A few months ago, Computerword published an interesting article that might 
through 
some light on the ongoing debate about "H-1B visas, offshore outsourcing and 
the 
debate over whether an IT labor shortage even exists."
The idea is that efforts to cut costs for technology workers deflate students 
enthusiasm to train for such training.  The article is also interesting because 
it 
breaks with the usual practice of blaming the prospective employees rather than 
the 
corporate employers.

Tennant, Don. 2008. "Pro or Parasite?" Computerworld (14 April): p. 8. 
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=316555
"There are a lot of CIOs [Chief Information Officers] around who dismiss the 
idea of 
hiring graduates fresh out of college. I know, because I've spoken with many of 
them 
....  But it seems like an awfully shortsighted approach to skills management."

"Of all the issues we cover, none seems more volatile or emotional than the 
subject 
of IT skills and labor management, encompassing as it does issues like H-1B 
visas, 
offshore outsourcing and the debate over whether an IT labor shortage even 
exists. 
During a panel discussion on this topic at our Premier 100 IT Leaders 
Conference 
last month, we polled the audience to see whether attendees believed there is 
such a 
shortage. Forty-six percent said yes, 43% said no, and 11% said they weren't 
sure. I 
wasn't surprised to see the results so evenly split."
"The lack of consensus extends to the question of whether the U.S. education 
system 
is producing enough graduates in technology-related fields. We've all read 
about the 
concern that the U.S. is losing its competitive edge because China, India and 
other 
countries are educating far more scientists and engineers than we are. But 
there's 
plenty of debate over whether that concern is legitimate."

"For example, last November, Harold Salzman of the Urban Institute testified 
before 
Congress that research conducted in collaboration with Case Western Reserve 
University and Georgetown University found no shortage of STEM (science, 
technology, 
engineering and mathematics) graduates in the U.S.  "The available data 
indicate 
that the United States' education system produces a supply of qualified STEM 
graduates in much greater numbers than jobs available," Salzman testified. "If 
there 
are shortages, it is most likely a demand-side problem of STEM career 
opportunities 
that are less attractive than career opportunities in other fields."  What 
needs to 
be factored into the equation, however, is that a hefty percentage of those 
graduates are foreign nationals."

"According to Salzman's report, in 2005, 38% of computer science and 42% of 
computer 
engineering graduates in master's degree programs were non-U.S. citizens. To 
the 
extent that the benefit of the knowledge gained by those foreign students lies 
outside of the U.S., it's clear that there's still a lot of work to be done to 
encourage young Americans to advance U.S. competitiveness by pursuing degrees 
in 
STEM disciplines."

"What's equally clear is that if the message being sent to our young people is 
that 
companies will be reluctant to hire them when they graduate, they'll steer 
clear of 
technology, the pool of homegrown talent will dry up, and the question of 
whether 
there's an IT labor shortage will be far less debatable."



-- 
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
michaelperelman.wordpress.com
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