Title: Packaging and Understanding Labor Data
1Packaging and Understanding Labor Data
- Prepared for
- Northwest Ontario Development Network
- September 2007
2Current Canadian Economy
- Residential investment decreases
- Loonie at par with greenback
- Business fixed investment climbs
- Business inventories build
- Exports dip again (maybe auto related)
- Imports increase
- Current account surplus shrinks
- Healthy corporate profits continue
- Consumer price inflation remains subdued
- Low unemployment rate edges higher
- Bank of Canada holds policy rate steady
3US Economy
- In 30 years, manufacturing has fell from 20 of
GDP to 10. - Manufacturing share of employment has fallen from
28 to near 10. - Output continues to grow as well as productivity,
but fewer jobs. - Culprit is technology management not off
shoring - Demise of manufacturing less trained workers
4Observations on Future of Canada
- Positive immigration policy, affordable higher
education system - Diversified economies (provinces)
- Lower crime rates, less natural disasters
- More accepted globally
- Emerging as new energy superpower
- No longer sleeping with an elephant
- US companies seeing value AMD, Phelps Dodge,
Open Text. - Unfortunately, strong loonie
5Canada Vital Growth
6Provincial Vital Growth
7Thunder Bay Labor DataNumbers and Trends Look
Good At First
8Wages for CSRs in NE Region 1997
9CSR Wages In CD Dollars 2006
10CSR Salaries in US Dollars 2006
11Skilled wages were competitive with most Midwest
industrial centers.
Skilled Wages, 1996
15.20
Thunder Bay
18.22
Joliet, IL
Joliet, IL
15.26
Elgin, IL
Elgin, IL
16.04
Minneapolis/St.Paul
Minneapolis/St.Paul
15.78
Pontiac, MI
Pontiac, MI
15.70
Janesville, WI
Janesville, WI
13.67
Burlington, IA
Burlington, IA
16.52
Detroit, MI
Detroit, MI
18.23
Dallas, TX
Dallas, TX
14.61
St. Louis, MO
St. Louis, MO
0.00
2.00
4.00
6.00
8.00
10.00
12.00
14.00
16.00
18.00
20.00
Average U.S. /Hour
12Semi-skilled wages are less than most Midwest
industrial centers.
Semi-Skilled Wages, 1996
10.13
Thunder Bay, ON
12.72
Joliet, IL
Joliet, IL
13.34
Elgin, IL
Elgin, IL
12.01
Minneapolis/St.Paul
Minneapolis/St.Paul
11.95
Pontiac, MI
Pontiac, MI
11.25
Janesville, WI
Janesville, WI
11.14
Burlington, IA
Burlington, IA
13.78
Detroit, MI
Detroit, MI
16.31
Dallas, TX
Dallas, TX
12.67
St. Louis, MO
St. Louis, MO
0.00
2.00
4.00
6.00
8.00
10.00
12.00
14.00
16.00
18.00
U.S./Hour
13Industrial Machinery SalariesMay 2006
14CSR Salaries 1 Year MediansFinancial Services
15CSR Salaries 6 Year MediansFinancial Services
16Machine Operator Salaries 1 Year Medians
17Machine Operator Salaries6 Year Medians
182002 Labor Availability Analysis
192002 Labor Quality Analysis
202002 Labor Quality Analysis
21Kenora 2002 Education and Training Analysis
22Labor Packaging
- Wages easy to find
- Quality and availability (general) requires
fieldwork - Education and Training analysis ask employers,
track graduates. - Most critical (make the site selectors job
easier) resident survey, (workers study) use
statistically significant survey (mandated in
Iowa) recently completed in Albuquerque
23An Overview of the White Collar Labor Force in
the Albuquerque MSA
- Prepared by Wadley-Donovan Group
- August 2006
24Features of Labor Force
- Potential hidden labor supply of 136,000
residents (135,000 in hidden labor force) - Additionally, 2,000 spouses and 10,000 military
retirees may be available. - Another asset 230,000 may be interested in
additional training to complement their
education.
25Hidden Labor Force
26Key Labor Findings
- The region has a favorable ratio of residents in
the working group 20-34 years old. - Good to very good availability of call center and
technical support labor - Employers can generally recruit from outside
Albuquerque. - Home to 16 post secondary institutions,
approximately 58,000 students - Region graduates over 3400 students per year in
key technical disciplines.
27Key Labor Findings
- Employers rank the quality of the graduates of
the local universities highly. - Employers report satisfactory work ethic and
productivity and no substance abuse. - Median annual wages are lower than the national
average and other Western cities. - Operating environment is employer-friendly (lower
rate of unionization compared to national
average). - Incentives and customized training programs are
excellent, especially for targeted firms.
28Overview of Theoretical Labor Derivation For
White Collar Office
- Population 683,744 (est. 2005 800,000)
- Projected pop. change ages 20-54 by 2008 24,008
increase - Labor Force 334,505 resident skills
administrative support/clerical 45,912 - Service occupations 39,236
- Sales occupations 38,236
- Total 2005 24,729
29Supply Components
- Currently Employed ( back office related
skills) 15,393 - Underemployed (adjusted) 5,503
- Not Employed 1,265
- 2005 Supply Additions population growth 1,885
college graduate - Base expansion spouses hard to account for.
30Back Office Qualified Applicants
- Commute 30 minutes (propensity 80)
- Employer Intercept (site response) 70)
- Employer Acceptance 40
- Net Qualified for Customer Service/Technical
Support 5,539 - 1 in 3 selectivity 1,846
- 1 in 4 selectivity 1,385
31Summary
- Call centers and technical support for 1500
employees within parameters and will be able to
attract qualified personnel - Technical support aimed at university and spouses
of Air Force personnel difficult to ascertain - Call centers employees anxious to move into next
level. - Results ABQ has had a multitude of high end
contact/financial service center activity (could
be announcing 2,000 employee financial service
center soon)
32Preparing your community for a labor constrained
inflationary economy
- Educate local leaders about the dimensions of the
labor problem - Carefully redefine economic development in this
new paradigm - Move your program practice from tactical to
strategic - Choose economic base specializations (prepare to
hyper specialize) - Prepare new products, value positions and
marketing methodologies - Develop predictive local labor market gap data
- Figure out how to steer talent to your high value
e-base sectors - Develop a spec workforce program that integrates
economic development and workforce development - Rethink your organizational and funding structure
- Develop an inflation mitigation plan
33We are in a global talent search, so anything we
can do to get those top draft choices we should
do, because one of them is going to be Babe Ruth,
and why should we let him or her go elsewhere
- Bill Brody, President,
- Johns Hopkins University