A hidden threat to Trump’s economic agenda

Carlos Soto, owner of a floral service called Flowers From Our Heart, had an unexpected problem on the busiest day of the year: He had to turn down business on Valentine’s Day because he couldn’t find enough workers to field all the orders he could have taken.

“A year or two ago, I’d put an ad on Craigslist and get 100 or 150 resumes for a few positions,” says Soto, whose Los Angeles-based service delivers flowers through a network of 30,000 local shops. “This year, I placed several ads and got very few people. I could have used another six people. I would have been able to take more orders.”

With the U.S. economy in its ninth year of expansion, employers are fretting about a problem that seemed unimaginable just a few years ago, in the aftermath of mass layoffs and the Great Recession: a shortage of workers, from unskilled laborers needed to hammer nails to programmers and developers able to build complex software. The unemployment rate is a low 4.1% and probably headed below 4% at some point this year. The Labor Department says there are nearly 6 million unfilled jobs in the U.S. economy, close to a record high.

Illustration by David Foster for Yahoo Finance
Illustration by David Foster for Yahoo Finance

For the first time ever, small-business owners said in a monthly survey dating to 1974 that the poor quality of labor is their biggest problem, rather than perennial gripes such as taxes, weak sales, costly health insurance or excessive regulation. In a recent survey of business owners by J.P. Morgan Chase, 54% said finding qualified workers would be a “top challenge” in 2018—10 points higher than the portion who felt that way last year.

Yahoo Finance surveyed more than 1,100 people who own or manage a business, and interviewed a variety of them in depth, to determine why there’s a shortage of workers, and what might be done about it. (Here are highlights from the survey.) Among our findings:

  • More than half of employers say they can’t find enough qualified workers

  • To lure workers, employers are raising pay and sweetening benefits–and they still can’t find people, in many cases

  • Businesses struggle to find workers able to show up on time, finish a shift and pass a drug test

  • Many businesses, like Carlos Soto’s floral service, are giving up work—and revenue—because they’re chronically understaffed

  • In some industries, employers fault lousy immigration policies—and feel President Trump is making the problem worse

  • Workers, for their part, blame companies for offshoring jobs, skimping on training and setting standards unrealistically high

This is how business owners and managers responded to the question. Source: Yahoo Finance survey conducted online via SurveyMonkey, Jan. 29-30
This is how business owners and managers responded to the question. Source: Yahoo Finance survey conducted online via SurveyMonkey, Jan. 29-30

A diminishing pool of workers

Economists emphasize that key data doesn’t yet show workers are scarce throughout the economy. Job growth remains strong, for instance, with employers creating more than 180,000 new jobs per month, on average, since the start of 2017. If workers were scarce everywhere, that monthly average would be lower, perhaps below 100,000. And pay hasn’t risen broadly throughout the economy, which is what normally happens when companies run short on staffing.