Job openings tumble in some industries, easing worker shortages. Others still struggle.

Worker shortages are finally easing along with the pandemic.

That has slowed the sharp wage growth U.S. employees enjoyed the past couple of years but also allowed businesses to raise prices more moderately, reopen shuttered restaurants and fix product shortages.

But that doesn't mean labor shortages have improved in all industries, shifting bargaining power from workers to employers.

Some industries are still coping with labor shortages.
Some industries are still coping with labor shortages.

Some sectors are still scrambling to find employees. Others have their pick as millions of Americans have returned to the job market because of an easing health crisis, joining a wave of immigrants.

“Some labor shortages have been completely eliminated, like retail,” says Julia Pollak, chief economist of ZipRecruiter a leading job site. “Others, like health care, largely persist.”

One way to measure the tightness of a labor market is by looking at the share of job openings that go unfilled each month. It isn’t precise because vacancies are counted at the end of the month while the number of people hired – which is the basis for determining unfilled openings – is tallied throughout the month.

Still, a high share of unfilled vacancies is a good proxy for a tight job market in which available workers are scarce. A low share typically signals a loose market teeming with job candidates.

Another gauge is the number of unemployed workers per job opening. The lower the number, the tighter the market.

Tighter job markets generally lead to stronger wage gains as employers bid up to attract workers.

Here’s a look at industries that have the most and least severe labor shortages, from tightest to loosest, according to a ZipRecruiter analysis of Labor Department data:

Financial activities

Share of unfilled job openings (July-September): 63.5%

Number of unemployed workers per opening (September): 0.2

Average wage yearly wage growth (August-September): 4.9%

Although the Federal Reserve’s sharp interest rate hikes and high mortgage rates have hurt parts of the financial industry, banking, investment and mortgage lending firms have continued to hire and struggled to find skilled workers, Pollak says. The market’s tightness has intensified since early last year.

Government

Share of unfilled openings: 63.4%

Number of unemployed workers per opening: 0.39

Average yearly wage growth: 4.7%

State and local governments need workers but haven’t been able to compete with the pay raises and flexible work set-ups offered by private-sector companies, Pollak says. The shortages have worsened slightly since early last year but are expected to ease as governments start offering better pay.