Baristas, pharmacists, and drivers: what professions are most in demand on the labor market
Kyiv • UNN
There are 249 thousand job offers on the Unified Job Portal. The greatest demand is for service workers, skilled workers, professionals and specialists.
The structure of job offers available on the Unified Vacancies Portal shows that the structure of vacancies has not changed significantly recently. The State Employment Center told UNN about the most popular jobs.
"The Unified Job Portal contains information about vacancies from the State Employment Service and leading job search portals.
As of the end of July, there were 249,000 vacancies on the marketplace. "The structure of vacancies in terms of occupation has not changed significantly recently. Professions that were in demand before the war are still relevant today,
The portal has the most job offers:
- for service sector workers: salesperson (20 thousand vacancies), cook (6 thousand), barista (2 thousand), waiter (2 thousand), security guard (2 thousand), hairdresser (1 thousand);
- for skilled workers: driver (12 thousand), mechanic (6 thousand), seamstress (2 thousand), electrician (2 thousand), mechanic (2 thousand), car mechanic (1 thousand), turner (1 thousand);
- For professionals and specialists: accountant (7 thousand), engineer (6 thousand), doctor (4 thousand), nurse (3 thousand); pharmacist (3 thousand), technologist (1 thousand), educator (1 thousand), psychologist (1 thousand), teacher (2 thousand), lawyer (1 thousand), economist (1 thousand);
- for unskilled workers: loader (4 thousand), laborer (2 thousand), cleaner (2 thousand), janitor (1 thousand), and stacker (1 thousand).
"It should be noted that a significant demand for certain professions is due to a significant turnover of personnel in such professions as salesperson, waiter, barista, laborer, and loader.
In addition, the largest number of vacancies are always submitted for professions that are found in almost all types of economic activity, such as driver, accountant, lawyer, economist," the response reads.