The occupations with the most projected new jobs in the US by 2033 [OC]

Posted by USAFacts

27 comments
  1. But wait, reddit told me that software development for new developers is dead. AI is going to replace them.

  2. 820k new jobs needed at a median pay of 33k. Yeah that aint happening.

  3. Home health aid is probably in the bottom 10th percentile of jobs I would want, that’s without even considering the low pay.

  4. With the most “demand” for labor, not the most filled positions. See all that demand for jobs at those super low wages? Nobody’s racing to the bottom for those jobs.

  5. Love how many of these don’t pay a living wage. $30k was fine in 1995, that shit can’t even afford a studio for one person in 2024 onward.

  6. Home health aide only makes 33k?! No wonder they are impossible to find!

  7. Nurse practitioner with a median of 126k?
    What am i missing here?

  8. I do IT support for HHAs and Palliative care aides. The turnover is weekly. There are new aides every single week, that has to be skewing this chart.

  9. Man where are all these software dev jobs I keep hearing about

  10. Geez…that pay differential of the top two….my takeaway from this: Learn to code, or get ready to be an indentured servant.

  11. Capitalism works! Supply and demand! We need more home health and personal care aides! The market demands more than we have! This means the salaries for such a job would naturally… uh… ummm… be less than minimum wage? The market has spoken!

  12. Where is engineering or stem generally speaking? All fields in stem will be going up, especially engineering. The omission makes the rest of the data seem unreliable, but that’s just a gut-take. I don’t know, maybe engineers will stay at the same number more or less, even though it’s pushed heavily and more people are becoming engineers as a result.

  13. Anyone else find this very concerning that the lowest paying jobs will be the only ones in demand? We’re fucked.

  14. It bugs me that behavioral health and mental health are grouped together. That’s like combining dentistry and surgery.

  15. The “silver tsunami” is a huge market that every company is trying to figure out a strategy to participate in. “Age in place” is a term being used constantly within tech companies. 

  16. not only is home health aide an extremely difficult job, while being very low income, it’s also one of the highest turnover jobs in the country. as someone who worked as one, it was new coworkers every couple weeks.

  17. And this is why people are pissed about the economy. Since 2008, so many good paying jobs disappeared and in its place, low paid, physically demanding jobs.

    Good luck with that!

  18. What happens to these numbers once millions are deported?

  19. Yup so with Boomers retiring en masse (and soon needing those health aides); with Millennials and younger having lower birth rates than ever… and with someone loudly threatening legal and illegal immigrants simultaneously… how does our nation do anything but stagnate the next decade or two?

  20. Need to have skilled trades jobs on there. Once all these baby boomers retire there is a very small group of people left in the trades

  21. Lets go accountant/auditor is on there, hopefully this makes my accounting degree useful when i graduate 

  22. As a former “personal care aide” while in nursing school… that shit was absolutely brutal. I was happy to gain valuable hospital work experience for my career but damn, tough work for meager pay. I always respect my PCAs out there because I know how it is. It is the most under-appreciated job in the healthcare field, for sure.

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