Housing is in a relatively deep recession, yet the decline in residential
construction employment (not including specialty contractors) has been relatively
mild (see Chart 1).
Chart 1

One hypothesis for the relatively mild contraction in residential construction
employment is that a lot of these jobs have been filled by undocumented workers
in this cycle. If undocumented, these workers would not be counted when they
were hired or when they were fired.
Is there any corroborating evidence that undocumented workers increasingly
have been employed in the residential construction industry? Yes, the behavior
of currency. Chart 2 shows a recent sharp decline in currency held by the public
as a percent of the total M2 money supply. The decline in M2's relative currency
component began shortly after the peak in this cycle's housing starts. Not
only would undocumented workers likely not be counted in the establishment
payroll statistics but they also would likely be paid in currency, not direct
deposits to bank accounts. The absolute and relative slowing in U.S. currency
growth in recent years is consistent with the hypothesis that there have been
large layoffs of undocumented workers. In turn, this would help explain the
relatively mild contraction in documented residential construction employment.
Chart 2
