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View Full Version : Construction worker wage going up due to Trump effect.


VITE1
08-07-2017, 8:24am
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/08/02...crackdown.html

President Trump's tough stance on immigration may be having an unintended consequence -- higher housing costs.

That's because builders say it's getting harder and harder for them to find workers, especially in places that rely on immigrant labor.

"There's just not anybody you can hire out there," said Stan Marek, CEO of Marek Construction.

Just how bad is it? According to the National Association of Home Builders, more than 56 percent of developers nationwide are reporting labor shortages.

NAHB says the problems started when the recession hit and domestic construction workers dropped out of the market to find other jobs. At the same time, immigrant workers went back to their home countries. But as the economy has picked up and the construction industry has heated up, those workers have remained missing.

The problem is compounded in hot real estate markets where more and more housing projects are finding fewer and fewer workers. In places like North Texas, recently, it's been a triple whammy.

"Half of the workers in construction in Texas are undocumented," Marek said. "We do hear that there are a lot of undocumented workers that are leaving the state, going to other states that don't have the anti-immigrant sentiment and many of them are going back to Mexico."

Ted Wilson with Residential Strategies, Inc. has run the numbers.

"We've seen direct construction costs climb by over 30 percent," Wilson said, "and a lot of that is directly attributed to what builders are having to pay their subs and trades in wages."

Meaning, with so few workers out there, construction companies have had to pay more to attract them, which adds to the cost of a home.


"You know, when you figure that 60 percent of the cost of a job is labor," Marek said, "that's a lot of money."

Wilson said companies have had to get by with fewer workers, so in addition to paying more for a house, you'll likely have to wait longer for it to get built.

"Instead of 12 guys coming out to frame your house, you get four guys," he said.


Wilson claims that sort of shortage can add a month or two to the time it takes to build a home.

But apart from higher prices and inconvenience to consumers, Marek said the worker shortage is a drag on the economy, keeping the recovery from going full throttle. Marek said he is turning down projects for lack of workers.

"I think if we were able to find the legal workers," says Marek, "we could add in our company maybe another five to 600 people. There's work out there if we could find those people."


Casey Stegall joined Fox News Channel (FNC) in 2007 and currently serves as a correspondent based in the Dallas bureau. He previously served as a Los Angeles-based correspondent.

How about getting all those deadbeats collecting welfare off thier asses and train them to swing a hammer? Also all those unemployed "Youths" that seem to get into trouble . Let them get trained to swing a hammer as well. The crime rates just may drop.

thecornerman
08-07-2017, 9:54am
How about getting all those deadbeats collecting welfare off thier asses and train them to swing a hammer? Also all those unemployed "Youths" that seem to get into trouble . Let them get trained to swing a hammer as well. The crime rates just may drop.

They don't want too work!
Everyone wants to go from preschool straight to bring boss!

Has anyone noticed the trend?
They want too charge other people $ for telling them what to buy, how to buy and where too buy it!
Some even have others deliver it for them

SteelCityBlue
08-07-2017, 3:38pm
A big part of the problem is wage growth. Why should a mobile carpenter work in Nashville when they can work in ATL for significantly more an hour?

OddBall
08-07-2017, 4:35pm
You had all those illegals filling up the "supply" side of the equation, effectively driving down wages. Now that the supply is down, wages will come back up. Can't really blame the employer for keeping his labor costs down. His competitor is going to hire the cheaper labor so he has to also, to stay competitive. He'll now have to hire home grown labor and the overall cost of housing is going to go up. Where the quality goes remains to be seen.

If someone needs to be blamed, there are several recent administrations that did not do what they knew they needed to do, because the housing market was on a high.

DAB
08-07-2017, 4:49pm
guess i'm glad i got my shop built when i did 2 years ago. :DAB: