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Monday, October 7, 2024

Driver Turnover Rises, Signifying Driver Demand, Not Shortage

 

American Trucking Associations Chief Economist Bob Costello reports the driver turnover rate at large truckload carriers rose in the first quarter of 2018.

โ€œThe uptick in turnover is consistent with continued tightness in the market for drivers,โ€ Costello said. โ€œAnecdotally, carriers continue to struggle both recruiting and retaining quality drivers โ€“ leading to increasing wages. The tight driver market should continue and will be a source of concern for carriers in the months ahead.โ€

According to ATAโ€™s Trucking Activity Report, the annualized turnover rate at large truckload carriers โ€“ fleets with more than $30 million in annual revenue โ€“ jumped six points to 94%. The increase set turnover at these carriers 20 percentage points higher than in the first quarter of 2017.

The turnover rate at less-than-truckload carriers rose two points to 10%.

At smaller truckload carriers, the turnover rate sunk to 73%, but was still seven points higher than for the same period the previous year.

โ€œTurnover is not a measure of the driver shortage, but rather of demand for drivers,โ€ Costello said. โ€œWe know that as freight demand continues to rise, demand for drivers to move those goods will also rise, which often results in more driver churn or turnover. Finding enough qualified drivers remains a tremendous challenge for the trucking industry and one that if not solved will threaten the entire supply chain.โ€