The first group had walked about 1 km from the main meeting point and sat near a closed shop with their work tools: an axe, shovel, a big flat basket, and high rubber boots. “Here there are workers and tradespeople. A tradesman does one thing, but we do any kind of work,” says Ragab Dessouqi, who has been in Jordan for 12 years. The same goes for his friend Mohamed Mukhtar Abd al-Basset Sayyed, who came to Jordan to work as a crane operator. Both men are Saidis, hailing from Upper Egypt.
We do everything except installing insulation and tiling, Mohamed says. A person who comes here as a laborer stays a laborer, and those who come as tradesmen will always be tradesmen.
Ragab, Mohamed, and others work as day laborers in construction. This is the most vulnerable group of Egyptian workers in Jordan, with the least job and wage security. To make ends meet, they are forced to take nearly any job available—whatever is required by the workshop owners who pass by the usual meeting places in the morning to pick the workers they need and give them a lift.
These workers are divided into laborers and tradesmen. Laborers do jobs like hauling tiles, cement, and sand upstairs on work sites, carrying away dirt and leftover construction materials, digging building foundations, or demolishing and removing building facades. They might also clean gardens, plant trees, or move rocks. “It’s not only hauling away construction materials and digging. We clean gardens and work on landscaping,” says Ali Ahmed Mohamed, 35, who came to Jordan from Assyout, in Upper Egypt. “We Saidis like agriculture and planting things. We’ll dig up the earth even to plant trees.”
Tradesmen earn more, but they are a minority of workers in these communities. No one knows how the standard wage—20 dinars a day for laborers and 25 for tradesmen—was determined, although workers often make less than this. There are 170,000 Egyptian workers registered in Jordan, making up 51 percent of all migrant labor in the country.
Egyptians work in the following sectors:

“We save at the expense of our stomachs”
As the hour reaches noon, the chance of finding work for the day gradually declines and day wages decrease. Two days earlier, Ali and a friend found a job shortly before noon. “A few days ago, we both went and worked a job together for 20 dinars. We save at the expense of our stomachs and live on the bare necessities,” he says. That was a fairly high wage for Ali and his comrade. They might make far less if days pass without work. Samir al-Sayyed Atwa, 50, is getting nervous about the time passing without finding work. He came to Jordan in 1986 to work as an upholsterer. “Subtract three years for the army and the rest have been in Jordan,” he says. “I’m 50 years old and haven’t been in Egypt for 20 years.”