurately measuring it at the local level has been more challenging. Mr. Romem, the economist, used job listings data from Greenwich.HR to drill down to the state level.

He found that states hit hardest by the housing bust saw on average the greatest decrease in the share of young workers between 2005 and 2010. Delaware and Vermont lost the largest share of young workers, followed by states such as Maryland, California and Arizona.

States where cost of living are high, such as Massachusetts, New Jersey and California, have the worst overall shortages of construction workers, as measured by the number of online construction job postings that stayed up for 45 days or longer in 2017, according to Mr. Romem’s analysis.

Those states lost tens of thousands of workers during the economic downturn, and many never returned. Workers retired, retrained for careers in energy and other sectors, or were immigrants who returned to their home countries. The industry has failed to replenish its ranks with newcomers even as construction has boomed.

Mike Holland, chief operating officer at Houston-based Marek Brothers Companies, said he has begun to search more broadly for workers. He talks to local nonprofits, such as the United Way, whose clients may be struggling to pay rent or buy food and can be recruited to higher-paying construction jobs.

“We were asleep at the wheel in making sure the supply [of workers] was coming,” said Mr. Holland. As a result, “we’ve got quality problems. We’ve got safety problems. We’ve got cost problems. There’s no place that it doesn’t have a collateral impact.”


https://www.wsj.com/articles/young-...he-housing-market-1533029401?mod=hp_lead_pos6
My father and brother are in the construction industry and we were talking about this awhile back. I've spent my entire career in the green industry and the labor woes are very similar so we all were able to commiserate.

My dad's main complaint was that people just don't want to do the work anymore, regardless of pay. He starts his general laborers off at $15 an hour, which isn't too bad for people with a high school diploma or less. His skilled guys do much better than that and he can't find anyone to fill the jobs and it seems to be getting that way across the board in these manual labor trades.

The points listed in the article are pretty much spot on, but I think the bigger issue is that the blue collar worker is disappearing quickly and it's not just in the construction industry. I think you're right that technology and the push for everyone to go to college has had a big impact on this, and as such young people don't have the same skill sets that they did 20 or 30 years ago. If working with power tools, or manual labor is a foreign concept to a young person, then they most likely aren't going to gravitate towards a trade or blue collar industry. And this sounds awful to say but when you don't have people that view these types of jobs as a career you're often left with less than motivated and unambitious workers to choose from.
 
Well there's a simple and novel solution to their problem that is truly a free market solution. They can pay higher wages to attract qualified construction workers. Illegal Immigrants have long undermined this industry and I know quite a few construction workers who got into different lines of work as they simply could not afford to support their families on the wages being offered.

So if demand exceeds supply......

Well there's a simple and novel solution to their problem that is truly a free market solution. They can pay higher wages to attract qualified construction workers.

We're not really all that into the free market though. The illusion we like, but the economic pressure must always be maintained,squeezing the lower and working class for the system to work the way the Wall Street/donor/"job creator" class envisions.
 
I don't follow what that has to do with young people not wanting to get into construction. As far as lack of new development just look at this board when it's been discussed before and it's one of the few bi-partisan issues we have, people don't want new development near their homes or in their neighborhoods.
Young people don't want to get into it because it doesn't pay. You have a similiar situation with over the road truck drivers. Though Truck driving does pay pretty well young folks aren't going into it cause they can find other jobs that pay as well and don't have the miserable over the road working conditions.

So it's not just purely a matter or young folks not being interested or having access to the training. The profit motive has to be their too.
 
its not about the ease of the job or the ability to sit at a desk for a job that entices most people to avoid labor positions. It's about the income. there is no way I could make the money doing construction jobs that i'm making in the IT field. The governmental control of the economy has made it so that only those who can't do high tech jobs or jobs that require more than basic intelligence do the laboring, a legal form of slavery.
Seems that way doesn't it? Their certainly seems to be institutional disrespect for tradesmen...until something breaks and needs fixed.
 
So young people aren't going into construction jobs because they are right wingers and don't watch PBS? Ok.

Please show me exactly where I said that.

When you have to dishonestly misrepresent what others say, you've already lost the argument.

So, you lose.
 
My father and brother are in the construction industry and we were talking about this awhile back. I've spent my entire career in the green industry and the labor woes are very similar so we all were able to commiserate.

My dad's main complaint was that people just don't want to do the work anymore, regardless of pay. He starts his general laborers off at $15 an hour, which isn't too bad for people with a high school diploma or less. His skilled guys do much better than that and he can't find anyone to fill the jobs and it seems to be getting that way across the board in these manual labor trades.

The points listed in the article are pretty much spot on, but I think the bigger issue is that the blue collar worker is disappearing quickly and it's not just in the construction industry. I think you're right that technology and the push for everyone to go to college has had a big impact on this, and as such young people don't have the same skill sets that they did 20 or 30 years ago. If working with power tools, or manual labor is a foreign concept to a young person, then they most likely aren't going to gravitate towards a trade or blue collar industry. And this sounds awful to say but when you don't have people that view these types of jobs as a career you're often left with less than motivated and unambitious workers to choose from.

You are presenting undersuppy here. So why isn't that creating higher wages? Sounds like there is a price ceiling on blue collar wages. Shouldn't the right wing invisible hand punch right through it?
I'm confused.
 
Well there's a simple and novel solution to their problem that is truly a free market solution. They can pay higher wages to attract qualified construction workers. Illegal Immigrants have long undermined this industry and I know quite a few construction workers who got into different lines of work as they simply could not afford to support their families on the wages being offered.

So if demand exceeds supply......

I agree that paying qualified workers more is the solution, but when there are no qualified workers to be had because no one is entering the industry then you have a problem. Entry level pay could be better but there's got to be a reasonable ceiling, especially when many of those entry level jobs require little more than a pulse. I mean it's great to say, let's just pay them more, but for an 18 year old who's job description is to tote heavy shit around the lot all day, how much should they really expect to make starting out? Young, unskilled workers have to expect to grind and apply themselves to learn and advance on the job where they can make a decent living for themselves but it takes time and fewer are willing to put in that time nowadays.
 
its not about the ease of the job or the ability to sit at a desk for a job that entices most people to avoid labor positions. It's about the income. there is no way I could make the money doing construction jobs that i'm making in the IT field. The governmental control of the economy has made it so that only those who can't do high tech jobs or jobs that require more than basic intelligence do the laboring, a legal form of slavery.

Unless you’re talking about construction laborers, you’re dealing with skilled workers.

There’s good money to be made in it.
 
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