DEARBORN – When Ford Motor Company says it cannot fill thousands of open mechanic jobs — even with wages that can approach six figures — the issue is not about people refusing to work.
It is about whether workforce training systems are keeping pace with how work itself has changed.
Ford CEO Jim Farley recently said the automaker has roughly 5,000 unfilled skilled-mechanic positions, calling the situation a warning sign for the broader U.S. economy.
“We are in trouble in our country. We are not talking about this enough,” Farley said in a recent interview, adding that critical jobs across the trades remain open even as companies raise pay.
For Michigan — home to the nation’s auto industry and now a central player in electric vehicle and advanced manufacturing investment — that warning lands close to home.
A Skills Mismatch, Not a Motivation Problem
Economists and labor analysts caution against framing the issue as a lack of interest in manual or technical work.
“What we’re seeing is not a collapse in labor participation, but a mismatch,” said Laura Ullrich, an economist with Indeed’s Hiring Lab, in recent commentary on trade and manufacturing employment. “Fields like manufacturing and construction have long-term shortages because training pipelines have not kept up with demand.”
That mismatch is increasingly visible in roles like automotive service and maintenance.
Modern technicians are expected to work with:
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Advanced diagnostic software
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Sensors and automated systems
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High-voltage EV components
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Battery safety and electronics
Those skills take time to develop — and they do not always align with short-term or outdated training
programs.
Farley has noted that mastery in some advanced technician roles can take years, particularly in diesel, electrical, and EV-related work.
Why Michigan Feels the Strain More Acutely
Michigan continues to invest heavily in:
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EV manufacturing plants
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Battery production
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Advanced mobility and automation
But workforce experts say service and maintenance skills have not always scaled at the same pace as factory announcements.
That gap shows up first in technician roles — jobs that are essential once a facility is operational, not just when it opens.





