
IIn April, Treasury Secretary, Scott Bessent, described the approach of President Trump’s policy as an exercise in “strategic uncertainty”. With regard to the incursions of workers without documentation of the Administration, we still do not convince that there is something strategic in this regard. Instead, we see confusion, interruption and economic damage. Instead of focusing on “the worst,” as promised during its campaign, the administration has increasingly dealt with the construction sector as a main goal. Since May, immigration and customs application have increased workplace raids throughout the country, with Florida, Alabama and Texas, seeing a strong activity.
There are reasons for concern. Expenditure under construction has dropped by 2.2% year -on -year in June, according to the Labor Department. A decrease more like a recession than a highly solid economy. The construction industry is short more than 430,000 workers, according to associated builders and contractors, and the lack of housing in America exceeds 4 million units. However, the application of the reduction appears, not maintaining, the labor pool to meet this demand.
Immigrants without documentation represent at least 12% to 15% of U.S. construction labor force, stirring more than $ 30 billion on annual payroll taxes, without receiving. They are mainly Hispanic, highlighting the disparities in the application. Unlike agriculture (with its H-2A visa program) or hospitality (with several seasonal visa channels), construction has no special work visa and remained legally exposed. In June, the administration paused briefly on farms and hotels before reversing sharply days later.
Construction was never mentioned, but it generates 4.5% of North -American GDP: the slice of agriculture and more than hospitality and combined agriculture. Construction workers are essentially treated as collateral damage to deportation policy.
TIt needs more construction workers and the demands for labor training are welcome. But this is a correction of decades to encourage North -Americans to pursue university educations. A generation will probably be needed on the right, assuming that the population of the United States is growing, which is not a thing, and we can expect. Enr does not propose amnesty. Instead, we are looking for a pragmatic solution aligned with the declared objective of the President to make America more secure eliminating theft, drug dealers and murderers, without flat workers, besiegers and ceilings.
We have a message for commercial organizations: to make a complete throat call for a temporary visa system, based on labor demand and the supervision of compliance, which will help stabilize workforce, alleviate absenteeism and keep projects underway.
Currently, some job managers spend the mornings, saying that “ice must have a mandate” that are visible from the road. Without reform, the President risks emphasizing a central piece of his economic agenda. The construction industry does not seek special treatment, but it must ask that it is not sabot.
