Press releaseMonday 08 January 2007
BOOM IN FINANCIAL SERVICES SECTOR DRIVING DEMAND FOR IT
CONTRACTORS
Contractors believe financial services will provide most job opportunities
for 2007
Confidence in public sector opportunities is waning
The booming financial services sector will once again dominate demand for IT
contractors in 2007, according to the latest research from giant group
plc, the contractor services provider. 25% of IT contractors now work within
financial services, the highest percentage since the giant group survey
began in 2003.
The survey, with over 2,500 respondees, reveals that almost a third (30%) of
IT contractors believe that the financial services sector will provide the most
career prospects this year, up from 28% the same time last year.
Matthew Brown, Managing Director, giant group, comments: "The
continuing boom in M&A activity and increased transaction volumes is leading
to higher demand for IT contractors within investment banks and hedge funds.
Investment in IT systems is focussed on cutting the cost of each transaction,
thereby enhancing competitive advantage."
"Data security also remains a major spending priority in the City, as is
compliance, and the introduction of the Markets in Financial Instruments
Directive this year will require a significant further outlay on IT
systems."
The survey also confirms that the number of IT contractors employed on public
sector IT projects has fallen by 3% since the end of 2005 and that contractors’
confidence in the ability of the public sector to create IT jobs is declining.
Just 20% of contractors believe that the public sector will offer the most
opportunities in 2007, down by 1% from last year.
Matthew Brown says: "There have been a number of high profile glitches with
Government IT systems in recent months and spending taxpayers’ money on IT is
becoming a much more politically sensitive issue. Contractors are also well
aware that the e-government programme is now complete, and with most public
services available online, the demand for IT professionals has moderated."
The Government recently announced it has abandoned plans to develop a massive
database to run a National Identity Register, following on from its early
decision to significantly scale back plans to establish a central NHS database.
Ongoing reports of teething problems with Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs
e-filing system have also attracted negative publicity.
back
next