Spanish Construction Firms shed 76,000 Jobs Since Pandemic, Facing Labor โChallenges
Madrid – Major Spanish construction companies – Sacyr, ohla, and Ferrovial – have collectively reduced their Spanish workforce by 76,000 employees since the start of the pandemic, representingโค a 31% decrease, according to โขa recent analysis of company data. This downsizing coincidesโ with a broader shift towards internationalโ markets โขand increasing concerns over proposed labor โregulations.
Sacyr has dramatically reduced its Spanish workforce, currently โฃoperating with 5,343 employees compared to 28,700 at theโ end of 2019 – an โ81% reduction. theโ group chaired by Manuel Manrique has seen a 65% decrease โขin personnel across all โmarkets, now employing 15,239 workers. Personnel spending has alsoโฃ decreased, โฃfalling to โโฌ714 million last year from โฌ1,187 million in 2019. This restructuring followed theโค sale of โฃValoriza Servicios Medioambientales to a โขMorgan Stanley fund and the transfer of Sacyr facilities to Serveo in December of โthe same year.
Ohla has also โundergone significant workforce adjustments, reducing its global โheadcount from 18,782 toโค just under 15,000. Theโ most substantial cuts โคhaveโ been inโ Spain, โขwhere employment has plummeted from 9,500โข in 2019 to lessโ than 2,500 – a 74% decrease.Concurrently, Ohla has expanded its international presence, increasing its workforce abroad by 35% to โ12,500, with strategic focus on Northโ America, the Czech Republic, Chile, and Peru. The company, โchaired by Luis โAmario, is currently in the process of selling its โคservices division, headed by Ingesan.
These workforce reductions are occurring โagainst a backdrop ofโ debate surrounding proposed changes to overtime regulations. The national Construction Confederationโข (CNC) has voiced strong opposition to a royal โDecree planned by the Ministry of Labor, arguing it would threaten the State Housing Plan 2026-2030 and the execution of European recovery funds.
The CNC, representingโค 1.3 million construction workers in Spain, warns that limiting overtime to 80 hours annually – compared to a European Union average of 450 hours – “would only worsen the already unfair limitation and the rigiditiesโ that already exist in Spain.” The organization claims this limit couldโข reduce worker salaries by up to 27%, or approximately โฌ7,000 per year.
Pedro Fernรกndez Alรฉn, leading the CNC, highlights a current shortage of 700,000 workers in theโฃ sector. โขThe CNC advocates for focusing on โcontrolling the execution of overtime, ensuring proper โdocumentation and payroll reflection, โand allowing for negotiation between employers and unions – a practice common throughout Europe.
sector data indicates that labor costs in โSpanish construction are currently at a ancient high โof approximately โฌ3,300 per worker, exceeding the average across all sectors.This, coupled โwith โthe workforceโค reduction, presents significant challenges for the industry as it navigates a changing economic landscape and ambitious infrastructure projects.