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Archive for the ‘Barack Obama’ Category

Put More IT Spending in Stimulus Plans???

Posted by Laura on March 26, 2009

Governments should include more information and communication technology investments in their economic stimulus plans, according to an advisor to President Barack Obama’s transition team. But governments must also move quickly to realize the desired short-run stimulus effects of these investments.

“ICT has larger economic impacts than other kinds of investment areas in the economy,” said Robert Atkinson, the founder and president of the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation, in a telephone interview. ITIF is a think tank in Washington, D.C., that advised Obama’s transition team on the economic impact of new technology investments.

Atkinson said technology investments were largely responsible for U.S. productivity gains over the last decade, and further investments in this area will bring more. The same benefits can be realized by other countries, including developing countries, that invest in technology infrastructure, he said.

“If you invest in ICT infrastructure in an economic downturn, you not only get better short-term job creation effects but you get better long-term productivity impacts,” Atkinson said. “Why not do that instead of giving people a tax credit or something like that to go spend on t-shirts.”

The U.S. government’s stimulus plan allocated significant funds for technology investments, such as US$7.2 billion for building broadband networks, but Atkinson said it could have done even more. “The market could have absorbed at least $15 billion,” he said.

With many countries already mired in recession, the window is closing for stimulus packages to have an impact. Governments must move quickly, Atkinson said.

“You want these projects to hit the ground running over the next 18 months, and ideally sooner than that,” he said.

The key to understanding why economists believe stimulus plans should take effect as quickly as possible lies in the basic differences between Classical and Keynesian economic models.

In the Classical model, government spending does not affect the labor market, which determines output. This model is based on the assumption that wages and prices react quickly to keep labor markets in equilibrium. It also assumes that periods of higher unemployment are caused by a mismatch between the skills workers have and the skills that companies demand.

In Keynesian economics, a model that was born largely out of efforts to explain the causes of the Great Depression, there are times when prices and wages don’t change quickly enough, resulting in higher unemployment. In this model, increased government spending raises economic output while also increasing expected real interest rates. This is where a stimulus package can help boost the economy.

These two models aren’t mutually exclusive. The Classical model is often seen as a description of how economies work over the long run, while Keynesian economics explains short-run changes in an economy over periods of approximately 18 months.

If governments take too long to put economic stimulus plans in place, they run the risk of missing this window of opportunity to spur output. If that happens, the result is an increased budget deficit and, eventually, higher taxes without the short-run gains in economic output. But there would still be some lasting economic benefit from investments in technology.

“If you make these investments and you make them right you can certainly have long-run economic impacts, which can be very sizable,” Atkinson said.

word.. Source is www.cio.com

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DC & New York – Magnet for Tech Jobs

Posted by Laura on March 12, 2009

Washington, D.C., and the New York metro region are the best places to look for IT jobs, outdistancing Silicon Valley and other tech-heavy regions, according to the Dice Report which tracks IT hiring trends.

D.C. is a very strong market, in part because the Obama administration is moving forward on transparency and relying on tech-heavy programs to help push the economic recovery forward. There are 50,000 job postings every day in the region, according to Dice. New York remains a strong market to get a job even though demand is off 44 percent because of the economic meltdown on Wall Street. Dice still clocks more than 5,000 open positions on any given day.

Tom Silver, Dice’s executive vice president, told eWeek that both Washington, D.C., and the New York metropolitan area are “major technology job centers.” And a security clearance is like gold in the nation’s capital, he said. “The stability of budgets in both government agencies and the contractors that serve the federal government is most likely the key differentiator versus other parts of the country,” Silver said.

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Obama Administration – New IT Opportunities

Posted by Laura on January 23, 2009

is being encouraged to spend $30 million in three areas.   Health Care IT, Broadband Networking & Green Power Grid…

obama

He has repeatedly discussed the nation’s crumbling roads, bridges & schools.  In addition to heavy machinery and lots of concrete and steel, these projects will need project managers, civil engineers, computer aided drafting specialists and other experts who know how to use technology to help out with the heavy workload. 

Modernization of the health care system will be another major initiative with a primary focus on getting medical records into centralized electronic files.  Still in the beginning phases, there will be plenty of money directed at making this happen to analyze online patient data from one facility to another and help cut the high cost of care.

Another focus is the financial market.  Obama is calling for great oversight of these markets and that requires accountants, internal auditors, tax accountants and IT personnel who know how to follow the money electronically.

Besides new jobs opening up what can this mean for you?   Try to check out and learn about technologies that include virtulization, Green IT, Broadband Networking, Open Source, Thin Clients, Cloud Computing and Video Conferencing.

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More then 300 Federal IT Jobs Available

Posted by Laura on November 20, 2008

jobPresident-elect Barack Obama proposed a major IT agenda during his campaign, and this will require many new skilled federal hires, as well as new technology projects and investments. The Plum Book, which lists presidential appointments within the federal government, includes more than 300 technology positions. Topping the list are 21 chief information officers, four chief technology officer positions and four positions dealing with information security.

The Defense Department listed the most available technology jobs, with nearly 50 openings. Down the road, federal job prospects for IT professionals may be even greater as a large number of Baby Boomer federal workers reach retirement age and leave the government.

 

For more tips on the job hut:
- check out this nextgov.com article

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