Minority Employment Growing in Tech Industry, but Women Lag, Report Says
“Tech jobs are creating significant opportunities for non-Asian minorities,” but not women, said a Progressive Policy Institute report by PPI Chief Economic Strategist Michael Mandel and Economist Diana Carew. The report, released Thursday, said from 2009 to 2014 the number of blacks with a college degree employed in the tech industry grew faster than in healthcare. Employment in computer and mathematical occupations rose by 79,000 jobs compared with 76,000 in health care for blacks, a PPI news release said. Hispanics working in healthcare outnumbered those in tech industries, with 104,000 jobs vs. 81,000, but the report’s authors still said it was a significant increase. Women have only 26 percent of college-educated tech jobs, which the report’s authors said isn't an equal share. “Too few science-minded women are pursuing degrees in computer and information science (CIS), choosing instead to study healthcare," the release said. “Policies at the federal, state and local level must encourage more women and minorities to pursue tech careers,” it said. “It is imperative that our nation's higher education system heed labor market signals by providing more pathways into tech jobs,” Carew said.