Jobs slump doesn't mean skills crisis is over

February's 7.1 percent slump in IT Internet job advertisements doesn't mean the skills crisis will soon be a bad memory.

"We're not short of applications -- it's the technical experience," Michelle Caminos, Gartner research VP of IT services and sourcing, said today.

Steve Rogers, director of IT recruitment agency Rusher Rogers Recruiting, agreed: "There are always going to be specialities which are always going to be required," he said.

A closer look at the figures shows that while IT overall fared poorly, falls in management and sales roles were offset by slight increases in advertisements for development and engineering roles.

The number could also have been affected by other factors, Gartner's Caminos said.

Bob Olivier, whose recruitment firm put out the job advertisement figures this week, agreed it is too early to be able to say what the February slump means. "This is the first month of decline. One month isn't a trend," he noted. He added that February is a "bounce back" month, and can't always be taken at face value.

In general, drawing conclusions from employment figures is difficult, Olivier continued: "A lot of economists say employment data is the hardest to read."

Fellow recruiter Rogers said that as yet he had not noticed the drop: "Anecdotally, I'm not really seeing a slow down in the recruitment market." He did add, however, that the demand for people could fall away quickly.

If the jobs industry is softening, enterprise will benefit, according to Olivier. "We are at the top of the market. Decline isn't necessarily a bad thing ... Wage restraint will help enterprises."

Talkback 4 comments

    skills crisis Anonymous -- 18/03/08

    There is no skills crisis in IT. There is just a bias toward hiring OS workers, and refusing to invest in IT training in this country beyond grads. Why the big push to deny that the number of tech jobs is in decline and more jobs are being outsourced. Keeping wages down perhaps? or is it just to boost immigration. There are talented specialists here who dont get real IT work

    Wage restraint will help enterprises Anonymous -- 11/04/08

    "Wage restraint" = Offshoring

    This is what is screwing American IT workers right now...

    Skill Crisis Anonymous -- 11/09/08

    Yes i agree with the "anonymous comment, thre is definately bias towards hiring overseas workers, this has been the case with my partner who has tried for over a year....with little success, despite his high technical skills.

    IT Jobs Slump Anonymous -- 04/10/08 (in reply to #320111736)

    There's is a slump in IT contract jobs in Australia. Of course there will be more applications coming in, but no more jobs to go around. Who are we kidding. This is going to be a trend all over the world, it is a matter of when and how severe
    I've never experienced such a downturn not even with my 5 years experience in the UK
    But this time we have no where to go, cause there is a worldwide slowdown especially in Software hiring

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