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BLS cites lack of pay – not drivers – as cause for driver shortage

(Photo credit: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)
Photo credit: Jim Allen/Freightwaves

Low wages may be more responsible for high driver turnover than a lack of qualified workers to supply the trucking industry, according to a study released by the U.S Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

The study, co-authored by Kristen Monaco, an associate commissioner at BLS, and Stephen Burks, an economics professor specializing in trucking at the University of Minnesota-Morris, calls out the American Trucking Associations (ATA) specifically for promoting the driver shortage theory, noting that ATA “has been arguing systematically since 2005 that firms hauling freight face a shortage of truck drivers,” along with the potential effects on the larger economy.

Results of the BLS study reveal, however, that higher earnings in truck driving increase occupational entry, especially among those willing to work longer hours for more pay. “Accounting for the fact that hours tend to be relatively high in truck driving, we find nothing surprising about how economic incentives appear to work in this labor market,” the authors contend, finding also that driving a truck is a relatively stable occupation compared with similar blue-collar jobs.

So what explains truckload (TL) carriers’ high turnover? “Arguably, the long-distance TL segment has high levels of competition, similar average costs across all scales of production, and a very limited ability to differentiate prices in the product market,” according to the study. “These characteristics result in labor market conditions in which individual firms are forced to accept high turnover as a cost-minimizing response to their competitive position in the market for their outputs.”

The study further points out that managing driver recruitment and retention becomes harder when the industry has lagged in pricing response to surges in demand, “because much TL freight moves under contracts, and aside from a spot market, freight rates do not adjust upward quickly.” It said the lag in response to driver demand occurred twice after the 2008 recession, in 2014 and in 2018.

The ATA was not immediately available to respond to the BLS study. In the past, the association has cited age, gender, lifestyle choices, and federal and state regulations that reduce productivity as primary reasons for the shortage. To fill the employment gap it has supported proposals such as lowering the age for an interstate commercial drivers’ license (CDL) and making it easier for a CDL upgrade.

The BLS study also runs somewhat counter to a year-end report by the National Transportation Institute study showing that boosting pay doesn’t translate into meeting hiring goals.

The Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association believes the BLS study supports its persistent message – that a shortage wouldn’t exist if drivers were better compensated for their work. “We have stated many times that the notion of a truck driver shortage is a myth. It’s been talked about for decades, and yet little has changed as far as pay.”

The BLS report notes that in the first quarter of 2010, in the wake of the 2008 recession, the annual turnover rate at large truckload carriers bottomed at 39 percent – and that at small TL carriers hit 35 percent, both of which are still very substantial percentages by the standards of blue-collar occupations.

The ATA’s latest driver turnover statistics, released March 13 for the fourth quarter of 2018, found that driver turnover continued to trend down in the truckload sector. The rate fell nine points to 78 percent at larger fleets (more than $30 million revenue) compared with the previous quarter, and is now 10 points lower than it was during the same quarter in 2017.

“The overall trend late last year was that turnover is slowing,” said ATA Chief Economist Bob Costello. “There can be various reasons for this – either freight volumes are decelerating and as such fleets pulled back on recruiting efforts, or fleets’ efforts to increase pay are paying dividends in the form or reduced turnover. The truth probably lies somewhere in between, but it is a trend worth watching.”

3 Comments

  1. Steve Webster

    Truck drivers are under pressure with E-LOGS it is impossible to average $250 u.S per day . Other jobs are paying too much better. Truck drivers need to make at least $20.00 u s per hour plus overtime after 10 hours per day and 50 hours per week. . The large companies know that truck drivers are getting beat up and robbed when they park when forced to by the E-LOGS. In 1980 a truck driver made $8.00 per hour plus overtime after 10 hours per day and 44 hours per week. One truck drivers working 4 days per week could buy a house and support a modest family. That would take $90,000 a year to do that now. 5195239586

  2. Carl swann

    If they would stop putting all the money in these high dollar trucks and put some of it in the drivers pocket there wouldn’t be a shortage

  3. Chris Fann

    Dose anyone understand it’s the brookers,logistic company and maybe the customers pushing rates so low we don’t really have a choice. When trailers have to be paid for; trucks have to be paid for, insurance has to be paid for all of that could be upwards of .40 a mile pay a driver much more and you can’t put fuel in the truck . This is the only industry that seems to want to run its self out of business. We try and negotiate fair rates to cover cost and can hardly do that. I personally would love to pay more. Would also like to make a little. Stop thinking we can run for less then $1.00 a mile and everything else would take care of its self.

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John Gallagher

Based in Washington, D.C., John specializes in regulation and legislation affecting all sectors of freight transportation. He has covered rail, trucking and maritime issues since 1993 for a variety of publications based in the U.S. and the U.K. John began business reporting in 1993 at Broadcasting & Cable Magazine. He graduated from Florida State University majoring in English and business.