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Table 4-3. Employment in For-Hire Transportation Primarily Serving Freight1 (Thousands)

Employment in many transportation industries has remained steady or has grown over the past two decades, but it has plummeted in rail transportation as productivity has soared. Between 1980 and 2005, rail employment declined nearly 60 percent. Consequently, in 2005 rail transportation employed only 5 percent of those working in the transportation and warehousing industry compared with 18 percent in 1980. By comparison, employment in trucking in 2005 accounted for about one-third of employment in transportation and warehousing.

Table in Excel format | Historical data

empty Cell 1980 1990 2000 2004 2005
Total U.S. labor force2 90,528 109,487 131,785 (R) 131,435 133,463
Transportation and warehousing 2,961 3,476 4,410 (R) 4,249 4,347
Rail transportation 518 272 232 (R) 226 228
Water transportation NA 57 56 (R) 56 61
Truck transportation NA 1,122 1,406 (R) 1,352 1,393
Pipeline transportation NA 60 46 (R) 38 38
Support activities for transportation NA 364 537 (R) 535 551
Couriers and messengers NA 375 605 (R) 557 572
Warehousing and storage NA 407 514 (R) 558 585

Key: NA = not available; R = revised.

1Annual averages.
2Excludes farm employment.

Note: These data include workers employed in transportation industries but not necessarily in a transportation occupation, such as a lawyer working for a trucking company. Moreover, these data exclude workers in transportation occupations employed by non-transportation industries, such as a truck driver employed by a retail company.

Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Current Employment Statistics survey, available at www.bls.gov as of May 3, 2006.

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