- about the freight.
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About this listen
The Core Illusion The "driver shortage" is not a lack of available workers, but a high-turnover crisis. While employment numbers have grown steadily since the 1980s, large carriers face turnover rates often exceeding 90% as drivers switch companies in search of better conditions.
Who Benefits from the Narrative? Large trucking companies and lobbying groups use the shortage myth as a tool to serve their bottom line:
- Wage Suppression: Claiming a shortage allows companies to justify stagnant pay while maintaining higher profits.
- Lobbying Power: The narrative is used to push for relaxed safety regulations, such as longer working hours and lowering the driving age to 18.
- Automation: Companies frame self-driving trucks as a "necessary solution" to a missing workforce, helping them secure investment and reduce public resistance to autonomous vehicles.
Why Drivers Leave Drivers aren't "missing"; they are being pushed out by poor working conditions:
- Inadequate Pay: Many are paid by the mile, meaning they aren't compensated for time spent waiting, loading, or stuck in traffic.
- Health and Safety: Drivers face 70-hour work weeks, chronic fatigue, and a lack of safe parking and rest facilities.
- Exploitative Schemes: Some are trapped in "lease-to-own" contracts that shift all financial risks to the driver, often resulting in take-home pay lower than the minimum wage.
The Path Forward To fix the industry, the sources suggest moving away from the "shortage" narrative and focusing on retention. This includes:
- Implementing fair, hourly compensation and comprehensive benefits.
- Investing in high-quality training rather than just "filling seats".
- Supporting unionization and collective bargaining to give drivers a voice in their working conditions.
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