The second job that will generate more gains is related to heavy truck and bus drivers, according to Statista and based on data that showed an absolute increase in jobs between 2023 and 2027. Teachers of vocational education will be the third profession with the most gains during this four-year period, according to EU Helpers.
It is evident that between 2023 and 2027, there will be a movement in the kinds of positions that are hired, with a greater emphasis on artificial intelligence, engineering, and data science. This shift in hiring patterns is indicative of a change in what is sometimes referred to as the "jobs of the future."
Conversely, jobs in the mechanical sector are predicted to grow higher during the next four years, but they will probably fall behind in the years to come.
On the list of occupations with the greatest employment growth, mechanics and machinery repairers are in fourth place, business development specialists are in fifth, and building frame and related trades workers are in sixth. This list is cumulative for the next four years.
Teachers in universities and other higher education institutions are also anticipated to make more money—even more than engineers in electrotechnology, which are ranked seventh and eighth in terms of employment growth.
But as was already said, the fastest-growing jobs are not at all like the ones with the biggest employment growth.
AI and machine learning professionals are the fastest-growing occupations for this period, indicating that such professions are increasingly on the rise throughout this period, whereas agricultural equipment operators are listed as the eighth-fastest-growing occupation.
Sustainability specialists will be in high demand as a result of this generation's increased worries about climate change, environmental challenges, and sustainability. They are the second fastest-growing vocation, after business intelligence analysts and information security analysts.
Furthermore, demand is predicted to rise for scientists, data analysts, and FinTech engineers, who now rank fifth and sixth among the fastest-growing professions, respectively, robotics engineers coming in seventh.