There are many short- and long-term lessons and trends to be taken from the current global pandemic, and the elite equipment manufacturers would be wise to pay attention to them in 2022, according to the Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM).
The AEM said that it is important for equipment manufacturers to not only understand these trends, but to understand how each could evolve through the year and beyond.
For the equipment manufacturer, however, it is important to not only understand these trends, but to realize how each could impact its client base.
These trends aren’t necessarily new to those paying attention—but they remain vital to the way a company can and should go about their daily business. AEM members provided their take on the trends.
4 Trends To Watch:
- Workforce Challenges and Solutions;
- Bipartisanship;
- Supply Chain Management;
- COVID-19 (and variants) and Employee Safety.
Workforce Challenges and Solutions
Julie Davis, AEM Senior Director of Workforce and Industry Initiatives
“When it comes to workforce, 2021 has proven that doing what we’ve always done will no longer get us what we used to get. Demographic research shows that employment challenges are not going to return to what they have been pre-pandemic. If anything, the pandemic acted as an accelerator that took labor force trends already sneaking up on the industry and exploded them into a new reality.
The most significant trends include the shift from a baby boomer pre-pandemic drift towards retirement to a pandemic mass exodus of retirements. Second, a labor force participation rate that was declining since 1980 dropped to record lows with 2.4 million women leaving the workforce, fewer millennials seeking careers of their own, working age males increasing preferring part-time over full-time work, and an opioid epidemic siphoning off prime-age men by the hundreds of thousands per year. Finally, we have to recognize that the U.S. birthrate has been steadily declining, hitting a 35-year low in 2019, according to census data. With fewer and fewer people available, the labor market will continue to tighten. If you are looking to immigration as a solution, be cautious, as the same decline in birth rate is happening in countries we typically look to for sources of immigrant labor.
So, what can companies that have been willing to be curious teach us?
First, if your HR department says they are “doing everything they can,” consider it a red flag. The war for talent is being won by HR departments whose mantra has become, “What else can we do?” Being curious includes evaluating and offering competitive compensation, meaningful benefits, potential career development opportunities and, most of all, flexible work. The employee experience needs to be reconsidered, much like we’ve analyzed the customer experience in the past. Important considerations include:
- Streamlining the application process;
- Meaningful onboarding;
- Mental health supports;
- Opportunities for upskilling;
- Internal career path or debt-free education
In addition, hourly workers want flexibility, even if they have to show up in person. Creative companies are finding ways to provide flexibility and predictability in scheduling to support health and wellness, childcare and caregiving responsibilities.”
Bipartisanship
Kip Eideberg, AEM Senior Vice President of Government and Industry Relations
“At the close of 2021, federal lawmakers delivered a long-awaited holiday gift to the American people – passage of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (commonly known as the “bipartisan infrastructure bill”). While many were elated at the congressional approval and enactment of the bill (AEM included), we were—and still are—frustrated and disillusioned with the time it took to get the job done. In a recent op-ed in Real Clear Politics, I shared how the unnecessarily drawn-out and overly political infrastructure debate spells trouble for our country. So, what can be done (to) end the petty partisan squabbling during a critically important election year? One word: bipartisanship.
While the infrastructure bill has been signed into law, much work remains to be done. Now it is up to U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg and President Biden’s recently appointed infrastructure czar, the former mayor of New Orleans Mitch Landrieu, to work with state and local governments to smooth the rollout and ensure the successful implementation of the $1.2 trillion bill. And the work doesn’t stop at infrastructure. We need our elected officials at the state and federal level to put policy ahead of politics and advance pro-growth economic policies that will ensure the long-term growth and prosperity of the equipment manufacturing industry. Lawmakers must also make investments to help attract, train and retain the next generation of skilled workers to address our industry’s growing workforce needs. Finally, we need common-sense policies that will help revitalize American manufacturing, bolster rural communities across our country and reenergize the U.S. economy.”
Supply Chain Management
Jason Malcore, AEM Director of Global Standards and Compliance
“In 2021, off-road, heavy-duty equipment industry stakeholders found themselves dealing with a relatively new concept for U.S. manufacturers; chemical management issues. On Jan. 6 of last year, the EPA announced its Final Rule regarding the prohibition on introducing Phenol, Isopropylated, phosphate (3:1) into commerce. This ban on a commonly used flame retardant struck the equipment manufacturing industry especially hard. Overnight, a wide swath of economic actors needed to rewire their manufacturing and design processes, and perhaps most importantly, learn how to manage a wide ranging, deep, and complex global supply chain, not familiar with the needs of tracking chemical components.
Managing supply chains, communicating chemical requirements, educating suppliers and managing data will be the only way to meet the coming challenges. With the size and complexity of the global off-road, heavy-duty equipment manufacturing industry, meeting this challenge will be an enormous task. To achieve this goal, industry stakeholders will need to work together to establish new industry best practices and efficient lines of communication to ensure information can effectively travel from one end of the supply chain to the OEMs. The industry has not yet found all the answers, but this will be a very important issue for 2022 and beyond.”
Covid-19 and Employee Safety
Sara Feuling, AEM Senior Director of Construction
“As we enter 2022, COVID-19 continues to have a significant impact on the manufacturing industry. While we have developed health and safety protocols and best practices to combat the virus, COVID-19 has done what viruses do best – change and evolve.
Thankfully, the manufacturing industry continues to change and evolve right along with it, adapting to new CDC guidelines, OSHA regulations, and local mask and vaccine mandates to keep business owners and their employees safe.
If the last two years have taught us anything, it’s that our industry remains strong and resilient, even in times of tremendous uncertainty. The pandemic has affected the way we do business, our economic outlook, our supply chain and, maybe most importantly, our workforce.
All this change will come to an end eventually. Until that happens, we will need to keep adapting to keep our industry safe.”
About the AEM
AEM is the North America-based international trade group representing off-road equipment manufacturers and suppliers with more than 1,000 companies and more than 200 product lines in the agriculture and construction-related industry sectors worldwide. The equipment manufacturing industry in the US supports 2.8 million jobs and contributes roughly $288-billion to the economy every year. For more information, visit https://www.aem.org/.