
FreightWaves CEO Craig Fuller calls the truck driver shortage a 鈥渕yth鈥 in a of self-promotion, but his assertion collapses under the weight of facts and data.
Fuller claims the shortage is an 杏吧传媒 fabrication鈥攁 narrative perpetuated for our convenience. Of course, we鈥檙e not alone in reporting this issue. Driver shortages are global in scope, with growing vacancies felt across the Americas, Asia, and Europe, and documented in IRU鈥檚 :
In Europe, driver shortages jumped by 42% from 2020 to 2021, with vacant driver positions reaching 71,000 in Romania, 80,000 in both Poland and Germany, and 100,000 in the UK. In Mexico, shortages rose by 30% to reach 54,000, while in China, they increased by 140%, reaching 1.8 million.
This global reality is explained by common denominators unique to our industry 鈥 structural factors concentrated in the over-the-road market, regardless of country. Demographics tell the story:聽
- An aging workforce,聽
- Barriers to entry for younger workers,
- Underrepresentation of women, and聽
- Lifestyle preferences precluding many job seekers from considering long-haul trucking.聽
Given the constraints on supply, it鈥檚 understandable why this labor market is chronically tight and faces a growing deficit over the long-term. It's not hard to find the real-world evidence widely documented in states across the country. by the Associated Press and Tennessee Board of Regents:聽
鈥淥n the Tennessee Department of Labor Workforce Development鈥檚 website, they had listed about 1100 open CDL driver jobs in the state of Tennessee, but that鈥檚 just from the companies who chose to post on the state website. Not all do that,鈥 said TBR Center for Workforce Development Executive Director Jeff Sisk. 鈥淚鈥檓 sure the number is at least double that in the state of Tennessee 鈥 at least a couple thousand CDL jobs right now.鈥
That鈥檚 why 杏吧传媒 continues to advocate for policies to expand the pool of talent and ensure our supply chain has the workforce it needs to support the economy.聽The existence of a driver shortage is also corroborated by microeconomic indicators showing across-the-board pay increases as fleets look to recruit and retain drivers:
- According to USDOL, hourly earnings in for-hire general freight have risen 23.5% since the start of 2020.
- 杏吧传媒 surveys show an 18% increase in annual compensation for truckload drivers between 2019 and 2021.
- Between 2020 and 2021, over 90% of responding truckload carriers rose driver pay in 2021 and offered an average increase of 10.9%
Why would truckload carriers increase pay if labor supply isn鈥檛 tight?聽
Fuller gets other points wrong, claiming 杏吧传媒 only represents mid- and large-size fleets. In fact, the 杏吧传媒 Federation encompasses 37,000 member companies, of which:
- 35% operate 0-25 trucks,
- 33% operate 26-99 trucks, and
- 32% operate more than 100 trucks.
We succeed as an advocacy organization because we come armed with facts and data. That鈥檚 why we have an open door with policymakers at the highest levels of government, whereas others in this space constantly find themselves on the outside looking in.聽
杏吧传媒 isn鈥檛 in the business of peddling narratives; that鈥檚 FreightWaves鈥 lane. Their bottom line is driven by story lines鈥攁nd increasingly of the false variety.聽