Analysis-How the post-pandemic labor crunch is curbing U.S.
manufacturing
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[May 21, 2021] By
Timothy Aeppel
(Reuters) - A foundry in Indiana couldn’t
ship $1.6 million worth of metal parts to customers last month because
it didn’t have enough workers to make them, while a Massachusetts
plastics factory has outsourced nearly a quarter of its business to
subcontractors to keep up with orders it otherwise couldn’t fill.
Welcome to the great post-pandemic labor crunch.
As economic growth revved up in recent months, employers rushed to pull
back workers shed during the COVID-19 crisis. But it hasn’t been easy.
The Labor Department’s latest jobs report showed decreases in
manufacturing, retail, and courier services employment in April,
sparking a heated and increasingly politicized debate over whether
generous unemployment benefits were keeping workers on the sidelines.
The enhanced benefits, which include a $300 weekly supplement, pay more
than most minimum wage jobs. They were extended to early September as
part of the Biden administration's $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package
approved in March. So far, more than 20 Republican-led states have moved
to end the extra payments ahead of schedule citing local labor
bottlenecks.
Other issues suspected of holding back workers include a childcare
crunch and general anxiety about health risks, but no one - from Federal
Reserve officials to corporate executives - can point to a definitive
reason for the squeeze.
As Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida remarked this week: "It may take more
time to reopen a $20 trillion economy than it did to shut it down."
(Graphic: U.S. factories struggle to keep up with demand,
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/LABOR-SHORTAGE/yzdpxzwexpx/
chart_eikon.jpg)
NOTHING LIKE IT
For many manufacturers, the labor problem is compounded by a surge in
demand that began during the lockdowns as homebound Americans shifted
consumption to goods from services. Factory backlogs hit record highs in
each of the last two months, according to the Institute for Supply
Management.
“I’ve never seen anything like this - ever - and I’ve been in
manufacturing for 30 years,” said Dave Reilly, chief executive of United
Solutions Inc, a plastics producer in Leominster, Massachusetts, that
churns out Rubbermaid storage totes among other things.
Reilly has shifted work to two subcontractors, because he couldn’t meet
orders with a staff that is short about 100 workers. United has two
factories, one outside Boston and the other in Mississippi, which
together normally employ almost 700 people. Both have lost people in
recent months.
He estimates he’s about 25% short of the production he needs, although
the company has been able to cover some of that by pulling from
inventories as well as using the subcontractors. All his office staff
and managers now spend time on the factory floor running molding
machines.
Staff shortages are driving up operating costs. The company runs 24/7
and always struggles to find people to work the third, overnight shift.
Staffing has grown so thin they are spending heavily on overtime to pull
people onto that shift. Reilly said staffing problems, together with
surging plastic resin costs, could soon make it unprofitable to run a
third shift and force him to suspend it - even though that will magnify
his problem meeting production goals.
[to top of second column] |
A worker disinfects a
work bench with a bleach mixture at the end of a shift at Green
Circuits during the COVID-19 outbreak in San Jose, California, U.S.,
April 2, 2020. REUTERS/Stephen Lam/File Photo
'BIG FOR US'
Labor shortages are not yet causing shutdowns like those seen in auto plants
running short of computer chips. Instead, they are forcing companies to delay
shipments and miss opportunities for growth.
BCI Solutions Inc, a foundry in Bremen, Indiana, missed $1.6 million in
shipments last month due to a lack of workers. “That may not sound like much,
but it’s big for us,” said J.B. Brown, the family-owned company’s president. The
missed shipments are equal to about 4% of annual sales of around $40 million.
BCI needs about 250 people to run production at the pace to fill all its orders
- but Brown said he’s been steadily losing workers since the start of the year.
He is now down to about 121.
Brown blames a variety of factors, and the $300 extra unemployment benefit is
one, he said. Many of his workers have left for jobs in the recreational vehicle
factories that are concentrated in his corner of Indiana. Those offer large
production-based bonuses when business is strong, driving up wages during a
boom. He raised starting wages by $2 an hour in February, to $15 an hour, and
will boost them again to $20 an hour on Monday, which means pushing up his whole
wage scale to avoid upsetting established workers.
“We talk to the companies around us - the ones just in a (half-mile) radius are
now collectively short over 1,000 people,” said Brown. The town’s Dairy Queen
has started closing one day a week, he said, due to lack of workers - to give
its remaining staff time off.
Workers' migration to higher-paid jobs fits in with what the White House and
some congressional Democrats have been saying: Pay people more, and they will
come.
Jason Lippert, chief executive of LCI Industries, the largest parts supplier to
the RV industry, also is losing workers to more lucrative jobs. “The RV makers
have the highest wages in our region,” he said, as high as $50 an hour. “So
generally, workers will look to jump from $20-an-hour jobs if they are not happy
where they are at."
With margins at risk, employers are trying new strategies to lure people to
their assembly lines, in addition to raising pay.
In Mississippi, where United Solutions has its second factory, the company is
preparing to participate next month in a “drive-thru job fair.”
"They don't even have to get out of their car," said John Bergeron, United's
human resources director. They just drive up to people waiting at tables
representing different employers.
(Reporting by Timothy Aeppel; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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