HOME
- Latest news
- This month's magazine
- Jason Stamper's blog
- Steve's gadget blog
- Internet blog
- Open source blog
- CIO agenda blog
- Newsletter sign-up
Network Sites
- App Dev & SOA
- Business Intelligence
- Content & Data Mgmt
- Desktops
- eCommerce
- Enterprise Applications
- Green IT
- IT Services
- Malware
- Micro Electronics
- Middleware
- Midmarket IT
- Mobility
- Networking
- New Media & Search
- Open Source
- Operating Systems
- Outsourcing and BPO
- Security
- Servers
- Service Management
- Storage
- Telecoms
- The Boardroom
- Unified Comms
- Virtualisation
Resources
Intelligence Store
About Us
CIO Agenda
- Hasso Plattner admits SAP needs to build customer trust
- SAP chief quits suddenly
- Twitter faces "Big Brother" test
- Pressure builds on IT public-sector jobs
- Quality Assurance: too little, too late
- Cyber-criminals choose easy route to your data - through employees
- Social networking and HMRC security scams claim victims
- Twitter phishing attack highlights flaws of passwords
- Microsoft admits IE flaw caused Google hack
Pressure builds on IT public-sector jobs
February 4, 2010
By Janine Milne
We may officially be out of recession - though a growth rate of 0.1% hardly seems much to crow about - but there's little to cheer about in government IT recruitment.
Local authority spending on IT staff will plummet by 10% this year as budgets have the life squeezed out of them, according to the Society of Information Technology Management (Socitim). And that's regardless of which party wins the next election.
This contrasts with the findings of the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) and KPMG which found that permanent placements overall grew last month. December's figures had proved to be even more buoyant.
KPMG's Bernard Brown commented that while this showed confidence had returned to the private sector, the "starting gun" had only just been fired for the public sector and that the impact of the recession would be felt there for the next 12 to 18 months.