Reports indicate that one in seven (70%) U.S. employees are making preparations over concerns of losing their jobs, and 40% admit they would run out of money after a month of unemployment. JobLeads sought to discover the industries most at risk of suffering following a recession. The company analyzed the job growth rate across various industries following key financial events to identify high-risk job loss careers in which you are most vulnerable to lose your job.
Employees in the construction industry are most at highest risk of losing their job, followed by the real estate sector. And the manufacturing industry comes in third.
JobLeads used data from U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics to find the industries and states that would fare best in a recession based on past data on job growth. The values for each year from 2005-2023 were averaged and then grouped by industry and state.
Data on how well each industry/state recovered from the Covid 19 pandemic and the 2008 Financial Crisis was found by averaging job growth in the years immediately prior, during and after the event. This was combined with a linear regression on the job growth values from 2005-2023 to find a gradient of the line of best fit (the overall trend. An average percent rank was calculated to find a score representing how vulnerable each industry/state is likely to be in another recession.
According to the analysis, the construction industry is the most likely to be affected by a financial event, with a vulnerability score of 7.99 out of 10. This sector experienced a near 14% decrease in job growth between the pre-financial crash period (2005-2006) and the crash (2007-2009), the largest decline across all industries. Although the construction industry has seen a 9.18% increase in job growth after the crash, it remains below pre-financial crash levels.
The data show that the real estate sector employees are the second most vulnerable to losing their jobs with a score of 7.81 out of 10. This sector saw a 4.51% decline in job growth from pre-Covid levels to during the Covid-19 pandemic (2020-2021), as well as a 5.02% drop during the 2008 financial crash (2007-2009).
Ranking third is the manufacturing industry, with a vulnerability score of 7.68 out of 10. Suffering from a 3.39% decrease in job growth during Covid-19 and a 6.27% decline from the pre-financial crash to the post-crash period, indicating employees in manufacturing risk of job loss.
Utility sector employees are safest in their jobs, according to the JobLeads analysis, with the lowest vulnerability score of 6.09 out of 10. It saw a 1.04% decrease in job growth during Covid compared to pre-Covid levels, and a 2.89% decrease following the financial crash compared to during the crash. This makes employees in the utilities industry likely to be the least affected by job loss.
A study published in the Journal of Employment Counseling examines the importance of self-regulation for enabling people to effectively search for a new job and to maintain their psychological well-being. Self-regulation allows unemployed workers to manage their emotions and behaviors in a way that produces positive results and to consider adversity as a positive challenge rather than a hindrance.
Jan Hendrik von Ahlen, co-founder and managing director at JobLeads, underscores how losing your job can be a traumatic experience, and applying for new positions—especially explaining a period of unemployment—can be daunting. With this in mind, von Ahlen offers career tips on how to self-regulate in a way that produces positive results in your next interview:
Self-regulation and a positive perspective reduce stress and cultivate peace of mind. That allows job seekers to manage what they can, let the rest go, and eliminate stressors that interfere with re-employment.
If you lose your job after working in a high-risk job loss career, research shows that your next best course of action is to maintain high levels of self-regulation. This attitude predicts better well-being, job search clarity and job search self-efficacy—the belief that you can successfully perform specific job search behaviors and obtain employment.
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