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Truck transportation jobs break 6-month string of gains with slight loss

Separately, warehouse jobs, which have been mostly declining the past 2 years, soar in April

Truck transportation jobs fell slightly in April. (Photo: Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

For the first time in six months, the number of truck transportation jobs has declined from the prior month.

Truck transportation jobs, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ report for April, fell by 300 jobs, to 1,557,800. It marked the seventh consecutive month of relatively small movement in the total employment number following two years of wild swings driven by the pandemic, the historically strong freight market that followed, the subsequent freight recession and the midyear 2023 impact of the closure of Yellow Corp.

Outside a gain of 4,100 jobs in March, every other change in that seven-month period was fewer than 2,000 jobs.

But a big loss of more than 31,000 jobs last August when Yellow closed still hasn’t been replaced. The April total this year remains 20,600 jobs fewer than where it was a year ago.


The big shift in April came in warehouse jobs, which have been on a downward trend for more than a year.

The increase of 7,600 warehouse jobs to 1,775,600 is the fourth consecutive month recording a gain, though the prior three months were all increases of fewer than 100 jobs.

Otherwise, the one-month gain in April is stunning not only in its size but in how contrary it is to recent trends. Seasonally adjusted warehouse jobs increased by 14,300 in April 2023, but that was followed by a string of declines that ranged from 3,300 to 16,700 jobs.

The end result is that warehouse jobs in April were still 108,200 fewer than they were a year ago and 166,600 jobs fewer than in May 2022, when they hit their all-time high of 1,942,200.


David Spencer, the vice president of market intelligence at Arrive Logistics, in his monthly commentary on the BLS report, said the truck transportation decline “doesn’t represent attrition at a grand scale but is just one more sign of cracking we are seeing from carriers as trucking conditions remain challenging in the first half of the year.”

With contract negotiations in full swing between carriers and shippers, Spencer said that “anecdotes from the Q1 RFP season point to increased pressure on asset carriers to provide year-over-year discounts in contract rates. While some have given in, and risk lower profits or even operating losses, others are saying no. It is those carriers that may no longer be able to keep drivers on board, waiting for a meaningful improvement in the truckload rate environment.”

“A weak peak season, and we will absolutely see more carriers throwing in the towel, resulting in further pullbacks in employment,” he said. By contrast, “a strong peak season would likely mean we are closer to the end of the downcycle, and it could be a sign to carriers to continue to invest in expanding their operations ahead of a potential sustained disruption, where carriers have much greater opportunity to earn profits in the spot market.”

In other highlights from the report:

  • Talk of a rail rebound and a focus on increasing staffing levels haven’t led to much of anything in rail transportation jobs. In April 2023, seasonally adjusted employment in rail was 152,800 jobs. In April of this year, it was 153,400, a gain of just 600 jobs in 12 months.
  • Hourly earnings in truck transportation edged back above $31 an hour in March, to $31.06. The wage data is on a one-month lag. It follows seven consecutive months of an hourly wage for all employees in truck transportation of less than $31 per hour. 

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One Comment

  1. Mark Stephens

    The Supply Chain Pendulum Swing
    An observation by Mark Stephens

    Volume capacity. Outbound tender volumes. Spot market rates. These are but a few terms used in the trucking industry within the United States supply chain.

    As with any cost to profit business, supply and demand remains the critical constant by which one makes predictive analysis.

    In a balanced market, freight movement compares nicely to trucking capacity. In today’s current market, we find ourselves in a conundrum as such. Where supply is abundant, so too are empty trailers whose movement depends on quick timing and flexible negotiated compromising techniques by planners and dispatchers.

    Pre-pandemic figures categorize nicely into the predictive ebb and flow of the pendulum swing in the supply chain (the range of profit margins targeted and often surpassed within the supply chain)

    The supply and demand formula was interrupted during this time due to unpredictable consumer buying phases. Production plants, distribution centers and off market third party logistic warehousing begin over ordering and quickly filling beyond maximum capacity. This exasperated increase to the normal pendulum swing was a primary effect of rate escalation.

    As a retired history teacher, I do recall 19th century philosopher George Santayana’s century old adage, “by not knowing relative history, there’s an excellent chance of repeating similar failure.” Doomed or condemned I believe was the operative adjective used.

    The trucking capacity grew at an alarming scale, yet the demand to move product remained the carrot to the thoroughbred. Rates were at their highest ever measured and the pendulum needle could not have reached any further than it did before the adverse effect began.

    By the time carriers had received their pre-ordered trucks and trailers in 2023 the reflux of the pendulum began moving in favor of the shipper and receiver (customer) where it currently lies, albeit in a slow decline.

    Trucking capacity is still extremely high in spite of some of the lowest rates offered and agreed upon. Add that to the rise in fuel cost in 2023, the supply chain industry saw a devastating rise in carrier and broker bankruptcies with thousands going out of business.

    Many analysts predict a back to pre-pandemic normality this year. That’s “hopeful” thinking. Bizlytics predicts the spring of 2025 to measure closest to pre-pandemic volumes.

    If an agreement was achieved to neutralize the influx of supply chain movement through supply and demand predictives and attainable profit margins would fall in a satisfactory target range the survival of all participants would become a reality; at least until the next pandemic.

    Technology is moving along quite well. AI is becoming a more understood ally to the supply chain partnerships and those who exercise that technology will transcend to the top and to those who let’s say wing it, on their instincts, well let us not forget Dr. Santayana’s famous quote.

    Mark Stephens
    Founder & CEO
    Bizlytics TGMS
    ~ a Solutions Software ~

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John Kingston

John has an almost 40-year career covering commodities, most of the time at S&P Global Platts. He created the Dated Brent benchmark, now the world’s most important crude oil marker. He was Director of Oil, Director of News, the editor in chief of Platts Oilgram News and the “talking head” for Platts on numerous media outlets, including CNBC, Fox Business and Canada’s BNN. He covered metals before joining Platts and then spent a year running Platts’ metals business as well. He was awarded the International Association of Energy Economics Award for Excellence in Written Journalism in 2015. In 2010, he won two Corporate Achievement Awards from McGraw-Hill, an extremely rare accomplishment, one for steering coverage of the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster and the other for the launch of a public affairs television show, Platts Energy Week.