High-tech employment numbers drop in second quarter

July 26, 2004, 02:35 PM —  IDG News Service — 

The number of U.S. workers employed in four IT-related occupations has dropped between the first and second quarters of 2004, according to numbers culled from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers-USA (IEEE-USA) blamed the drop in employed software engineers, programmers, hardware engineers and computer scientists and systems analysts on the continuing trend for U.S. companies to send jobs overseas, often called offshore outsourcing. The number of employed workers in those fields also seem to contradict the unemployment numbers that the BLS has released, which show a dip in the unemployment rates in those fields.

But the two sets of numbers are measuring different things, said Gary Steinberg, a spokesman for BLS. A programmer who is hired in a different field no longer counts in the unemployment rate, even if fewer programmers are employed this quarter, Steinberg noted.

The overall number of people employed in computer-related occupations in the U.S. dropped by about 9,000 people from the first to second quarter. The 2.96 million computer-related jobs in the U.S. in the second quarter of 2004 compared to an average of 2.98 million during 2003.

According to numbers released by IEEE-USA Monday:

-- The number of employed software engineers in the U.S. dropped from 856,000 in the first quarter of 2004 to 725,000 in the second quarter. Yet, the unemployment rate among software engineers dropped from 3.3 percent to 2.9 percent between the two quarters. In 2003, an average of 758,000 software engineers were employed in the U.S.

-- The number of computer scientists and systems analysts dropped from 672,000 to 621,000 between the two quarters. Unemployment dropped from 6.7 percent to 4 percent. An average of 722,000 computer scientists and systems analysts were employed during 2003.

-- The number of computer programmers dropped from 591,000 to 575,000 between the first and second quarters this year, although the second-quarter numbers are still higher than 2003's average of 563,000 employed U.S. programmers. The unemployment rate among programmers dropped from 9.5 percent in the first quarter to 5.7 percent in the second quarter, according to BLS numbers.

-- The number of employed computer hardware engineers dropped from 86,000 to 83,000 between the two quarters. The 2003 average was 99,000 employed hardware engineers in the U.S.

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Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
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