DocumentCode :
1051687
Title :
IT employment prospects in 2004: a mixed bag
Author :
Niederman, Fred
Author_Institution :
Saint Louis Univ., MO, USA
Volume :
37
Issue :
1
fYear :
2004
Firstpage :
69
Lastpage :
77
Abstract :
Signs of general economic recovery and renewed IT sector growth are dampened for IT workers globally by improved productivity and locally by a global labor market. Since 1999 - when US business magazine cover stories described IT positions going unfilled and extensive congressional lobbying to increase quotas for overseas workers to fill them - the US IT job market has changed drastically, losing more than a million jobs. For US workers, this change raises two different but complementary questions. First, what are the prospects for the global IT workforce in the near and longer term? Second, how will IT jobs be distributed among competing labor markets around the world? The first question addresses total demand for IT workers. The second addresses the economics of business investments and how governments, universities, communities, and individuals can compete successfully for them.
Keywords :
employment; human resource management; information technology; labour resources; IT employment; IT sector growth; IT worker; US IT job market; US worker; business investment economics; economic recovery; global IT workforce; global labor market; overseas worker; Companies; Computer industry; Economics; Educational institutions; Employment; Information technology; Internet; Investments; Remuneration; Unemployment;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Computer
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9162
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MC.2004.1260728
Filename :
1319278
Link To Document :
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