Pandemic Fallout: US Tech Sector Sheds Record Number of Jobs in April, CompTIA Analysis Reveals

111,900 jobs lost as the national unemployment rate hits 14.7%

The U.S. information technology sector suffered historic job losses in April as the nation’s unemployment rate reached a level not seen since the Great Depression, according to CompTIA, the leading trade association for the global IT industry.

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The loss of 111,900 tech sector jobs represents the largest monthly contraction in the industry’s history, according to CompTIA’s analysis of employment data released today by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics #JobsReport The previous low point occurred during June 2001 when 62,800 positions were eliminated.

“Job losses of this magnitude are undoubtedly alarming,” said Tim Herbert, executive vice president for research and market intelligence at CompTIA. “The job posting data and occupation data for technology professionals working across every industry sector provides a degree of reassurance, although given the highly unpredictable situation, it will continue to be wait and see.”

The second component of tech employment, IT occupations, showed an increase of 82,000 in April.1 The IT occupation figure should be viewed as directional because it is subject to much more volatility than the monthly employment data reported to the BLS by employers.

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No major industry sector was spared from business shutdowns, furloughs and layoffs brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic. Total nonfarm payroll employment fell by 20.5 million in April, with restaurants (-5,491,300), retailers (-2,106,900), healthcare (-1,436,300), government (-980,000), and construction (-975,000) the hardest hit.

Employment in the IT services, custom software development and computer systems design category took the biggest hit, eliminating an estimated 93,200 jobs last month.

Layoffs also occurred in computer and electronic products manufacturing (- 9,600), data processing, hosting and related services (- 6,500) and telecommunications (- 3,100). The only employment category to add jobs in April was other information services (+ 500).

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CompTIACOVID-19HR TechnologyJobsReportmarket intelligenceNEWSTECHNOLOGY
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