This AI-proof career faces a 250,000-worker shortage—now the Trump administration is trying to revive the job millennials abandoned
Global tensions, like Iran's threats to disrupt the Strait of Hormuz, remind us how much the world relies on maritime trade. Even the specter of instability sends oil prices soaring and rattles markets—including the tech sector—underscoring a simple truth: modern economies still run on ships.
But while headlines focus on geopolitical flashpoints, a different maritime challenge is unfolding at home. The U.S. shipbuilding industry faces a projected shortfall of 200,000 to 250,000 workers over the next decade, according to a McKinsey analysis of Department of Labor data. Critical roles—from welders and solderers to frontline supervisors—are going unfilled. Compounding the issue: 27% of today's shipbuilders are 55 or older, meaning a wave of retirements is imminent.
This isn't a sudden collapse. It's the result of a decades-long cultural shift. As baby boomers staffed shipyards through the late 20th century, younger generations—especially millennials—were steered toward four-year degrees and white-collar careers. Skilled trades were often perceived as physically taxing, unstable, or outdated. Now, as that experienced cohort exits the workforce, the pipeline behind them has narrowed.
Yet this vulnerability may be Gen Z's advantage. With entry-level corporate jobs increasingly competitive—amid hiring pullbacks, economic uncertainty, and AI-driven automation—skilled trades offer a compelling alternative.
"This is absolutely a rare window for young workers because the demand is real, funded, and seemingly long-term," says Fraser Patterson, CEO of Skillit, an AI-powered hiring platform for construction trades. "These are not speculative jobs. They are tied to multi-decade investment cycles, and they offer a path to strong earnings, skill development, and stability without requiring a traditional four-year degree. You're seeing a reset where skilled trades are becoming one of the most reliable ways to build a career."
Why Shipbuilding Jobs Are Surging
U.S. commercial shipbuilding has declined sharply: from producing roughly 5% of the world's ocean-going vessels in the 1970s to just 0.2% today. For years, remaining roles were viewed as demanding without commensurate pay. But that calculus is changing.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, ship and boat building workers earn an average of about $67,000 annually; ship engineers can make six figures. And as policymakers prioritize reshoring manufacturing and reducing dependence on foreign yards, wages are rising to attract talent.
U.S. Navy Secretary John Phelan emphasized this focus during his confirmation hearing, stating the Navy Department's priority was "shipbuilding, shipbuilding, shipbuilding"—with worker compensation at the forefront. Last April, an executive order aimed at "Restoring America's Maritime Dominance" signaled federal commitment.
"I think this is really an issue of wages, to be honest," Phelan noted, pointing out that workers can earn comparable pay at Amazon or major retail chains. "When folks are aware of what else is out there to make the same income, it's hard to get that person to want to do that job."
The industry is responding. Unionized workers at Huntington Ingalls Industries' Pascagoula, Mississippi, shipyard recently secured a landmark contract: an immediate 18% base wage increase, with total compensation projected to rise 35% to 47% over five years—the largest raise in Ingalls Shipbuilding history. HII remains the nation's largest military shipbuilder and Mississippi's top manufacturing employer.
Earn While You Learn: A Debt-Free Path Forward
Shipbuilding encompasses far more than hull assembly. Shipyards need welders, electricians, pipefitters, machinists, and more—roles requiring precision, offering growing pay, and remaining largely resistant to automation compared to many office-based jobs.
Geography does matter: unlike plumbers or electricians who can work nearly anywhere, shipyard jobs cluster in hubs like Philadelphia, San Diego, Mobile, Alabama, and Newport News, Virginia. But for those willing to relocate or live near these centers, opportunities abound.
To fill the gap, companies are expanding apprenticeships and training pipelines that lower entry barriers. Many roles now offer paid, on-the-job learning—without student debt.
Early results are promising. Apprentices interviewed by *60 Minutes* at a Philadelphia shipyard described the work as outperforming prior jobs—from Amazon warehouse roles to cake decorating—not just in pay, but in long-term trajectory.
"I would tell my friend that instead of paying out of pocket to go to a trade school, you're getting paid while you learn here the entire time," one apprentice shared.
The U.S. shipbuilding workforce crisis is real—but so is the opportunity it presents. For workers seeking stability, skill development, and a career less vulnerable to automation or outsourcing, the shipyard may be the next frontier. With federal backing, rising wages, and innovative training models, the industry is rebuilding not just ships, but a new generation of American tradespeople.
