The diagram provides information about the proportion of supervisors struggling to hire workers in different domains – manufacturing, building, commerce, and services – within two years from 2003 to 2004. Units are given in percentages.
Overall, it is clear that while the percentages of recruiting professional employees demonstrated the highest figures, the reverse is true for technical and managerial workers. In the meantime, finding inexperienced workers accounted for the moderate percentages.
To start, the percentages of challenges in finding skilled workers followed an almost upward trend. In the fields of manufacturing, building, and services, the difficulty ratios of hiring employees were 45, 42, and 41 respectively in the initial year. A year later, the percentages of difficulty in employing staff in those fields showed remarkable increases, with manufacturing, building, and services consisting of 6%, 3%, and 4%. In contrast, the proportion of effort in hiring skilled workers for the commerce sector was 47% in 2003, and the following year, it went down significantly to 41%.
In detail, the percentages of difficulty in employing unqualified workers showed moderate growth. In 2003, the proportion of effort in recruiting staff for manufacturing and building fields constituted 26 and 21, which is followed by an increase of 2% in both figures in the subsequent year. In contrast, the extent of challenge in the recruitment in the commerce sector witnessed a decrease of 3%, from 22% in 2003. Regardless of all the figures, the percentage of difficulty in employment for services had shot up to a percentage of 29% by 2004, with the most dramatic rise of 9%.
The percentages of obstacles in finding technical and managerial staff showed a downward trend. In all domains, the intricacy ratios of hiring technical and managerial employees were 8, 14, 2, and 5 in 2003. In 2004, the proportions of difficulty in employing staff in those fields showed negligible decreases, with manufacturing, building, commerce, and services accounting for 6%, 10%, 0, and 2.
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