Foreign IT workers pour into the UK

ATSCo warns of shortfall in UK computer science graduates

Written by Guy Dixon

Organisations are exploiting the leaky visa system to import cheap labour from abroad

Ann Swain Chief executive, ATSCo

Foreign IT workers are entering the UK from outside the EU in record numbers to take up "mid-level roles", according to the Association of Technology Staffing Companies (ATSCo).

The number of non-EU IT professionals entering the UK has increased by 14 per cent in the past year.

The majority are classed as "intra-company transfers", where multinational organisations relocate workers between offices in different countries.

ATSCo, which obtained the figures from Work Permits UK, said that 38,450 UK work permits were issued to non-EU IT workers last year, compared to 33,756 in 2006.

Ann Swain, chief executive of ATSCo, claimed that the UK is witnessing a reversal of the trend toward off-shoring, and accused organisations of " exploiting the leaky visa system to import cheap labour from abroad".

"There was a fear that support functions would be the thin edge of the wedge and that mid-level IT roles would go offshore next, but what is happening is quite different," she said.

"Foreign IT workers are coming to the UK to take these mid-level roles."

Swain also warned that the influx of foreign workers could accelerate the decline in the number of computer science graduates from UK universities.

"Is it any wonder that so few students are choosing IT when entry-level jobs are being sent offshore and workers are being brought in from overseas for mid-level positions?" she said.

Further reading

Graduates bemused by low-tech offices

New generation wants IM and webcams, not phones and meetings   More...

GCHQ targets gamers for next-gen spies

The name's 008, gamerboy_fragclan_008   More...

BCS urges students to consider career in IT

Never too late, according to industry body   More...

UK IT industry facing skills crisis

Developing the Future report paints a mixed picture   More...

Related articles

Saudis build $10bn IT research centre

New university part of plans for the information economy   More...

Researchers warn of chip and Pin flaws

Popular retail machines vulnerable to attack   More...

vnunet.com analysis: OU tackles computer forensics

First course heavily over-subscribed   More...

Tech wages on the up

We've never had it so good, claims report   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

09 May 2008

2.51 MBWiMax muddle, Google tactics and asteroid bunkum More...

08 May 2008

3.26 MBBroadband Anywhere, phone-free transport and Web 3.0 More...

07 May 2008

3.19 MBUK success, a paucity of IT women and robot wars More...

Poll

DATA ENCRYPTION

DATA ENCRYPTION

Should encryption be mandatory for all personal data held by companies and governments?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

Ofcom

Ofcom outlines future wireless vision

Wi-Fi healthcare and intelligent car brakes in the pipeline   More...

HP

HP Labs opens doors to academia

Innovation Research Program invites proposals related to current research   More...

Advertisement

Asteroid

Nasa plans manned mission to asteroid

Bruce Willis thankfully not going   More...

MySpace

MySpace offers opt-in data sharing

Deals signed with Photobucket, Twitter, eBay and Yahoo   More...

Advertisement