Sunday, June 13, 2010

Truck driving jobs, auto industry jobs show strong upward trend

The high U.S. unemployment rate may be reduced by up to 400,000 truck driving jobs and a shortage of workers in the U.S. auto industry. The U.S. auto industry and also the U.S. trucking industry hemorrhaged jobs during the recession. But jobs in both industries are coming back as the U.S. economy inches toward recovery. The U.S. trucking industry is already seeing driver shortages in some markets. A labor shortage is forecast for the U.S. auto industry as well.

Source for this article: Truck driving jobs and auto industry jobs to surge in near future

truck driving jobs coming back

Nearly 150,000 driving jobs were lost from the U.S. trucking industry within the last two years. But up to 200,000 new truck driving jobs could be accessible this year. Another 200,000 will be added next year, as outlined by the state of logistics report from the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals. The need for a lot more truck drivers is being created for many reasons, CNNMoney.com reports, including retirements, tougher safety rules to get rid of bad drivers and replacing laid off truckers.

Auto industry jobs demand new skills

Given that 2008, the U.S. auto industry saw 228,000 jobs lost. But trends point toward an addition of about 15,000 jobs this year and up to 100,000 new auto industry jobs a year from 2011 through 2013 as the industry recovers from the recession, as outlined by the Center for Automotive Research|The Center for Automotive Research sees job numbers trending upward as the industry recovers toward about 15,000 in 2010 and an additional 100,000 new auto industry jobs each year through 2013|In a dramatic reversal, the Center for Automotive research forecasts 15,000 new jobs this year and an additional 100,000 a year through 2013 as the industry recovers from the recession}. The emerging new jobs, USA Today reports, won't be filled by the complacent union workers who contributed to the U.S. auto industry's decline. On the factory floor, auto industry jobs are demanding more and different skills, such as computer literacy and also the ability to work with less supervision than! their predecessors. A college degree in related disciplines will most likely be necessary.

A good truck driver is hard to find

Even with a U.S. unemployment rate reported at 9.7 percent, numerous truck driving jobs may not be filled, said Rosalyn Wilson, author of the report featured on CNNMoney.com. If coming home to the family at the end of the day is a quality of life issue, numerous will hold out for something else. Truck driver salaries were at a $ 37, 730 median as of May 2009. Truck drivers, paid by the mile, are expected to make a lot more because of increasing miles and a shortage of drivers.

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CNNMoney.com

usatoday.com



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