By Goldman Sachs

Could Immigration Solve the US Worker Shortage?

Date:

Captura de Pantalla 2022-06-09 a la(s) 09

Author: Marcelo Soba

  1. Labor participation is expected to pick up in the U.S., adding as many as 1.5 million workers over the coming year, but economists at Goldman Sachs predict that will leave a sizable jobs-workers gap of around 1 million
  2. Immigration slowed in the U.S. between 2019 and 2021 amid the spread of COVID-19 and policy changes, leaving the labor force about 1.6 million workers smaller than it would have been if it had stayed on its pre-pandemic trend
  3. Broad bipartisan immigration reform appears out of reach, but smaller changes may have a chance, such as a bill for farm workers or other temporary jobs
  4. To get price increases back to the Fedā€™s 2% target, theĀ jobs-workers gapĀ in the U.S. needs to narrow by around 2.5 million, according to Goldman Sachs Research