Contractor calculator market report - October 2007

IR35 Test
  • IT holds steady in September despite financial services turmoil
  • Construction is up 12% over last month
  • Engineering, electronics, hold steady
  • UK economy shrugs off Northern Rock fuss

Despite a major bank failure, bad numbers from some of the other international banks, and the tail-end of the subprime crisis, demand for contractors held steady throughout the month of September, according to the Colchester, Essex-based job board Jobserve.

Demand Is Steady

''Despite all the turmoil in financial services, with Northern Rock on the ropes and all the rest, demand for IT contractors held steady throughout the month of September,'' says Karen McDermott, head of marketing at Jobserve.

Again, construction performed strongly on Jobserve, with the number of jobs published in September rising by 12% compared to last month and year-on-year the figures were even more impressive, at over 140%. The number of Engineering, IT and Electronics jobs published on our site held steady, McDermott says. Clearly demand from the Olympic project is driving the contract offer, but along with it is considerable demand for private sector construction projects which had been expected to start up this autumn. Engineers are profiting from both of these factors as well as construction contractors.

Despite all the turmoil in financial services with Northern Rock on the ropes and all the rest demand for IT contractors held steady throughout the month of September

Karen McDermott-Jobserve

Mid-Level is Being Outsourced

One trend continues manifest. Higher level contracts are staying in the UK, but an increasing number of mid-level contracts are moving offshore. Jon Butterfield, the managing director of the London-based consultancy ReThink, said such statistics, along side anecdotal information from their customers, shows outsourcing is shrinking the UK market for mid-level IT work. Noting that the thousand placements they make a year were shifting to higher-level work, Butterfield asked his customer base. "We placed many more people in higher-end jobs this year. The lower end jobs seemed to be disappearing," he said. "We asked our customers, and majority said they were outsourced."

The firm said this shows that a global division of labour is happening, with the UK taking on higher-level work, while developing countries focus on more technical areas. Statistics from the IT consultancy Jobstats back up the trend (the site looks at the percentage of advertisements for jobs):

Finance Still Highest Payer

  • Finance is still the highest paid speciality but demand has fallen to about 25%
  • Demand for management jobs is up 41.4% at an average rate offered of 41 pound per hour
  • Demand for support jobs is down to 25% at an average rate offered of 37 pound per hour
  • Design is holding at 28.1% with an average rate offered of 39 pound

Skills Shortage Dominates Market

But while these contracts leave the UK, the demand for specific IT skills continues to outpace supply of skilled staff. As McDermott points out, some jobs may leave the country, but in the big-demand skill areas, need continues to grow regardless of economic conditions.

The number of graduates in IT continues to decline, and those who do graduate may not have the right skills. ''The UK's IT industry has its own particular pressures - from a general falling off of numbers of students enrolling on tech courses, to a shifting playing field of priorities. IT systems are increasingly important to almost every aspect of a business, which means greater complexity in administering, maintaining and scaling such systems. This does not sit easily with an academic teaching philosophy designed to cover 'fundamentals','' says Rob Chapman, CEO of the IT training consultancy Firebrand Training.

The number of graduates in IT continues to decline

Rob Chapman-Firebrand Training

Says Alex Charles, product director and founder of the London-based research firm SkillsMarket: ''The continuing skills shortage in the UK will fuel contractor demand regardless of economic conditions. Companies need IT to compete, and there is harsh need for people who have the skills to provide the technology.''

UK Growth Despite Northern Rock

But will demand slow after the Nothern Rock crisis and the accompanying fallout? Gordan Brown has been insisting that it won't (but he's also close to calling an election before the feared slowdown occurs).

A look at the numbers is more intelligent. The OECD is predicting a possible slowdown in the UK economy, but not if the Bank of England cuts interest rates. That is a most likely occurrence. With interest rate cuts, consumer spending almost invariably rises in the UK, as the OECD points out, and that will take up the slack left by the banks and their subprime problems (most of which will be digested in a quarter or so).

Employment numbers confirm the OECD outlook. The BERR points out that the UK labour market is in a strong position. It cites the following:

  • 29.1 million people were in work in May to July, the highest figure on record
  • The employment rate is 74.4%, up on the quarter (0.1 points) but down on the year (0.2 points
  • Vacancies remain very high at 663 thousand and redundancies are very low

What this means is that the machine keeps grinding on in the UK. At least for now, contractors need not hunt too far for job offers, and that will not change in the near future.

Published: Wednesday, October 03, 2007

© 2012 All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. Please see our copyright notice. If you want to use any content you have seen on this site then please request our media pack and ask for details of our Content Licencing Service.

Technical-E


Readers Comments...


  
Bookmark and Share
  
     
  

Latest Site Updates

Project management contractor does it ‘by the book’, literally, to win first contract Project management contractor does it ‘by the book’, literally, to win first contract

Project management contractor Ken Burrell won his first contract, and just secured his first renewal, by acquiring & applying new contracting skills.

ContractorCalculator Market Report February 2012 ContractorCalculator Market Report February 2012

Contractors received a PR boost in Davos and have a target rich contract market if they can pick the winning sectors of the UK’s two-speed economy.

Plenty of rules for us; no rules for them Plenty of rules for us; no rules for them

Contractors could be forgiven for assuming HMRC only targets the public over tax avoidance, while the political elite are left to get on with it.

IR35, tax avoidance and Ed Lester: a potent mix threatening contractors’ livelihoods IR35, tax avoidance and Ed Lester: a potent mix threatening contractors’ livelihoods

Contractors are right to be worried by interim management contractor Ed Lester’s trial by media, because an unjustified backlash might be the result.


  
  

Twitter

  • HMRC extends anti-avoidance campaigns to construction trades and traders using new online search technology http://t.co/walUSlzX

    7 hours ago

  • Project management contractor does it ‘by the book’, literally, to win first contract http://t.co/8H4wfIhk

    15 hours ago

  • Contractor demand increased in January but billings down - a mismatch of demand and supply? REC/KPMG Report on Jobs http://t.co/E4npw1Q3

    15 hours ago

  • Contractor Newsletter, Issue 62: February 2012 http://t.co/SxRdnKm1

    Tue, 07 Feb 2012

  • It sounds glib, but a good start in reducing govt's gob-smacking costs (http://t.co/tzOGMPa1) would be to invest in pro interims/contractors

    Tue, 07 Feb 2012

  • £10.9bn of unpaid tax written off by government; Treasury failed to spot worrying trends http://t.co/7PKjoXVe via @NewStatesman

    Tue, 07 Feb 2012

Follow Us On Twitter


  
     

  
  

Contractor solutions

Contractors Handbook AM Limited ContractorCalculator Marketplace InniAccounts AWR Whitepaper IR35 Test
  
Contractor accountants - pricing checklist Contract jobs board
  

Contractor solutions

Contractors Handbook

The expert guide for UK contractors and freelancers

Bedouin Group

No more IR35. Retain up to 85% of your earnings.

Parasol Group

Umbrella or Limited? Guidance on best options, and take home pay.

InTouch Accounting

Person to person contractor accountant. £85 pcm. Free IR35 review

Choice Premier Pay+

Take home up to 85% of your pay. IR35 solution.

NA D J Colom Accountants Bedouin Group Contractor Financials NewsNow
  
Contractors Handbook

  

The UK's leading contractor site. Independently audited traffic (ABC) – 133,141 monthly unique visitors.