Source: http://techcrunch.com/2010/08/28/silicon-valley’s-dark-secret-it’s-all-about-age/An interesting paradox in the technology world is that there is both a shortage and a surplus of engineers in the United States. Talk to those working at any Silicon Valley company, and they will tell you how hard it is to find qualified talent. But listen to the heart-wrenching stories of unemployed engineers, and you will realize that there are tens of thousands who canât get jobs. What gives?
The harsh reality is that in the tech world, companies prefer to hire young, inexperienced, engineers.
And engineering is an âup or outâ profession: you either move up the ladder or face unemployment. This is not something that tech executives publicly admit, because they fear being sued for age discrimination, but everyone knows that this is the way things are. Why would any company hire a computer programmer with the wrong skills for a salary of $150,000, when it can hire a fresh graduateâwith no skillsâfor around $60,000? Even if it spends a month training the younger worker, the company is still far ahead. The young understand new technologies better than the old do, and are like a clean slate: they will rapidly learn the latest coding methods and techniques, and they donât carry any âtechnology baggageâ. As well, the older worker likely has a family and needs to leave by 6 pm, whereas the young can pull all-nighters.
At least, thatâs how the thinking goes in the tech industry.
Is this true???