Home World USA Latin America Europe Asia Africa TV Shows Showbiz Travel Lifestyle Opinion Science Politics Health Sports Tech Entertainment Business
Opinion October 17, 2025

Why America needs to tax-incentivize tradesmen, not just college graduates

Why America needs to tax-incentivize tradesmen, not just college graduates

Walk onto anyconstruction site in America, and you’ll hear the same story: We can’t find enough skilled workers. Electricians, welders, HVAC technicians, plumbers and heavy-equipment operators are in dangerously short supply, and the gap is widening.


Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently warned that building America’sartificial intelligence infrastructurewill require an army of electricians. The demand for data centers — both cloud and AI — is expected to double year over year. Mike Rowe has been sounding the alarm for years: The most "essential" jobs are the ones our culture stopped celebrating.


Here’s the truth: Without skilled tradesmen, America grinds to a halt. No power. No housing. No data centers. No cloud. No AI.


Yet we keep pushing young people toward four-year degrees, often leaving them with six-figure debt, while treating the trades as a second-class option. Meanwhile, a "silver tsunami" is coming as baby boomers and Gen X tradesmen are retiring faster than replacements are entering the field.


HELP WANTED: US MUST FILL LOTS OF SHIPS-AND-CHIPS JOBS TO BEAT CHINA


According to Rewiring America, we’ll need 1 million additional electricians in the next decade, on top of today’s workforce of about 800,000.


Failing to emphasize andincentivize skilled workisn’t just a cultural mistake. It’s an economic time bomb.


Fixing the Imbalance: Use the Tax Code


The quickest, fairest way to reverse course is through thetax code.


Here’s our proposal: Create aggressive tax breaks for tradesmen themselves, not just the companies that employ them.


If you choose to become an electrician, welder or plumber, you should enjoy the same level of government support that college graduates receive.


TRUMP ADMIN TACKLES URGENT ELECTRICAL GRID CRISIS AS AI SET TO DOUBLE DEMAND


If we can make tips non-taxable for service industry workers, we can certainly extend that logic to the men and women literally rebuildingAmerica’s infrastructure. And, frankly, it’s absurd that our active-duty service members or full-time first responders pay federal income taxes at all.


Want to attract a new generation into these professions? Incentivize the behavior that sustains the nation’s backbone.


By their late 20s, these tradesmen could be debt-free, earning solid middle- to upper-class wages, buying homes and raising families; not just chasing the American Dream, but rebuilding it.


Compare that with manycollege gradstoday who are burdened by debt, underemployed and watching automation threaten their jobs.


We should reward the work America’s future depends on, not funnel kids into a path that may not exist a decade from now.


This is also about national security


This isn’t only an economic issue, it’s a national-security one.


AMERICA HAS THE POWER TO LEAD THE AI REVOLUTION – AND THE LEADERSHIP TO MAKE IT HAPPEN


The Pentagon already warns of labor shortages in shipbuilding and mission-critical infrastructure. Data centers — the central nervous system of AI and national defense — are desperate for electricians and cooling technicians.


Without a robust pipeline of skilled tradesmen, our ability to compete with China in the AI race collapses before it begins.


Our national security depends as much on the American welder and HVAC tech as it does on the fighter pilot. It’s time our policies reflected that truth.


This isn’t a subsidy; it’s an investment


Critics will call this a giveaway. They’re wrong.


Tax incentives aren’t handouts. They’re investments in the backbone of America, in the men and women who keep the lights on, the water running and the servers cool.


If Washington can shovel billions into green-energy dreams and Ivy League programs producing fragile, perpetually offended graduates, then it can certainly afford tax relief for the Americans who actually build, wire and power this country.


CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION


The conservative answer is clear: Reward hard work, build self-reliance and restore dignity to the trades.


Congress should act now


Year after year, calls for reform fall on deaf ears in Washington, especially among Democrats more interested in partisan shutdown theatrics than solving the real problems facing working Americans. It’s time to stop putting politics above people and startrebuilding the middle classthat keeps this country running.


Congress can start by:


This is simple, fair and fiscally sound. The alternative is to watch American growth and resilience grind to a halt.


America’s prosperity and security now depend on the trades more than ever. Let’s start treating tradesmen and women with the respect they have earned.


CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM MIKE SARRAILLE


CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM KIRK OFFEL


Kirk Offel is a Navy submarine veteran and the CEO of Overwatch Mission Critical, a Texas-based talent incubator that trains and hires future leaders for high-skill jobs in the data center industry.

Share this article

UMVA MAG

UMVA Mag is your trusted source for breaking news, in-depth analysis, and compelling stories from around the world. Covering politics, business, technology, entertainment, sports, health, science, and more — we deliver journalism that matters.

Independent, Accurate, Unbiased
24/7 Breaking News Coverage
Trusted by Millions Worldwide