
Is it a threat to your job?
Published: 21 August 2007 09:56 BST
Offshoring is viewed with increasing ambivalence in the IT industry, according to the exclusive silicon.com 2007 Skills Survey.
A third of respondents to the survey agree or strongly agree with the statement 'I feel that offshoring is a threat to my current job' - a very slight increase on last year's result when 32 per cent feared their job could be sent abroad. At the same time, the number of people who don't view offshoring as a threat dropped to 41 per cent, from 44 per cent last year.
The proportion who aren't sure whether offshoring is a threat stands at 23 per cent - a rise of six percentage points on 2004's figure, suggesting increasing ambivalence about the impact offshoring is having on UK tech jobs.
A recent report by not-for-profit research organisation, The Work Foundation, found little direct evidence of significant job migration due to offshoring in Europe, yet public opinion often runs counter to that.
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A recent silicon.com Reader Comment typifies the fears generated by offshoring. Discussing the issue, reader Karen Challinor wrote: "If this [offshoring] keeps up we won't have an IT industry in this country as the only people working in IT will be non-technically literate managers."
However, according to The Work Foundation report: "Indian business insiders see future offshore outsourcing as an advantage for Europe enabling it to focus on the 'thinking part of the job', providing opportunities for 'better jobs' and 'knowledge work' in Europe."
When it comes to specific job roles, rank-and-file IT workers have the biggest fears about offshoring. More than two-fifths of software/web developers responding to the silicon.com Skills Survey agree or strongly agree offshoring is a threat to them, while two-fifths of IT pros feel the same way. This compares to less than a third of CIOs, and just over a third of board-level executives and IT managers.
Nearly two-thirds (63 per cent) of survey respondents agree or strongly agree that IT jobs that involve business skills are less likely to be offshored than jobs which involve only technical skills.
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