To say it's been a bad year for IT workers is an understatement. It has been bad, says the industry group TechAmerica Foundation, but government data shows that it's faring better than many industries.Yes, it's been a bad year for every industry, but technology has not been
hit as hard with job losses between 2008 and 2009 as one might have expected,
says the industry group TechAmerica Foundation.
The organization, basing its premise on recent government data, shows that
between January and June of this year 115,000 jobs have been lostmuch of that
coming from the technology manufacturing sector.
"The tech industry has suffered the full force of the global economic
recession in the first half of this year, yet we believe it has weathered the
storm better than most," said TechAmerica Foundation President Christopher
W. Hansen in a news release. "Given that technology is an important
economic driver, long-term investments and globally competitive tax policies
are critical for encouraging technology companies to form and flourish in the United
States and add new American jobs."
TechAmerica reports the following:
"From June 2008when the financial crisis and economic downturn were
gaining momentumthrough
June 2009, tech lost 224,100 jobs, a 3.7 percent workforce decline. Over
the same time period the U.S.
private sector shed jobs at a higher pace5.1 percent.
"For the six months between January and June, the losses were the greatest for U.S.
high-tech manufacturing employment. Technology manufacturers shed 69,500 net
jobs in the first half of 2009, a 5.6 percent loss, leaving a total of 1.2
million tech manufacturing jobs in June. This represented 11.6 percent of total
U.S.
manufacturing jobs lost over that time period.
"Total U.S.
high-tech services employment was also down over the previous six months, but
not as severely as manufacturing. Technology service providers shed 45,500
net jobs from January to June of 2009, a one percent drop for a total of 4.6
million jobs. The breakdown was: engineering and tech services (-21,500),
communications services (-13,600), and software services (-10,400)."
Employment across the technology industry seems to have faltered in comparison
to private sectors employers as a whole during this same six-month period.
While high-tech employment declined by 1.9 percent from January to June 2009,
private sector employment held steady with 0.2 percent growth.
Job board Dice.com, which specializes in technology jobs, had more than 49,000
technology listings for positions in early September, nearly half of which were
for contract positions, and many that were based in the Northeast cities,
including Washington D.C.,
Baltimore, New Jersey
and New York.
Some of the big names in tech in Silicon Valley
are hiring, including software-as-a-service firm Salesforce.com and search
giant Google. A recent article from US News and World Report on best cities for technology jobs
highlights regions of the country that are deeply entrenched in research and
technology development.