IT workers looking for jobs in the U.S. have nothing to cheer about in the latest workforce survey released by the Information
Technology Association of America. Hiring projections for IT workers during the next year are the lowest since 2000, and more
than a tenth of IT companies are looking at moving IT jobs to countries with cheaper labor.
The only sliver of good news in the study, released Monday, is that the total number of IT jobs in the U.S. seems to have
leveled off, with the number of IT layoffs no longer outpacing the new IT hires projected in the survey. The ITAA study, based
on a survey of 400 U.S. hiring managers at both IT and non-IT companies, predicts that U.S. companies will fill 493,431 IT
jobs in the next 12 months, compared to projections of 1.1 million jobs in last year's survey and 1.6 million in 2000. The
ITAA projections don't measure predictions of layoffs and unfilled open positions when projecting the number of IT hires,
so the net job growth in the U.S. IT industry will be lower.
"The good news is that it looks like we've hit bottom finally," said Harris Miller, president of the ITAA. "The companies
have rightsized about as far down as they're going to rightsize. That's not to say we're going to suddenly see a dramatic upward spike. I don't think that's likely to happen, but I do think
that there are some indications out there that CIOs are starting to get a little bit of permission from their CFOs and CEOs to start spending a little bit of money again."
The U.S. began 2003 with 10.3 million IT workers, according to the ITAA, up 4.2 percent from the start of 2002, but up less
than 1 percent from the last quarter of 2002. The IT workforce appears to have bottomed out at just under 10 million jobs at the start of 2002, the ITAA said, after 500,000 IT job layoffs in the U.S. in 2001.
Sixty-seven percent of those surveyed for the study released Monday said they thought hiring demand would stay the same or
decline over the next year.
ITAA began its workforce study in 1997, but started using new methodology in 2000. The number of projected hires is the lowest
since the association began using that new methodology, but Miller also called the number a historic low.
The message to IT workers is that the skills expectation bar has been raised "not by inches, but by several feet," said Clare
Dolan, senior director of educational initiatives for Oracle, one of the sponsors of the ITAA study.
IT workers shouldn't look at increasing their skills as a lifelong learning process, but a daily one, Dolan added. "Because
of the competitiveness, you need to be learning daily," she added.
Asked about moving IT jobs outside of the U.S., 6 percent of all firms said they already have, including 22 percent of IT
companies with 1,000 or more employees. Fifteen percent of IT firms say they will or might move IT jobs out of the U.S. in
the next year.