Why Finding Workers Is Getting Harder for U.S. Homebuilders
Even with millions out of work because of the pandemic, there are still hundreds of thousands of unfilled jobs in the construction industry.
A contractor works on a home under construction in Las Vegas.
Photographer: Roger Kisby/BloombergAs industries go, residential construction in America has largely weathered the pandemic thanks to steady demand and low interest rates. Worksites nationwide are humming with good, paying jobs at a time when 1 in 8 workers are receiving unemployment checks. So why on earth are some construction firms complaining of a labor shortage?
U.S. construction is sprawling, employing roughly 5% of the nation’s workforce (7.3 million employees) at some 680,000 firms, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). The industry is essentially its own economy, building hundreds of billions of dollars worth of structures each month. It’s true that many parts of the sector are hurting because of the pandemic. But in others, there’s actually too much work to go around.