Fishing and hunting workers

Detailed Occupation

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    N/A Workforce
    N/A
    Average Age
    N/A
    Average Salary
    N/A

    About

    Fishing and hunting workers are most often employed by the N/A industry. The average yearly wage for Fishing and hunting workers was N/A in N/A.

    The locations that employ the most Fishing and hunting workers are Coastal Maine Region--Hancock, Knox, Waldo & Lincoln Counties PUMA, ME, Bristol County (South)--New Bedford, Dartmouth & Westport PUMA, MA, and Matanuska-Susitna & Kenai Peninsula Boroughs PUMA, AK. The locations with a relatively high concentration of Fishing and hunting workers are N/A.

    Employment

    Employment and salary information for the Fishing and hunting workers workforce. Fishing and hunting workers workforce in N/A was N/A people, of which N/A% were women and N/A% were men.

    Employment Over Time

    Metric
    Grouping
    N/A
    Male Workforce
    ± N/A
    N/A
    Female Workforce
    ± N/A

    The Fishing and hunting workers workforce in N/A was N/A people (N/A% women and N/A% men). This implies an average annual growth of N/A% between N/A (N/A) and N/A (N/A).

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    Employment by Location

    Level
    Metric

    This map shows the states in the United States shaded by average wage for Fishing and hunting workers.

    During N/A, the states that concentrated the best average annual wage were N/A.

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    Yearly Wage Ranking

    N/A
    AVERAGE WAGE
    #N/A in the ranking (N/A)
    N/A
    NATIONAL AVERAGE WAGE
    For all occupations across the US

    In N/A, Fishing and hunting workers earned an average of N/A, $NaNk less than the average national salary of N/A

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    Wage Distribution

    Gender
    N/A
    WAGE GINI

    In N/A, Fishing and hunting workers had a wage GINI coefficient of N/A, which is lower than the national average of N/A. In other words, wages are distributed more evenly for Fishing and hunting workers (shown in red) than for the overall labor force (shown in gray).

    The graphic shows the distribution of average salaries by buckets for Fishing and hunting workers compared to the entire workforce in the country.

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    Industry

    Information on the industries that employ Fishing and hunting workers and on wages for those in the field. N/A is the industry that employs the most Fishing and hunting workers, both by share and by number, though the highest paid industry for Fishing and hunting workers, by average wage, is N/A (N/A).

    Occupations by Industries

    Metric
    Value
    N/A
    N/A Workforce
    ± N/A
    N/A%
    1 YEAR GROWTH
    ± N/A%

    This graphic shows the share of Fishing and hunting workers employed by various industries. N/A

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    Diversity

    Demographic information on Fishing and hunting workers in the US. The workforce of Fishing and hunting workers in N/A was N/A people, with N/A% woman, and N/A% men. The average age of male Fishing and hunting workers in the workforce is N/A and of female Fishing and hunting workers is N/A, and the most common race/ethnicity for Fishing and hunting workers is N/A.

    Gender and Age

    Metric

    The workforce of Fishing and hunting workers in N/A was N/A people, with N/A% woman, and N/A% men.

    The age ranges that concentrated the largest workforce were N/A years (N/A people), N/A years (N/A  people), and N/A years (N/A people). Among them they concentrated N/A% of the total workforce.

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    Ethnicity

    Gender

    In N/A, N/A% of Fishing and hunting workers workers were Hispanic and N/A% non-Hispanic.

    The treemap shows the distribution of Hispanic workers according to their origin, highlighting Mexican (39.8%), Cuban (20.8)%, and Puerto Rican (19.9)%

    You can review this information by gender using the selectors above.

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    Races

    In N/A, N/A% of the Fishing and hunting workers workforce were N/A, of which 6.01% were women and 94% men. Other races that concentrated a significant number of workers were N/A (N/A%) and N/A (N/A%).

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    Education & Skills

    Data on higher education choices for Fishing and hunting workers from The Department of Education and Census Bureau. The most common major for Fishing and hunting workers is N/A but the most specialized major according to RCA in N/A were N/A.

    Among the necessary skills for Fishing and hunting workers, N/A stands, but the revealed comparative advantage (RCA) shows that Fishing and hunting workers need more than the average amount of N/A.

    Majors

    ACS PUMS data only shows the major for bachelor's degrees. However, we can filter the data based on highest degree obtained.
    Type of Majors
    Degree

    The most common majors achieved by Fishing and hunting workers in N/A (counting all academic degrees) were N/A.

    You can review this information for different academic grades by modifying the option selected in the selector above.

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    Education Levels

    Metric

    The main educational levels achieved by the Fishing and hunting workers workers were N/A (N/A people), N/A (N/A people), and N/A (N/A people).

    The graphic shows the Fishing and hunting workers workforce by gender and educational level.

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    Skills

    Chart

    Data on the critical and distinctive skills necessary for Fishing and hunting workers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Fishing and hunting workers need many skills, but most especially N/A, N/A, N/A.

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