Les Hatton

Talent follows the money

The UK’s skills crisis will continue to get worse so long as IT staff are overworked and underpaid

Written by Les Hatton

The number of voices commenting on the looming skills crisis in IT is growing – at last. As an educator, I have been acutely aware of this problem for some time, and warned IT Week readers about it in an article in early 2005.

For several years now, there has been a steady fall in the number of university students studying IT and other scientific subjects. Many theories have been expounded to explain this. Some suggest that modern students think that these subjects are too hard. I hope I’m not alone in thinking that this particular theory is nonsense. Others argue that the dumbing down of science, as evidenced by numerous moronic television science programmes, has caused technology generally to lose its appeal. I have some sympathy with this argument: when was the last time you saw technology and technologists portrayed as forces for good on TV?

Others again argue that the academic content is out of phase with the needs of society, and yet others feel that we don’t make IT and science interesting enough for youngsters, and propose all sorts of competitions and initiatives to make these subjects more appealing to kids. Such schemes are very laudable but I can’t see them working because they do not address the issue that I believe lies at the heart of our skills problem: salaries.

Throughout my career in the UK, scientists, engineers and IT people have often been underpaid compared with other professions. My first real job was as a scientific civil servant. I was 25 at the time, and a highly trained mathematician and programmer with a nice shiny PhD to prove it. In spite of this, I and my fellow scientific civil servants were one grade lower down the pay scale than administrative civil servants with equivalent academic qualifications. This inequality was official policy and impossible to fight, so I voted with my feet. Some years later, in idle conversation, the chairman of a well-known British company told me that his firm’s profits were created by “housing scientists in Nissen huts and paying them peanuts”. Quite.

Let’s consider three other factors. First, university fees may well double again in the near future, making the average debt on graduation in the UK around £30,000. Second, East Asia produces enormous numbers of science and IT graduates currently prepared to work for peanuts. Third, today’s youngsters are just as smart as my generation but I suspect more financially savvy. They are simply not going to work in an area that is undervalued and underpaid however “exciting” we make it.

If we are genuinely worried about the skills shortage, we are just going to have to pay IT workers more.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

Houses of Parliament

Employers to drive skills development

The Leitch Review of UK education foresees a bigger role for vocational training 06 Dec 2006

 

Security staff need business skills

IT security professionals must broaden their knowledge base, warn experts 29 Mar 2006

Skills crisis deepens as employers stand by

The UK's skills crisis continues to worsen, warns report 08 Jan 2007

Words won't bridge the e-skills gap

Gordon Brown talks a good talk on sharpening the UK's ICT skills but it is not clear what he will do 09 Feb 2007

Security professionals need better risk management skills

Risk management skills and certifications key to IT security professionals career progression, according to survey 25 Oct 2006

related whitepapers

today's top stories

CIOs must embrace collaboration tools

Author Don Tapscott gives Angelica Mari his reasons for promoting social networking tools and says transparency is the key to security 04 Dec 2008

On a quest to build a connected society

BT Design’s JP Rangaswami talks to Gareth Morgan about his pivotal role in the telecoms giant’s efforts to deliver universal broadband and his plans to tap into the creativity of the open source community 04 Dec 2008

IT leaders must stand by India

A sense of perspective is the most important response from IT leaders to the attacks in Mumbai 04 Dec 2008

Case study: Clifford Chance

Law firm implements Sun platform and reduces datacentres to gain efficiency and cost synergies 03 Dec 2008

Should CRM be more sociable?

As vendors rush to add more social networking bells and whistles to their CRM products, some experts warn that users must tread carefully when venturing into online communities 03 Dec 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Will the terrorist attacks in Mumbai affect your offshoring plans?

Will the terrorist attacks in Mumbai affect your offshoring plans?

Is India becoming a risky destination?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

Padlocked CDVideo

Technology and privacy

Watch the final video in a two-part Computing roundtable debate on the importance of putting data privacy issues at the heart of your IT plans 02 Dec 2008

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast - Standard Life's offshoring plans; and the prospects for government IT

The insurance giant outlines its new outsourcing strategy; and we ask if the government's economic bailout will affect its IT plans 28 Nov 2008

Latest in-depth articles

Doctors looking at a computerAnalysis

Watchdog wants IT to cure privacy woes

Information Commissioner Richard Thomas is urging organisations to put privacy protection at the top of their procurement and development criteria 04 Dec 2008

Colin McDonaldComment

Web 2.0 has potential to transform staff training

Employees can sharpen their IT skills through using the latest interactive training tools, writes Colin McDonald 04 Dec 2008

Advertisement

Primary Navigation