In December I attended the Chicago FED Economic Outlook
Symposium. During a presentation on the
steel industry, the speaker noted that companies are having problems hiring
enough production workers. Then, during
a presentation on the housing industry, the speaker noted that builders can’t
find enough skilled tradesmen for the jobs available. Finally, an auto industry analyst stated that
there are unmet employment needs there as well.
This certainly isn’t good news for the trucking
industry. My company, FTR (Freight
Transportation Research), is estimating the current driver shortage at 200,000
and, based on the presentations in Chicago, trucking fleets will not only be
competing for workers inside the industry, they will be competing with many
other industries. And this situation will
only get worse, considering the potential of stronger economic growth and that
we are only at the start of the baby-boomer retirement wave.
I recently found a newspaper article from 2007 that
predicted a huge worker shortage (in general) beginning in 2010. While initially I found the headline
humorous, the Great Recession did not eliminate this worker shortage, it only
delayed it. It would seem the worker
shortage predicted in the article began in 2013.
But how can there be a widespread labor shortage with
unemployment still near 7% (and “real unemployment much higher)? One factor is “structural unemployment.” Structural unemployment occurs when
unemployed workers lack the skills needed for the jobs available or do not live
in the part of the country where job openings exist.
The Great Recession created significant structural
unemployment. Many workers lost jobs
they had worked in for 10, 20, or even 30 years. Their jobs skills are either not transferable
to other industries or not adequate in a changing, high-tech oriented
economy. In addition, the housing bust
made workers less mobile. It is
difficult, in some cases impossible, to sell your house if you are “underwater”
or if you live where housing prices are depressed. (I identified the structural
unemployment problem created by the recession in October 2009, one of the first
people to do so).
But structural unemployment cannot fully explain the labor
shortage. I believe there is a new
factor which I will call “cultural unemployment.” Cultural unemployment occurs when the jobs
available are not desired by unemployed workers due to cultural patterns. You could also call it “Ugly Job Syndrome.” Factory and truck driving jobs now fit is
this category. These were desirable jobs
a generation ago, but the culture has changed and now a percentage of the available
labor pool is avoiding these professions.
Also, government policies have contributed to this cultural
unemployment. Cheap college loan money
led to an over-supply of college graduates (and an under-supply of blue collar
workers), and an increase in the social “safety-net” allows more people to
eschew physical and more demanding labor. And the recent report by the Congressional
Budget Office predicts that the Affordable Care Act will motivate people not to
work full-time, if at all.
So as bad as you think the driver shortage is, it probably is
even worse given the overall labor market.
And due to regulation, demographics, and economic cycles, it will
continue to exacerbate. This is going to
cause significant changes in the trucking industry as companies respond to the
changing labor economics. There is no
single solution to this problem. Yes you
will see higher wages and shorter routes, but you will also see changes in the
distribution system (more warehouses, perhaps) and more and different types of
intermodal. It will also force carriers
and shippers to develop creative solutions that maximize the number of drivers
and maximize the efficiency of these drivers.
This will take some hard thinking and analysis. Time to start thinking now.
Time to train more truckers! |
(The post first appeared on the FTR website. FTR is the leader in analyzing and
forecasting the commercial transportation industry. For more information on FTR reports and
services, please click here.
when the job does not pay enough to pay the bills the person must get a different job after 20 years of driving truck i have to give up the job i love
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