Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Truck Driver Jobs America Has a Shortage of Truckers
Truck Driver Jobs America Has a Shortage of Truckers Truck driving salaries may be increasing 8% to 12% annually, but the industry is facing an enormous shortage of drivers. According to a new report from the American Truckers Association, the industry is desperately trying to fill some 48,000 jobsâ"and that shortage could go up to 175,000 by 2024 as drivers retire (truck driver median age is 49, compared to the average workerâs median age of 42) and the demand for shipping and deliveries booms, in part thanks to the growing dominance of online retail. The ATA pegs the average private-fleet truckerâs salary at $73,000 and the BLS puts the industry-wide median at around $40,000. But the study explains that those numbers havenât been enticing enough to draw qualified applicants. Read More: Guess Which Small Business Industry Is Growing the Fastest? âFleets consistently report receiving applications for open positions, but that many of those candidates do not meet the criteria to be hired,â wrote ATA Chief Economist Bob Costello in a press release. âAccording our research, 88% of carriers said most applicants are not qualified.â Part of the problem, the report says, is the jobâs very accurate reputation for long hours and weeks away from home. Addressing those problems is the ATAâs solution to fixing the labor shortage, listing âincreasing driver pay, getting drivers more time at home, as well as improving the image of the driver and their treatment by all companies in the supply chainâ as realistic solutions to combat the shortage. Other proposed courses of action include recruiting veterans, attempting to lower the driving age from 21 to 18â"thereâs significant unemployment among young adultsâ"though regulations and insurance often make it difficult for people with short driving histories to secure jobs. The last solution suggested by the ATA puts a question mark on the 2024 prognostication: Driverless trucks. While noting that âwe are still years away from truly driverless Class 8 trucks running on the highway as a normal part of the industry,â the report images a future where long-haul trucking could be performed by autonomous trucks, while local pick-up and delivery routes would be reserved for human drivers. Read Next: The Trucking Industry Is Delivering Good News for the Economy
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