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How Engineers and Scientists Cluster In the U.S.

First time accepted submitter DERoss writes "The National Science Foundation has published a research paper titled Regional Concentrations of Scientists and Engineers In the United States. The lead paragraph contains the sentence 'The three most populous states — California, Texas, and New York — together accounted for more than one-fourth of all S&E employment in the United States.' According to the 2010 census, however, those three states also contain more than one-fourth (26.5%) percent of the U.S. population. In other words, there is no concentration beyond how the general population is concentrated." The clustering is studied with finer granularity than the per-state level, though, and the paper names several places (like the Santa Clara area, and Houston) where such jobs are particularly prevalent.

11 of 79 comments (clear)

  1. Re:What is the point? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Knowing where the engineers cluster, and why, can help plan industries or plan job hunting. The clustering also strongly affects engineer salaries and competitive skills, and where to plan conferences of engineering or computer science. And fine granularity can be very helpful for start-up companies, advancing to mid-size companies, who need a larger pool of qualified employees as they move to larger offices.

    Conversely, knowing where the _managers_ like to work is important as well. I know competent engineers who literally can get nothing done because their managers call them in for 3 or 4 meetings on the same day, demanding status reports on the projects the engineers would be working on if they weren't in meetings. This is partly because they are in cramped offices where the managers can reach them too easily and keep trying to micromanage the engineers, asking "when will you have a fix for this" and recording it on Gant charts.

  2. Re:first ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yes, they live on Goat Island, in the middle of the Goat Sea.

  3. Re:What is the point? by rubycodez · · Score: 4, Funny

    stick around a few days and see the dupes of the worst

  4. Re:What is the point? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Informative

    Can someone please explain to me what the point of this is?

    The point is to give someone an excuse to post a link to the relevant xkcd.

  5. where the jobs are by confused+one · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Engineers cluster where the jobs are. So do most people. We're sort of past the question, which came first, the population or the jobs? Businesses build where they can acquire (1)people (2)space (3)economic benefits (4)access to transportation for goods. That describes most of the urban population centers (although #2 might require building in the suburbs).

    1. Re:where the jobs are by ebno-10db · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Businesses build where they can acquire (1)people (2)space (3)economic benefits (4)access to transportation for goods.

      You forgot #5: happenstance. The best explanation for why Silicon Valley is where it is, is that Bill Shockley's mother lived there. He could have started Shockley Semiconductor Laboratories almost anywhere he wanted, and either New Jersey or SoCal would have made more sense. Seattle became a big tech hub because Gates and Allen were from there, and they missed home more than they liked New Mexico.

    2. Re:where the jobs are by confused+one · · Score: 3, Insightful

      fair enough. I can't argue with that; although, there have been a number of analysis done which showed that without the support of people who happened to be living in the San Francisco bay area, and the liberal support of the University of California system, Silicon Valley could not have happened. Attempts to replicate it have failed due to a lack of the right people or lack of economic support.

  6. No No! - wrong way around! by crepe-boy · · Score: 5, Funny

    The obvious conclusion is that people tend to cluster around scientists and engineers - they follow us wherever we go. Fear our Pied Piper powers!

  7. Re: What is the point? by ebno-10db · · Score: 4, Insightful

    by this measure, DC, Maryland, and Virginia are a leading cluster

    It's called "pork". I frequently travel to the Rockville-Gaithersburg-Germantown corridor of Maryland on business, and I never fail to be amazed just how much STEM work is there, and in nearby areas, mostly sucking off the government teat. I know it extends well beyond STEM, but that's the part of it that's most visible to me. It's nice to know the rest of the country's tax dollars are going towards keeping the people there fat and happy, while most of the rest of the country limps along.

  8. Re:What is the point? by radarskiy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The summary says that there is no state-level clustering shown by the 3 most populous states, not that there is no clustering whatsoever. (I think the main implication is that these states are so large that they behave like they are more than one state.)

    Table 1 shows 4.1% of all workers across the country are in science and engineering, and the spread for NY, CA and TX is 3.6-4.9, so they're pretty close. However, there are other states that stray quite far from this, such as Mississippi at 1.7% to DC at 10.7%.

    The paper then goes on to suggest that there may be clustering at the municipal level or by field, but unfortunately does not show the "intensity" figures for those cases.

  9. Interactive map by webplay · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here is an interactive map showing where computer and mathematical occupations are overrepresented.