The Price of Egg(head)s

barbarus

Recycles dryer sheets
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David Wyss, chief economist for Standard & Poor’s, has been quoted as saying that America has "a shortage in high-skilled jobs like scientists and engineers.”

I believe, in spite of the wording of the quote, that he means that we have a shortage of these high level workers not a shortage of jobs for them to fill.

Interpreted in this sense(shortage of brains), is this true or is Dr. Wyss full of p**?
 
David Wyss, chief economist for Standard & Poor’s, has been quoted as saying that America has "a shortage in high-skilled jobs like scientists and engineers.”

I believe, in spite of the wording of the quote, that he means that we have a shortage of these high level workers not a shortage of jobs for them to fill.

Interpreted in this sense(shortage of brains), is this true or is Dr. Wyss full of p**?

Right now the engineering biz is begging for people. About 3 or 4 years ago they weren't hiring and some were laying off. The high tech companies want to hire cheap, foreign techies that know the latest language so they don't have to retrain the last group of programmers that new the last hot language.

It's all cyclical. We don't do enough to encourage kids to study math and science. When they do, they are treated like commodities but that's about the same as any other major.

I will say that a typical engineer can be very mediocre and still have a nice middle class life style. No other 4 year degree can make the same claim.
 
David Wyss, chief economist for Standard & Poor’s, has been quoted as saying that America has "a shortage in high-skilled jobs like scientists and engineers.”
I believe, in spite of the wording of the quote, that he means that we have a shortage of these high level workers not a shortage of jobs for them to fill.
Interpreted in this sense(shortage of brains), is this true or is Dr. Wyss full of p**?
Kinda setting us up to speculate, aren't you?

If you provide a link to the quote, perhaps we could all figure it out from the context of the article...
 
Here's the secondary source where I saw the quote. I'd like to read the primary source myself, but couldn't find any paper Wyss had written. I assume that the journalist Herbst had just called him for an off-the-cuff observation, rather than referring to a published document.

[FONT=arial,sans-serif][SIZE=-1]http://news.yahoo.com/s/bw/20070822/bs_bw/aug2007db20070821451283[/SIZE][/FONT]
 
I will say that a typical engineer can be very mediocre and still have a nice middle class life style. No other 4 year degree can make the same claim.

I guess this is the same everywhere, then, huh? :p I actually have some co-workers with barely a high school degree titling themselves as "software engineers"....
 
Well from my vantage point there must be a shortage of highly skilled engineers and scientists willing to work for $25k/year.

If they paid say $350k/year you would be amazed at how fast the shortage would go away.

MegaCorp wants the former, and those pesky engineer holdouts want the latter. There is no shortage of talent but there sure is a shortage of compensation.
 
Here's the secondary source where I saw the quote. I'd like to read the primary source myself, but couldn't find any paper Wyss had written. I assume that the journalist Herbst had just called him for an off-the-cuff observation, rather than referring to a published document.
The truth may involve shades of gray. "There is not a general labor shortage in the U.S.," says David Wyss, chief economist for Standard & Poor's, which, like BusinessWeek, is a unit of The McGraw-Hill Cos. (NYSE:MHP - News). "There is a shortage of people willing to do grunt work for low wages -- the kind of shortage you want -- and a shortage in high-skilled jobs like scientists and engineers."
That sure is awkwardly worded. I think he's trying to say that there are more wannabe scientists & engineers than there are jobs for scientists & engineers, which perhaps explains why their wages aren't rising.

Consider the numbers. Even as the unemployment rate has declined in recent years, millions of Americans have left the workforce and stopped looking for jobs. The government's Bureau of Labor Statistics has a dedicated category for "discouraged" workers who believe no positions are available to them. If the percentage of Americans participating in the workforce were the same now as it was in 2000, the number officially counted as unemployed would be 9.1 million, rather than 7.1 million. The unemployment rate would be 5.8%, instead of 4.6%.
I'm not a "discouraged" worker, I'm just voluntarily removing myself from the problem!
 
MasterBlaster, I'd rather arrived at the same conclusion myself.

So have a number of scientists and engineers with blogs or who just make isolated comments on the Net.

It seems, though, that those that employ scientists and engineers and those that educate them are of the opposite line of thought.

This site seems to appeal to a lot of "techies"; possibly more on the software than hardware side of the aisle.

Things are going well with 2B. Any personal observations from others?
 
There does seem to be a supply demand imbalance in the US... Part of the reason for outsourcing. The other is to exploit the wage differential.

With boomers retiring it will only get worse. We will open up immigration much more over the next 10-20 years... at all levels.

The problem is: while the wage differential is great, people want to immigrate to the US. If it is not, they will be less inclined to immigrate.

There are a number of things that go hand in hand that cause people to want to immigrate. If there is political stability, decent property rights laws, good human rights laws (no oppression), and capitalism is nurtured, those wage differential will evaporate.

It looks like India and China (and much of the rest of Asia) are moving in that direction.

IMHO - The Chinese are moving towards a capitalistic/socialist government and away from communism. I do not think they are unnecessarily planning to do so... but the snowball is getting bigger and bigger and gaining momentum. It is probably best that they do it slowly or they will wind up like Russia.


The last developing area in the world will be Africa.
 
IMHO - The Chinese are moving towards a capitalistic/socialist government and away from communism. I do not think they are unnecessarily planning to do so... but the snowball is getting bigger and bigger and gaining momentum. It is probably best that they do it slowly or they will wind up like Russia.

Youngest son did his History Day project on the Tiananmen Square Massacre and the changes in China since. He made it to the regional finals and I got to help him tighten up his project a little. He had a lot of primary sources and it was very interesting to read how close the Communists came to losing control. Since then they have loosened up greatly on the economic side, but the political side is even more oppressive than before. They obviously intend to stay in control politically, and seem to be doing a good job at it for now. They've funneled a lot of the people's energy into making money but I suspect that after as more people have all their material wants filled they will start asking for some civil rights.

Right now the engineering biz is begging for people.

BIL is the dir of engineering for the undersea division of a pretty large oilfield products company - he told me about a year ago that they were hiring people who would have never made it past the dropping off the resume phase a few years earlier.
 
BIL is the dir of engineering for the undersea division of a pretty large oilfield products company - he told me about a year ago that they were hiring people who would have never made it past the dropping off the resume phase a few years earlier.

That's happening all over the industry. Companies don't hire for years and suddenly want to triple their staff with top tier experts. There's only so many they can steal from each other. It comes down to planning. Companies used to do that to avoid massive personnel swings.

Tell your BIL I'm available for $200k and please assure him that I lack most of the qualifications he's looking for.
 
The last developing area in the world will be Africa.

Yup, and I eagerly await seeing it happen. Just think of the huge numbers of people in Asia that are/have been lifted out of poverty as that region has developed. And Africa has lots of natural resources...
 
I am responsible for a global technology organization which consists of both engineering and software professionals. I have been in this field for 30 years (management for the past 15). The market is very tight (available personnel) in the US right now. Many people I know can pretty much name their price right now. We have a few openings in the US and we are having a very difficult time finding qualified individuals. It is very
reminiscent
of 1998 - 99 just before year 2k).
I have been concerned as many have been about outsourcing to countries with lower paid professionals and the following is my personal experience. In certain circumstances we have found it possible to utilize low cost talent when we needed very specific technical work performed. In situations where we needed communication and project management outsourcing will not work for us. As far as the shortage of workers in the US it has always been difficult to find highly motivated and talented individuals this is the hardest and most important part of my job. (also the most rewarding too).
I honestly believe there will be positions for those individuals who are talented and willing to work hard to be some of the best in their field.
I have a story I like to tell. In 1974 when I was taking classes in computer programming (they call it software development now) the professors told us how computers would program themselves. In the 1980's when fourth generation languages came out the magazines told us how computers would program themselves... Four years ago my youngest son called me from the university (he was studying software engineering) and was very concerned that he may be in the wrong major because one of his professors told him that all software development would be outsourced to Asia. (this is a kid who was on a full academic scholarship). I relayed my story of what the profs said to me while in college... He has since graduated and has an exceptional position with a major corporaton making considerably more than his two older brothers who graduated from top tier universities and chose other professions...

By the way.. I just read an article which describes that one of the major Indian software firms will be opening an office in Atlanta and hiring about 1000 people.
 
IMHO - The Chinese are moving towards a capitalistic/socialist government and away from communism. I do not think they are unnecessarily planning to do so... but the snowball is getting bigger and bigger and gaining momentum. It is probably best that they do it slowly or they will wind up like Russia.

The Chinese do not seem to want to emulate the US or Europe. Think Singapore, and other similar soft-authoritarian systems which have economic but not political freedom.
 
Note from an old phart:

Circa 1966 - when I was er ah younger my engineering orientation(welcome to the company) had 13 engineers - 6 of us were American.

Howard one of my older acquaintences at the time told the story about Sputnik - he had been laid off from his Chem Engr job about a year earlier and was selling Hammond Organs door to door to feed his family. He had some rather colorful adjectives to describe his thoughts reading the banner headline in the paper -'Where are America's Scientist's and Engineers?'

I thought off Howard's tale when I was reading a few years later -'Will the Last Person Leaving Seattle Please Turn Out The Lights.'

I was reading at my new job - in Denver.

Cycles - gotta lov em!

heh heh heh - Constellation and Aries to replace the Space Shuttle in a few years. Heck I'll only be in my 60's - time to suit up again - I don't think so. :rolleyes:
 
BIL is the dir of engineering for the undersea division of a pretty large oilfield products company - he told me about a year ago that they were hiring people who would have never made it past the dropping off the resume phase a few years earlier.

The big difference today is that now they have to be nice to their employees. This is too big a paradigm shift for Big Oil. Let them stew.

Oilpatch Gypsy
Still taking a job away from a Canadian.
 
The big difference today is that now they have to be nice to their employees. This is too big a paradigm shift for Big Oil.

He can appreciate that I'm sure, because several years ago that was his attitude. He got his current job because he got so fed up with the company and how they were treating him he just walked in one day and quit. He took a week off and then set up an office at home, printed up some business cards and was already negotiating his first contracts when his former boss's boss called up and asked him to go to lunch. The guy said "we screwed up and can't afford to lose you - and here's the job we want you to do."
 
The world/US/Employer/neighborhood is always going downhill, just ask any older person.
 
Leonidas,

So he went back:confused:

Nuts to that. If they had their heads so far up their a** in the first place, how could they be expected to change? On their part, they could never trust him again. (It is funny talking about managers trusting someone.:2funny: ) You can tell when a manager is lying--his lips move.

I would have listened to the job they wanted done, then given them my billing rate. Sure, I will work for you--at arms' length.

You may surmise that I don't like working for other people anymore. I work for me.

Gypsy
 
Leonidas,

So he went back:confused:

Nuts to that. If they had their heads so far up their a** in the first place, how could they be expected to change? On their part, they could never trust him again. (It is funny talking about managers trusting someone.:2funny: ) You can tell when a manager is lying--his lips move.
I think it was the right thing for him. He never mentioned how much money he got, but his lifestyle significantly improved after that (and he is an LBYM'er even if his wife isn't).

He like the work and liked the company, but the director of engineering was taking advantage of him, holding him down and claiming credit for all of his work. After he left it only took a few days for it to go to hell and his boss was found out as a fraud. He was retired and they offered his job to my BIL. Since he took over he has had the freedom to do things the way he always felt they should be done and so far he has been making a lot of money for the company and they are pleased.

The money helped lure him back, but the real satisfaction was being recognized and rewarded for his talent. He loves his job - except for the travel.
 
August 23, 2007 TECHNOLOGY AIDE ....Technology Department
• (up to 30 hours per week)
• Salary - $8.00/hour
Qualifications:
• Working knowledge of computer operating systems (Windows 2000, Windows XP)
• Experience installing and upgrading computer hardware
• Experience installing software applications
• Working knowledge of educational software applications
• Strong human relations skills
Skills:
• High degree of energy and self-direction
• Ability to communicate well with teachers regarding computer concerns and problems
• Ability to communicate well with computer support services
• Aptitude for technology and its effective use
• Ability and willingness to learn about new technologies strategies and technology applications in
education
• Ability to manage and organize resources
• Ability to install and explain software
• Ability to troubleshoot equipment and software
 
August 23, 2007 TECHNOLOGY AIDE ....Technology Department
• (up to 30 hours per week)
• Salary - $8.00/hour


Well... This is one of those jobs that allows some inexperienced kid (without a degree) to get their toe in the door. Work there for a year or so and get some experience to move on for more pay.
 
Well... This is one of those jobs that allows some inexperienced kid (without a degree) to get their toe in the door. Work there for a year or so and get some experience to move on for more pay.

I know an eleven year old who can maybe squeeze in 30 hrs/wk after Junior High (or is it middle school). He's the one who gets me unstuck!

heh heh heh heh heh ;)
 
Well... This is one of those jobs that allows some inexperienced kid (without a degree) to get their toe in the door. Work there for a year or so and get some experience to move on for more pay.

I see it differently. When I hear employers declaring that they "can't find good help", what I hear is "We can't find good help who'll work for $25k/yr"...
 

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