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IT (And Other) Salaries On The Rise In The U.S.

pertinax18 writes "CNN Money is reporting that salaries for most college grads are on the rise once again. Especially interesting to collegiate (and other) /. readers may be the 4.1% increase in pay for CS grads, and 10.7% increases in pay for others in the field. From the article: 'If those numbers sound enticing, it's probably because computer science graduates are long overdue for a pay increase. "They haven't seen an increase since 2001 and this is the first year, in all four reports, that they showed an increase," Koncz says.' Are things finally starting to look up for us?"

6 of 780 comments (clear)

  1. What a Crock by HackHackBoom · · Score: 5, Informative

    Show me places in the industry or people who have received raises. Not to sound bitter, but I know not a single person in my circle of friends and business associates who've said they're getting raises.

    It's more about cuts and firings lately :(

    --


    "It's not stealing if you don't get caught!"

  2. A Year ago... by JaffaKREE · · Score: 5, Informative

    A year ago, getting an IT job was hard as hell. Countless resumes, postings and searchings EVENTUALLY netted me a DBA position.

    In the last few months, I've started getting emails randomly from recruiters who've seen my resumes posted. I haven't been looking, haven't updated it. One of the opportunities struck me, so I took it. No problems. I've been offered more jobs in the past month - without looking for anything - than I could even get close to a year ago.

  3. Re:one omission by Randolpho · · Score: 4, Informative

    w3rd.

    Average salaries may be on the increase, but total jobs in the IT field are not. It's getting *more* difficult to find a job; the glut of IT folks out there (and it *is* a glut) means employers can sit on their haunches while waiting for that "perfect candidate" who has exactly 3 years as an Oracle DBA and 5+ years experience with ADO.NET. (Yes, I've seen job offers exactly like that -- has ADO.NET even been *around* for 5 years?).

    There are *ZERO* entry level jobs on the market at the moment. So the rest of us who just got out of college, even if we racked up experience with internships or other on-the-side jobs, are screwed unless we can lie convincingly in our interviews. If we can even *get* an interview, that is.

    --
    "Times have not become more violent. They have just become more televised."
    -Marilyn Manson
  4. Re:Got to be an average. by ReverendHoss · · Score: 4, Informative

    Agreed, averages may be useful to spot trends, but never compare your actual salary to them.

    Programmers in NYC get 80K per year just so they can keep up with the increased housing, cost of living, etc. Programmers in the Midwest get 35K. Same quality of life, just different numbers. Take a look at these numbers to make a comparison by region.

    Comes from employers/tax returns (I believe), so will probably be more accurate than surveys which have voluntary participation.

  5. Actually, you CAN kill the economy in 2 months. by Magnus+Pym · · Score: 4, Informative

    Are you in the telecomm industry? If so, you would have heard of the so-called "CLEC"s (Competive Local Exchange Carriers) that were to compete with the big telecom boys. As soon as Bush was elected, they went out of business... because the smart money knew that Bush would support the incumbent big firms against them... just like he sabotaged the Microsoft antitrust trial. As went the CLECs, so went the telecomm infrastructure startups who were building innovative equipment that the CLECs would have bought, but that the ILECs have no interest in buying, because they have a monopoly anyway.

    It is no accident that the bust coincided with Bush's election. Without Bush, there still would have been a dot-com bust, but other sectors would not have been as badly affected.

    It is also no accident that oil prices, after stagnating for pretty much the entire Clinton years, started skyrocketing after Bush's election. It is his priority to keep gas prices high. For every cent in gas price hikes, the Oil industry makes millions of dollars. And guess which industry forms Bush's personal financial base.

    Magnus.

  6. Re:Bush's Fault by Odin's+Raven · · Score: 4, Informative
    Why is it Bush's fault when salaries go down, but a magical coincidence when they go up?

    As people are fond of saying: "You must be new here..." (Not just to /., but to the planet Earth. ;-)

    It's for the same reason that leaders (in the U.S.A., and in other countries, and even the PHB down the hall from your cube) will claim credit for economic upturns during their reign, while claiming that any and all economic downturns were caused by:

    • magical coincidence
    • market forces (see "magical coincidence")
    • consumer uncertainty (see "magical coincidence")
    • the failed policies of a predecessor from an opposing political party
    • evil pixies (see both "magical coincidence" and "opposing party")
    • terrorists (see "opposing party")

    Leaders in power like to claim credit for good things, and avoid responsibility for bad things. Opponents of leaders in power like to assign blame for bad things, and claim responsibility for good things (or at least deny that the leader may have had a role in the good things).

    Welcome to the world of carbon-based Terran life forms. For further study, may I recommend reading a long-running classic field study of this planet's society, conducted by the noted sociologist, Scott Adams. While the studies focus primarily on interactions within hierarchical corporate institutions, you may find them illustrative as you attempt to understand the political systems you encounter on your survey of our planet.

    Live long and prosper, or whatever the appropriate greeting is on your homeworld.

    --
    A marriage is always made up of two people who are prepared to swear that only the other one snores.