Mar. 16 at 6:16 PM
$GWH BlackRock CEO Larry Fink says the biggest job boom coming to America has nothing to do with AI software or Wall Street, it's in infrastructure.
Specifically, the construction, power grids, and data centers.
That is where he believes the massive job growth is coming from.
And his warning is that we are not ready for it.
Companies are committing hundreds of billions to build out AI infrastructure across the US, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, and Alphabet are projected to spend
$650 billion on it this year alone.
But that buildout requires physical workers.
Electricians, pipefitters, construction crews, grid engineers.
Fink told the Trump administration directly, the US doesn't have enough skilled workers to meet the demand these projects will create.
Microsoft's Brad Smith called the skilled labor shortage the "single biggest challenge for data center expansion in the U.S."
In some regions, Microsoft had to relocate workers or ask them to commute 75 miles just to fill critical roles.
The electrical work alone accounts for 45–70% of total data center construction costs.
Over 200,000 electricians are expected to retire in the next decade.
The pipeline to replace them doesn't exist at the scale needed.
Energy resilience is the other piece Fink flagged.
Data centers don't just need to be built, they need consistent, reliable power.
The US grid hasn't been meaningfully expanded in decades.
China, by contrast, generates roughly twice the electricity the US does and is actively building more.
Fink's point is direct because if the US doesn't win the buildout of its physical infrastructure, China will.
That is why BlackRock just committed
$100 million to fund training programs for 50,000 skilled trade workers over the next five years.
The largest asset manager in the world is putting money into electricians and plumbers because it sees the bottleneck clearly.
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