Around the world, airlines, restaurants, hotels and so many others can’t fill open jobs, thwarting efforts to capitalize on resurgent consumer demand. Many workers that went home when the pandemic hit haven’t returned to work, and they aren’t trying to return yet either.
What’s increasingly clear is that after the coronavirus pandemic delivered an unprecedented shock to the global economy, putting tens of millions of people out of work and displacing many others, the job market will never be the same. Some workers retired early; many are skeptical about going back to work in the face of lingering health concerns any many others are having difficulty securing reliable childcare.
The economy emerging from the crisis looks different from the one that preceded it. Demand is higher in some sectors and lower in others. Workers have left front-line jobs in some industries for roles that are less exposed to the coronavirus, won’t be affected by fresh lockdowns, or offer better work-life balance.
Workers are out there, Applicants are not.
The number of job openings increased to a high of 10.1 million on the last business day of June 2021, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported. Hires rose to 6.7 million and total separations edged up to 5.6 million. The unemployment rate declined by 0.5 percentage point to 5.4 percent in July, and the number of unemployed persons fell to 8.7 million. The deficit is clear, 10+ million jobs and less than 9 million workers available, many of whom aren’t applying for jobs anyway.
Where are the workers?
Some of the reasons businesses can’t find applicants:
What can be done?
Get creative. Many companies have found new and creative ways to attract applicants. See our next article, Creative Ways to get Workers Back, to find out what popular actions companies are taking that are making headway.
*US Bureau of Labor Statistics