DATA REVEALS U.S. MANUFACTURING FACES A 2 MILLION WORKER SHORTAGE
• 26% of the existing manufacturing workforce is expected to retire by 2030, leaving more than 1.5 million roles vacant. • National “Job Posting Intensity” benchmark set at 0.50, with 24 states exceeding the stress line. • Virginia manufacturers face 5x higher hiring pressure than the national average.
SANTA ANA, CA, March 10th, 2026 - As U.S. manufacturing enters 2026, a new data report warns of a widening "intensity gap" that threatens to derail American industrial growth.
Findings from ‘The Labor Shortages Report' by MIE Solutions reveal that nearly half of all U.S. states are facing labor shortage pressures significantly above the national benchmark.
The report introduces a ‘Job Posting Intensity' score, which benchmarks manufacturing-specific job postings on Indeed against official U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) employment data.
It revealed that while the national intensity score sits at 0.50, specialized and smaller industrial states are reaching a breaking point.
With 26% of the national industrial workforce now eligible for retirement, representing approximately 3.9 million workers, this exodus is expected to leave a vacuum of 1.5 to 2 million unfilled roles by the early 2030s.
The report revealed demand was increasingly concentrated in skills-intensive occupations, like CNC machining, maintenance technicians, and process engineering.
The state of Virginia emerged as the most pressured labor market in the country. With a job posting intensity score of 2.83 per 1,000 jobs, hiring pressure in Virginia is 5.6 times the national average.
This spike is attributed to rapid industrial expansion, including AstraZeneca's recent $4.5 billion facility investment, and massive federal defense contracts in the region, which could be outstripping the local supply of skilled tradespeople.
Montana (1.14), Vermont (0.97), New Hampshire (0.94) and New Mexico (0.72) round out the states facing the highest pressure.
Meanwhile, traditional industry powerhouse states like Texas (0.56) and Ohio (0.53) remain near the national average, benefiting from deeper, established labor ecosystems despite high total job counts.
This comes as the Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) for employment contracted for its tenth consecutive month, which also remained below the critical 50-point threshold for most of 2025.
According to BLS data, factory employment has dropped by more than 70,000 since April 2025, standing at 12.69 million in December - the lowest reading since March 2022. This suggests that while demand for domestic production is rising, the industry may struggle to backfill roles at the pace of retirements.
Dean Dunagan, VP of Sales at MIE Solutions, said:
"The findings from our ‘Labor Shortages Report' show that the fight for manufacturing talent is no longer confined to the traditional industrial hubs. In many states, employers are competing for a shrinking pool of skilled workers at the same time as production demands are increasing. That tension is only going to intensify as we move through 2026.
"For U.S. manufacturers, staying competitive now means thinking beyond headcount alone. Globally, they're up against countries investing heavily in automation and digital manufacturing, while domestically they're facing wage pressure, retirements, and skills gaps that can't be solved overnight.
"Technology is increasingly the great leveler. Manufacturers that use data, automation, and modern manufacturing management systems to maximize output from existing teams are far better positioned to absorb labour shortages and compete on a global stage. The winners will be those who focus on doing more with the resources they already have, while building resilient, future-ready operations."
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