Report: Layoffs Way Up; IT Layoffs Hard to Gauge
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It's not clear from outplacement giant Challenger, Gray & Christmas' latest job cuts report where IT exactly stands, but the numbers that it is giving across most industries suggest a fair amount of people at the beach for the remainder of the summer months, as inflation is on the rise. Sorry to report what is definitively bad news, but let's be clear about something: This report doesn't give IT its own category, so take the data for what it's worth. According to the report, July is the second month this year where job cuts in the United States were over 100,000 (103,312 to be exact). Here's some of the pertinent data from the report:
The pace, while not specific to IT, is difficult to ignore. We could be seeing numbers like those of the post-Internet-bubble era (in 2001, for example, there were nearly 2 million layoffs). The bulk of these numbers is made up by workers in the transportation, financial and retail sectors, where turbulence has been a dominant theme, and it has been a truly difficult time for many afflicted by the economic downturn. This snapshot from the report lays out the specific industries: JOB CUTS BY INDUSTRY JULY IT could be touching almost all of these industries. If the airlines, investment firms and Starbucks of the world are struggling lately, then it might follow that workers in high-paying IT jobs could be getting pink slips. And yet, critical system functions that at their core help the business make money need people to maintain, upgrade, design and build newer core systems. When you look beyond much of the sector-specific data, cost-cutting happens in every organization, especially if your company is public and answers to shareholders with growth expectations regardless of economic cycles. And in related news, Gartner recently reported that IT salary increases are holding steady, but staffing is a little down. From the Gartner report: "According to a survey of 285 U.S.-based IT organizations, 57.9 percent projected an increase in IT staff levels ... during the survey time period (March 1, 2008 through February 28, 2009). However, this is a notable drop from 66.3 percent reported in the 2007 study." How much of an increase, as in how many jobs, isn't abundantly clear. What's it really like out there for you this summer in your technology job?
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