Finland has become another example of what happens when ideology overtakes economic reality. According to a recent report, Finland’s construction sector is suffering severe unemployment, with the Construction Trade Union estimating that 17.5% of construction workers are now unemployed. Many have already exhausted the maximum 400 days of earnings-related unemployment benefits and have dropped onto lower levels of support. Yet almost simultaneously, there are renewed discussions about bringing in workers from outside the European Union to fill jobs in the construction industry.
The desperation in Finland’s labor market is becoming almost unbelievable. One comparison circulating widely captures just how severe conditions have become. Reports indicate that Finnish discount retailer Puuilo received roughly 21,000 applications for just 400 summer jobs, an acceptance rate of less than 2%. By comparison, admission rates to Finland’s medical schools reportedly range from roughly 2.8% at the most competitive universities to nearly 4% at the least competitive.
It has become statistically more difficult to land a seasonal retail job than to gain admission to medical school. Whether viewed as a symbol or a statistic, it reflects the same reality: the labor market has become so weak that even entry-level positions attract overwhelming demand. When thousands of qualified people are competing for temporary retail work while experienced construction workers remain unemployed, it becomes increasingly difficult to argue that the problem is a shortage of labor. The problem is a shortage of opportunity, brought about by years of economic mismanagement, high financing costs, and policies that have steadily undermined productive private-sector growth.
Nearly one out of every five Finnish construction workers cannot find employment. The construction sector has been battered by bankruptcies, collapsing housing demand, and rising interest rates. Employment in Finnish construction has fallen to roughly 176,800 workers, down sharply from the peak reached only a few years ago. Yet instead of asking why so many skilled Finnish workers remain unemployed, policymakers continue discussing labor imports.
At the same time, bankruptcies across Finland have climbed to their highest level since 1996, with the construction sector among the hardest hit as high interest rates, weak housing demand, and rising financing costs continue to cripple new development. Yet despite what many workers describe as the worst construction labor market in a generation, policymakers continue discussing the recruitment of labor from outside rather than first putting their own skilled workforce back to work. That disconnect is precisely why confidence in government continues to deteriorate.
This has become the standard political response across Europe. Governments insist there are labor shortages while their own citizens struggle to find work. The problem is often not an absolute shortage of workers but a mismatch created by economic policy. High interest rates have devastated residential construction across much of Europe. Finland’s own central bank acknowledges that housing construction remains in severe difficulty and that the labor market will stay weak well into 2027 despite hopes for a gradual recovery.
What governments refuse to acknowledge is that this is the direct consequence of years of policy failures. Europe embraced negative interest rates, encouraged debt-fueled property booms, and expanded government spending while simultaneously imposing environmental regulations, soaring energy costs, and endless bureaucracy. When inflation finally arrived, interest rates had to rise, and the very sectors that had been inflated by cheap money collapsed first. Construction always becomes one of the earliest casualties because it is extraordinarily sensitive to financing costs.
The numbers are becoming increasingly alarming. Finland’s unemployment rate has climbed into double digits, making it one of the highest in the European Union. Recent data showed around 290,000 unemployed people nationwide, while economists continue warning that job creation remains weak despite isolated signs of economic growth. Even the Finnish government expects unemployment to remain elevated throughout 2026 before any meaningful improvement begins.
Our models have long warned that Europe would face a prolonged period of economic stagnation accompanied by growing political unrest. Finland is now experiencing exactly that combination. Workers who spent decades paying taxes are watching opportunities disappear while policymakers debate importing additional labour. That is the type of policy disconnect that destroys confidence in government. History demonstrates that when citizens conclude their own governments place ideology ahead of the interests of their own workforce, political backlash inevitably follows. Europe is learning that lesson the hard way.



















