Tech grads get higher salary offers, but existing workers may face job perils

Survey: Average pay for computer science graduates is at highest level in seven years

Computer science graduates and other students leaving college with IT skills appear to be in demand: Starting salary offers are up, according to a recent report, and university officials say that IT recruiters are crowding campuses.

But if you're a high-tech worker in the middle of your career, the job outlook may be less certain, as cutbacks continue at some of the top IT vendors.

Recruiters "are on college campuses constantly looking for people," said Emanuel Contomanolis, associate vice president of co-op and career services at the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) in New York. And it isn't just vendors doing the recruiting, he said, pointing to increasing interest in tech grads among companies in certain vertical industries.

For instance, Contomanolis said that financial services firms, which typically had been focusing their college hiring efforts on students with financial-related degrees, are now aggressively hiring graduates with IT skills. That's because the companies have realized that technology capabilities "are going to be critical to how they differentiate themselves in the market," he added.

The heightened interest is borne out by survey data collected by the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE), which last month said that computer science graduates have been offered an average salary of $53,051 this year, up 4.5% from last year's level. Contomanolis is present-elect of Bethlehem, Pa.-based NACE, which also said that this year's graduates with management information systems degrees have received an average starting salary offer of $47,407, up 4.7% year to year.

The salaries being offered to computer science graduates from the class of 2007 are the highest reported to NACE in the past seven years. The next-highest salary level was recorded in 2001, when graduates were offered an average of $52,473. The low point was in 2003, when the average salary offer dropped to $47,109, according to NACE.

The fact that recruiters now have a smaller pool of computer science students to choose from may be contributing to the increased salary offers. For instance, according to the Computing Research Association (CRA), the 170 institutions in North America that grant computer science degrees up to the Ph.D. level reported a total of 10,206 bachelor's-degree graduates for the academic year that ended in the spring of 2006 -- the most recent one for which data is available. That was down by nearly one-third from the level at the start of this decade, when there were more than 14,000 graduates annually.

"The drop isn't over yet," said Jay Vegso, a CRA staff member who authored a report on the number of graduates for the Washington-based group. Vegso also looks at enrollment trend data, and he said he expects the decline in computer science graduates to continue for another two years -- or perhaps stabilize at best.

The most-cited reason for the decline is the dot-com bust; the students who graduated last spring would have enrolled when the high-tech downturn was at about its worst point. But the movement of tech jobs to lower-wage countries, is also seen as a factor.

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