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Recovery train could leave IT jobs behind

Recovery train could leave IT jobs behind

By:  Patrick Thibodeau  On: 01 Oct 2009 For: Computerworld US(NA) Creator

As the economy begins to regain strength, companies are expected to increase spending. But many IT managers are expected to show caution in hiring new workers...

 

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Will Cognizant and ACS help with a recovery or hurt it by shifting work overseas? The only IT spending category that is expected to finish 2009 in the black is outsourcing, with a 2.1 per cent gain, said Forrester Research Inc., in a report released Tuesday. If that increase seems scant, consider that Forrester is expecting IT spending to decline overall by 9.3 per cent for the year, led by a hardware spending plunge of 15.5 per cent.

Andrew Bartels, the analyst who prepared the forecast, expects IT managers will be conservative about taking on new staff and will rely on consultants and outsourcers to meet immediate need.

"You probably won't start to see hiring for permanent staff until the middle of next year," Bartels said, but employers will hire consultants.

Forrester sees an overall strong recovery next year, with 7.7 per cent growth, and it's going to be led by IT consulting services, which it expects will increase by 11.4 per cent. Consultants can be, for instance, a laid-off Microsoft Cop. employee who is working independently or an offshore contractor hired through a consulting firm. Outsourcing itself will grow about 4.5 per cent. Software spending will rise 9.3 per cent, Forrester said.

Peter Bendor-Samuel, CEO of Everest Group, an outsourcing research group, sees "some bounce" for IT services coming out of the recession because companies won't want to "grow back" the cost structure they had before the recession hit.

"You tend to look for cheaper and more flexible models, particularly offshore," he said.

But Bendor-Samuel also sees a far more mature offshore market with slower growth that won't see the same increases as years past.

Forrester isn't predicting the effect on hiring, but the recession has delivered a pool of available workers. The industry group TechServe Alliance, in Alexandria, Va., which analyzes U.S government IT occupation data that includes software engineering, programming and systems analysts jobs, found in June that IT employment was at 3.8 million, for a year-over-year decline of about 5 per cent.

Fred Maidment, a management professor at the Ancell School of Business at Western Connecticut State University who has studied outsourcing's impact on workers, said that when companies start adding jobs again, many of those jobs may be created in other countries.

The downturn in 2001 to 2003 was the first time the U.S. felt the impact of the shift overseas in highly skilled, well-educated workers jobs and that shift is continuing. "This is going to be even more of a jobless recovery," Maidment said.










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patrick thibodeau Patrick Thibodeau covers SaaS and enterprise applications, outsourcing, government IT policies, data centers and IT workforce issues for Computerworld. Follow Patrick on Twitter at @DCgov , or subscribe to Pa... more

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