E-skills highlights IT skills
shortage
UK needs over 700,000 new IT professionals by 2013
Rosalie Marshall, IT Week, 28 Jan 2008
A new series of reports has predicted that the UK will need
more than 140,000 new IT and Telecoms professionals per year
over the next five years.
The IT and Telecoms Insights 2008 reported that most of the
professionals will need to be trained to a high level, half are
expected to be experts from other fields, and one in five will
be hired directly from education.
The reports are based on research conducted by e-skills UK,
a not for profit employer led quango that will be presenting
its findings tonight to John Denham, the secretary of state for
innovation, universities and skills.
If the technology and telecoms skill base is improved and
more businesses adopt technology and foster its innovation,
then £35 billion could be created for the UK economy over the
next ten years, the report said.
The research also found that a broader range of technical,
business and communication skills are needed by IT and Telecoms
professionals in order to succeed, while more IT knowledge is
needed by the business workforce. The IT industry is also
lacking females and the situation is worsening, the report
stated. Only 18 per cent of the IT and telecoms professional
workforce is female, down from 22 per cent in 2001.
The research was conducted using input from 4,000 employers
and from Gartner Executive Programs, Auridian Consulting,
Experian, Adroit Economic and Regeneris Consulting.
Vodafone’s chief executive, Nick Read, said “we need to
transform technology-related education and capture in the
curriculum the excitement that students already have for
technologies in their daily lives such as mobile phones and the
internet.”
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