[HN Gopher] Oil companies scramble to find workers despite boom
___________________________________________________________________
Oil companies scramble to find workers despite boom
Author : prostoalex
Score : 9 points
Date : 2022-04-29 17:13 UTC (1 days ago)
(HTM) web link (www.reuters.com)
(TXT) w3m dump (www.reuters.com)
| j7ake wrote:
| I recall back in the previous boom of 2006-2007 they were paying
| high school graduates $200k to work in the fields. They would
| even fly you in and you work a few days then fly you out.
|
| I wonder if salaries have changed since then.
| WhatsName wrote:
| That's a wild guess and I have no insight into the industry,
| but I wouldn't be suprised if it's yet another race to the
| bottom?
|
| Labor seems to be one of the few things where supply and demand
| dont apply.
|
| Happy to be wrong.
| jason-phillips wrote:
| > Labor seems to be one of the few things where supply and
| demand dont apply.
|
| I don't understand this. From my perspective, the labor
| market in the United States today is possibly the best
| example of supply and demand mechanics.
| fnordpiglet wrote:
| They discuss wages. $45 / hour was average in the US. They're
| losing people to Amazon driver jobs etc. It's hard to empathize
| when clearly they could simply pay more.
| jeffbee wrote:
| A climate change fighting strategy I've casually advocated for
| the last few years is every American with a documented history of
| wages from fossil fuel production gets $100k spot bonus for
| signing a contract that forbids them from working in that field
| again. It should be government policy that the oil, gas, and coal
| industry cannot find labor.
| mistrial9 wrote:
| every employment sector in the USA seems to attract
| intermediaries as fast or faster than the new workers.. the more
| imbalance or imperfect information, the more aggressive the
| intermediaries get in requirements, fees, conditions, oversight,
| control of recourse, control of information, access to new
| details, and more
___________________________________________________________________
(page generated 2022-04-30 23:00 UTC)