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IT skills for Canada's public sector market - finders, keepers

IT skills for Canada's public sector market - finders, keepers

By:  Duncan Stewart  On: 30 Jul 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

It is unacceptable for the public sector to resign itself to losing the most senior or valuable IT employees to the private sector. These employees have the critical skills and institutional knowledge and memory. Further, a continual process of employee turnover involves non-trivial hiring and training costs. The new HR paradigm for retention and acquisition is to develop, deploy and connect.

IT skills: Finders, keepers for Canada's public sector market

It's widely accepted that government can't compete as an IT employer with the private sector for both salary and stock option reasons. And demographics mean that any day now all the baby-boom IT staff will retire.

The collapse of the dot-com bubble in 2000 meant there were precious few replacement workers coming down the pike: any kid with half a brain dropped out of computer science, switched to geology, and is now happily roaring around the Tar Sands in a 4x4. (Oh, and we were only too quick to outsource all the IT jobs to India, ensuring that the up-and-comers knew their jobs were at risk.)

Is there a looming IT staffing crisis for the Canadian public sector? There have been more than a few headlines that sound exactly that alarm; it even makes sense at first glance.

In truth, reality is a bit more complex. For starters, there is nothing remotely close to a crisis at this time. Only last year there were more than 250 applicants for a single IT system management position with the federal government. And based on Deloitte research, we don't see either demographics or educational enrollment causing a sudden IT skills shortage.

That being said, we also think that complacency in the ranks of public sector HR professionals would be a serious error. There is a crisis coming: slowly. But it isn't due to the factors that most people think.

It is important to first understand a complicated dynamic that drives IT staffing issues between the public and private sectors.

There is no question that when the technology industry is enjoying frantic boom times, they have a tendency to suck IT professionals out of the public sector. Fuelled by venture capital and booming stock valuations, they can for a limited period of time pay salaries well above government levels, offer the promise of potentially millions of dollars from stock option profits and make employees feel like they are part of the "next big thing."

The distorting effect on an IT labour market can be significant, especially within a focused geography. The most recent bubble (1999-2000), for example, saw IT personnel in the National Capital Region public sector specifically targeted by employers in the Kanata area.

However, these balmy conditions tend to occur about only three out of every 10 years. The other two-thirds of the time, private sector tech firms are only competitive with public sector employers, if that.

The retrenchment seen following the Bubble and September 11, 2001, meant that even some cash-rich tech firms were letting go of as much as 90 per cent of their work force.


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Duncan Stewart Duncan Stewart is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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