The Great Resignation may feel like a distant nightmare for many employers, who, in 2025, have regained leverage on the labor market. But as the country’s changing population increasingly creates labor shortages, that post-pandemic period may feel like the good old days. Impending labor shortages stemming from demographic changes, like declining birth rates, have been on employers’ radar. As 2025 US immigration policy shifts the makeup of the market, a challenge that might’ve felt like a future problem for HR pros is becoming a more imminent issue. “The demographic challenges have been plaguing talent leaders for most of the time that I’ve been in this work, which has been my entire working lifetime,” Alison Lands, VP of the employer mobilization practice at Jobs For the Future, told HR Brew. “The labor market has only continued to get tighter, and the pain points have only continued to get more painful. So there’s never a better time to think about it than right now. Kicking the can down the road will make things more difficult.” For more on HR’s labor-shortage headache, keep reading here.—PM |