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Why the Trucking Shortage Is Costing You

Why the Trucking Shortage Is Costing You

(Bloomberg) -- A shortage of truck drivers that has been simmering in the U.S. for years has reached a full boil, causing anxiety from small factories to the Federal Reserve. Trucking companies have responded by raising wages and boosting their hauling fees. Their customers then have to choose between smaller profits or passing along the higher costs, which fuels inflation. Some producers have encountered a shortage of trucks, which can tap the brakes on economic growth. Don’t expect the problem to go away soon: In the tight labor market, construction and manufacturing jobs will continue to lure would-be truckers.

1. How bad is the driver shortage?

The truck-driver shortfall swelled to a record 296,311 in the second quarter of this year, according to FTR Transportation Intelligence. The change was swift: In the fourth quarter of 2015, less than a 10th that many driver jobs went unfilled.

Why the Trucking Shortage Is Costing You

2. What caused the problem?

The root cause dates to 2004 when federal rules changed for measuring whether drivers had reached the maximum workday: driving 11 hours in a 14-hour period. The new rules said that the 11 hours begin the moment a driver gets behind the wheel; prior to that the clock would stop whenever a driver cooled his heels at a loading dock. (Just six percent of drivers are women.) Because drivers couldn’t work as long, more of them were needed to cover the routes. This started a driver shortage interrupted only by the recession in late 2007. And the population of truckers is aging. Only 20 percent of drivers are in the 20-34 age bracket, compared with 30 percent for construction workers. That’s in part because drivers have to be at least 21 years old to cross state lines, under federal rules, eliminating long-haul trucking as a viable vocation for new high-school graduates.

3. Why has it suddenly gotten worse?

Blame the strong economy. For-hire truck tonnage rose 7.9 percent in the first half of 2018 from a year earlier, more than double the gain for the same period in 2017, according to the American Trucking Associations. On the supply side, with the unemployment rate hovering around its lowest level in almost half a century, construction and manufacturing have an easier time attracting workers than trucking, which can require weeks on the road at a stretch. Payrolls climbed 4.1 percent in the last 12 months ending June for construction and 2.3 percent for manufacturing while truck transportation lagged with a 1.7 percent gain. On top of that, a newly enforced federal requirement that truckers use electronic logging devices has stopped drivers from fudging their hours. That’s reduced capacity between 5 percent and 10 percent, according to various industry estimates.

4. Can anything be done?

The industry has been lobbying to allow people under 21 to drive interstate routes; a bill on this was introduced in Congress in March. And as of October, the Transportation Department no longer assumes that a commercial vehicle driver is human — an initial step toward allowing autonomous trucks to travel across state lines. The government also signaled a willingness to overrule states that stand in the way of self-driving trucks and is studying how to change existing rules to accommodate self-driving systems.

5. Who’s feeling the pain?

Anyone who needs to move goods. Long-distance trucking costs advanced 9.4 percent in June from a year earlier, according to the Labor Department, the largest increase in nearly a decade. So trucking’s been a gloomy part of many second-quarter earnings reports.

Why the Trucking Shortage Is Costing You

And driver scarcity can get so bad that it hurts business. Revenue at a unit of Knight-Swift Transportation Holdings Inc. plunged 17 percent in the second quarter because it lacked drivers.

6. Who’s benefiting?

Trucking companies, freight brokers and railroads have all been able to raise prices. Earnings more than doubled at Werner Enterprises Inc. in the second quarter and jumped 55 percent at J.B. Hunt Transport Services Inc., the largest trucking company by market value. Norfolk Southern Corp., a railroad in the eastern U.S., posted a 46 percent increase. And drivers are enjoying the perks of being wanted.

7. How are drivers benefiting?

The median salary for truckers increased 15 percent from 2013 to 2017, according to the ATA, and some companies are offering sign-on bonuses as high as $10,000 to attract drivers. Larger companies have set up driver schools to recruit candidates. Carriers also are trying to get drivers home more often to reduce the 90 percent annual turnover rate that is typical for long-haul truckers. And customers are reducing waiting times and making rest areas more accommodating since drivers, particularly those who own their own trucks, can be picky about which shippers they service.

8. What does this do to the economy?

A lack of trucks means companies haven’t been able to ship their products when they wanted, which can slow the economy. The Federal Reserve mentioned trucking 25 times in its Beige Book of regional economic conditions in July, up from 10 times a year earlier; six districts “specifically mentioned trucking capacity as an issue.’’

9. Are driverless trucks the answer?

Autonomous vehicles would certainly avoid the driver-shortage problem. But while Daimler AG and other major vehicle makers are working on the technology, most analysts and freight companies don’t expect driverless trucks will be turned loose on the roads for decades.

The Reference Shelf

  • The Labor Department’s producer-price report for June says that trucking costs threaten to stoke inflation.
  • Shippers clean up their act to keep drivers happy.
  • The Washington Post interviewed drivers and found few would recommend the job.
  • In Bloomberg Opinion, Virginia Postrel says easier parking and better rest stops could attract drivers.

To contact the reporters on this story: Thomas Black in Dallas at tblack@bloomberg.net;Eliza Haverstock in New York at ehaverstock@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Case at bcase4@bloomberg.net, Tony Robinson, Anne Cronin

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.