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AeA's New
Cyberstates 2008 Report Shows the U.S.
High-Tech Industry Adds 91,400 Jobs in 2007
and Unemployment Rates are Below 2% Across
Many Tech Occupations

This 11th annual edition of AeA’s
flagship publication,
Cyberstates,
examines the high-technology industry in
all 50 states, the
District of Columbia,
and
Puerto Rico. It provides new 2007
national data on tech employment and
venture capital investments. It also
includes the latest data on high-tech
wages, establishments, payroll, and
research and development (R&D)
expenditures.
For the second consecutive year, we did
not include international trade data in
this report. A forthcoming AeA report
entitled Trade in the Cyberstates 2008
will highlight the importance of high-tech
trade to the nation, particularly
technology exports from all 50 states, the
District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.
The high-tech industry added jobs to the
U.S. economy for the third year in a row.
Tech industry employment totaled 5.9
million, after adding 91,400 jobs in 2007.
This is on top of job gains of 139,000 in
2006 and 87,400 in 2005.
This is the fourth straight year of
employment gains in the tech industry’s two
strongest sectors --- software services
(+82,600) and engineering and tech services
(+45,800). The downside is that
growth in these sectors was slower than
last year; and the other two tech sectors,
high-tech manufacturing and communications
services, both saw net employment losses in
2007.
Cyberstates 2008 relies on data
from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
At the national level, employment data are
available for 2007. State employment
and national and state wage, establishment,
and payroll data are for 2006.
Unfortunately, state specific data from BLS
lag by nine months. All data are the
most recent available at the time of
publication.
Forty-eight cyberstates experienced net
job growth in 2006. The largest gains
occurred in
California (+21,400),
Texas
(+13,700),
Virginia (+9,800),
New Jersey
(+8,500), and
New Mexico (+6,700). On
a percentage basis, New Mexico saw the
fastest job growth in 2006 at 16 percent.
Virginia continued to lead the nation
with the highest concentration of tech
workers, with 91 of every 1,000 private
sector workers employed in the tech
industry.
Massachusetts and
Colorado
had the next highest concentrations of tech
industry workers.
The high-tech industry employs highly
educated workers and pays them well --- 87
percent more than the average private
sector worker nationwide. Forty-seven
cyberstates had wage differentials higher
than 50 percent and four cyberstates had
differentials higher than 100 percent.
Venture capitalists invested nearly $17
billion in the tech industry in 2007, a six
percent rise over 2006. Technology
companies spent $75 billion on R&D in 2005,
the most recent year that data are
available, representing 37 percent of all
industrial R&D.
Although the U.S. tech industry
continues to add jobs, AeA is concerned
that future growth is being jeopardized
unless the United States prepares itself
for a vastly more competitive global
marketplace. In March 2007, AeA
released the report,
We Are Still Losing
the Competitive Advantage: Now Is the Time
To Act, building on a similar report we
released in 2005. Both reports warned
of an impending slide in U.S. global
competitiveness, caused by negligence on
the part of our political leaders to
adequately invest in scientific research,
improve our education system, and allow the
best and brightest from around the world to
work in the United States.
The tech industry has long demonstrated
its ability to drive the economy. But
it will continue to do so only if we as a
country address unprecedented global
competitiveness challenges as nations
around the world open their markets to
trade, embrace technology, and invest in
research and education.
If Americans are to compete in a global
economy that is knowledge-based and driven
by technology, the U.S. education system
needs to improve dramatically. Recent
international tests show that American
15-year-olds ranked 17th in science and
24th in math compared to their peers in
other developed countries. Skilled
workers are critical to the technology
industry, and the United States needs to
ensure that the American education system
from K-12 to our colleges and universities
produces enough scientists and engineers to
support an industry that is so crucial to
our economic prosperity.
Additionally, U.S. federal R&D funding
has faltered. Federal research
generated numerous technological
breakthroughs in the 20th century, from the
Internet to the MRI scanner to GPS --- to
name just a few. The tech industry’s
extraordinary success was built in large
part on R&D investments from 20 to 30 years
ago. But as a percentage of the
economy, federal investments in R&D have
declined from their peak in the mid-1980s.
Meanwhile, Congress has let the R&D tax
credit lapse, in effect, discouraging
companies from investing in future
innovation in the United States.
Other countries, including China, have more
attractive R&D tax credits, some even
permanent.
Lastly, we need to support high-skilled
immigration. Tech companies need to
be able to
recruit the best and the
brightest from around the world.
Given the poor state of our education
system and the lack of American kids
pursuing careers in science and
engineering, high-skilled immigration is a
critical safety valve for high-tech
companies. Half of all U.S. graduate
degrees in engineering go to foreign
nationals. Yet these people often
have to leave the country as soon as they
graduate because they can't get a visa to
stay. These talented individuals do
not come here and take American jobs; they
create thousands of jobs by developing
intellectual property, spawning innovation,
and founding companies.
AeA was proud to have been instrumental
in promoting legislation that became the
America Competes Act, which
overwhelmingly passed through Congress and
was signed into law in August 2007.
This Act addresses many of the issues
raised here. The bill only
authorized these measures, but no
funding was provided for this legislation.
We call on policymakers to fully fund the
America Competes Act in 2008.
Christopher W. Hansen
President and CEO
AeA, Advancing the Business of Technology
Chris Hansen,
President & CEO, AeA is interviewed on FOX
Business about Cyberstates 2008,
High-Skilled Visa Reform, STEM Education,
and U.S. Competitiveness on April 2.
Hansen asks Congress to fund the America
Competes Act.
(Watch
the "High-Tech is Hot" Video on www.foxbusiness.com)
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Senior China and U.S. Government
Officials Highlight 4th Annual Trade
Compliance Seminar in Shanghai |
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On
Thursday, March 20, AeA and SEMI
hosted the 4th Annual China Customs and
Export Controls Seminar in Shanghai.
The event was sponsored by AeA member
companies Cymer, QUALCOMM, Texas
Instruments, Matheson Tri-Gas, and
PricewaterhouseCoopers. The event was sold
out for the second year in a row and
attended by 175 customs and export
compliance professionals from Chinese
companies, U.S. subsidiaries, customers, and
supply chain partners.
Government speakers included:
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Madame Zhou Ruojing, Deputy Director-General,
Department of Electronic, Mechanic and High
Tech Industries, MOFCOM, Beijing;
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Bernie Kritzer, Director, Office of National
Security and Technology Transfer Controls,
Bureau of Industry and Security, U.S.
Department of Commerce, Washington, DC;
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Jeannette Chu, Export Control Attache,
USFCS, U.S. Embassy, Beijing;
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Wu Hua Ding,
Director, Shanghai Customs Legal Division;
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Zhou Hui, Director of Division; and
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Wang Xiao, Deputy Director, Shanghai
Entry-Exit Inspection and Quarantine
Bureau of the People’s Republic of China.
The program included four panels: China policy
and regulatory environment, United States
policy and regulatory environment, risk
management and internal controls for trade
compliance and Chinese customs compliance
and border issues. Industry speakers and
moderators represented:
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Applied Materials;
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Cymer;
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Larkin Trade International;
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SMIC;
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Tektronix;
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Ernst & Young; and
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PricewaterhouseCoopers.
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Rita Spencer-Rout,
Sr. Manager, Import/Export, Cymer and West
Coast Chair of the AeA Export Controls
Committee served as the 2008 seminar
chairperson. A detailed program agenda with
all topics and speakers and the event flyer
can be viewed on the following webpage.
For more information on the program contact
Ken Montgomery at
ken_montgomery@aeanet.org or to learn
more about all of AeA’s International
committees contact Rob Mulligan at
rob_mulligan@aeanet.org.
Rob Mulligan (bio)
Senior Vice President International

Ken Montgomery, Director,
International Trade Regulation, AeA;
and Ken Schramko, Manager, Public
Policy, SEMI; pictured at SEMICON
China 2008. |
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The sold
out event was attended by 175 customs
and export compliance professionals
from Chinese companies, U.S.
subsidiaries, customers and supply
chain partners. |
For more information on the International Issues affecting your company, visit:
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AeA
Pushes for Passage of Health IT
Legislation |
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AeA is
lobbying for passage of important health
information technology legislation that
will help speed the transition to and
deployment of electronic medical records.
Two bills,
the Promoting Health Information Technology
Act (H.R.
3800),
introduced by Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-CA) and
the Wired for Health Care Quality Act (S.
1693),
introduced by Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-MA) and
Sen. Mike Enzi (R-WY) are currently being
considered by both houses of Congress.
This
legislation promotes the growth of
Health IT
by improving
interoperability and creating federal
standards by:
- Codifying
the National Coordinator of Health IT;
- Providing
grants to eligible entities to purchase
qualified Health IT systems; and
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Prohibiting federal agencies from
purchasing Health IT systems that are not
interoperable with federally adopted
standards.
AeA and its
member companies believe that the
development of Health IT is a crucial
component in
upgrading America’s healthcare system, in
reducing costs, and in improving overall
medical care.
AeA believes
that the adoption of Health IT is critical
to achieving our country's larger health
care reform goals of expanding access and
controlling costs. Today, over 130
million Americans receive health care from
their employers, who spent $537 billion in
2006. Health care costs for employers
have risen 78% since 2000. Unless
costs are controlled, fewer employers will
be able to afford to offer coverage, and
access will erode. Increased
utilization of healthcare IT can improve
quality and safety, but do so with greater
efficiency and help achieve a more
sustainable rate of growth in health care
spending.
According to
the RAND Corporation, electronic medical
records could save the United States at
least $162 billion and potentially as much
as $346 billion annually. In addition
to the financial saving, Health IT has
proven to help reduce medical errors,
increase life expectancy, and reduce
patient wait time.
Stay tuned
for developments and updates on this
legislation.
John
Palafoutas (bio)
Senior Vice President for Domestic
Policy & Congressional Affairs

AeA's Health IT
Steering Committee meet to plan the
national roll-out of the initiative
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AeA’s New and Improved State
Government Affairs (SGA) Program
Sees Early Success |
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It has been
less than a month since AeA’s President &
CEO, Chris Hansen,
unveiled the
Association’s new and expanded State
Government Affairs (SGA) Program and we
have already seen some terrific successes
across the country. Under the new structure,
AeA is investing greater resources and
efforts into creating a member driven,
transparent policy-making process.
The new
process is driven by an internal network of
regional policy directors who are the eyes
and ears for AeA across all 50 states. The
regional policy directors rely on policy
issue managers to assist with policy
development – these managers’ work directly
with membership committees to review and
discuss legislation and to ensure that AeA
is consistent in communicating the
Association’s policy positions throughout
the state legislatures.
As a result
of our new structure and process, AeA
members have been better represented
throughout the country. In our first 30
days we have submitted letters, hired
contract lobbyists, and flown AeA staff to
work on various pieces of priority
legislation that impact all aspects of the
high-tech industry in several states
including:
- Alaska;
- Arizona;
- California;
- Colorado;
- Connecticut;
- Florida;
- Illinois;
-
Iowa;
-
Maryland;
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Nebraska;
- New
Jersey;
- New
York;
-
Oklahoma;
-
Oregon;
-
Rhode Island;
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Texas;
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Washington; and
-
Wisconsin.
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As you know,
Chris Hansen’s goal is to ensure that all
of our member companies are more broadly
represented through our extended coverage
throughout state Capitols across the U.S.
to ensure that the issues that are of most
importance to high tech are identified and
responded to irrespective of where they are
being proposed. If there are ways in which
I, or the rest of the State Government
Affairs Staff, can be of assistance please let us
know!

California ||
Northeast ||
Northwest ||
Southeast ||
Southern ||
Midwest
Roxanne
Gould
(bio)
Senior Vice
President, State Government Affairs
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California CIO Visits Google,
Microsoft, Sun, and Symantec's
Silicon Valley Offices on AeA Tour |
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On March 25,
several AeA member companies sponsored an
all-day tour of
Silicon Valley
for Teri Takai, California's State Chief
Information Officer (CIO), and her staff:
Christy Quinlan, Chief Deputy Director;
Bill Maile, Communications Director; and
Regina Evans, Deputy Director from the
Office of the Governor. The day consisted
of visits to the offices of Google,
Microsoft, Sun, and Symantec. It was a great day full
of information sharing.
The
following are the bulleted highlights from
the tour, which included comments by Teri
Takai:
- Security
is a top priority for the Office of the
CIO.
- EPA is
the agency with the biggest risk.
- Takai
wants to build consumer confidence. She
wants to report the IT successes in CA.
There is too much emphasis on the IT
failures and not enough on the projects
which succeed.
- There
will be more IT standards in CA, but they
may not be adopted by all agencies.
- Strategic
Sourcing Contracts (a current contracting
vehicle in CA with the Department of
General Services) are the way to go.
Top four
steps to be taken:
- Network
strategy needs to be in place.
- State
agencies currently have firewalls to
protect each agencies from other state
agencies – remedy needed.
- Identity
management must be addressed.
- Need to
address the concerns of the Office of
Information Security from an enterprise
perspective.
Other
comments included:
- The
Governor supports information technology
and we must use IT to make his vision a
reality.
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California needs to improve the way in
which we use technology.
- With
regard to California’s Green initiatives,
Teri will follow the model and the
efforts will begin with the data center
infrastructure. Her vision is for a
state-of-the-art data center. With regard
to going paperless, her office will have
to first determine where all of the
records reside, then work on disaster
recovery procedures. Paperless will come
later.
- Ms. Takai
thanked the vendor community for reaching
out to her and visiting her.
Challenges
that Takai referenced to accomplish these
goals include:
- Working
around the bureaucracy.
- Getting
people together to help with compliance
efforts.
- Agency
cultural barriers.
While at
Microsoft, Ms. Takai also spoke to a group of 70 teenage girls
from around the state (called DigiGirlz)
about a career in technology.
Microsoft sponsors DigiGirlz groups across
the nation in an effort to encourage female
students to go into the technology fields
as career options.
Roxanne
Gould
(bio)
Senior Vice
President, State Government Affairs

Ross
LaJeunesse, State Policy Counsel,
Google; Teri Takai, CA CIO; and John
Burchett, State and Local Government
Affairs, Google (L-R). |
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Ingrid
Hoff, West Region Director, State and
Local Government, Microsoft; Teri
Takai, CA CIO; Gail Thomas-Flynn,
General Manager, State and Local
Government, Microsoft (L-R).
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Mavis
Toscano, Senior Manager State and
Local Government Affairs, Sun; Regina
Evans, Deputy Secretary, Office of
the Governor; Christy Quinlan, Chief
Deputy Director, Office of the CIO;
Teri Takai, CA CIO; Mike Whalen,
State and Local Government Sales,
Sun; and Bill Maile, Communications
Director, Office of the CIO (L-R). |
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David
Thompson, Group President, I.T.
Services Group, Symantec; Teri Takai,
CA CIO; Neils Johnson, Senior
Manager, Executive Briefing Center,
Symantec; Denise Pearl, US Field
Sales, Public Sector, Symantec; and
David Blevins, Regional Manager,
Enterprise Sales, Symantec (L-R). |
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Download AeA Partner
Onvia's 2008
Government Procurement
Outlook Report for Free
AeA's
Government and
Commercial Markets Group
is excited to offer AeA
members a complimentary
download of "The 2008
Government Procurement
Outlook" report,
developed by AeA's
Government Business
Intelligence partner
Onvia, Inc.
Find out today how
purchasing agents
believe 2008 spending
will shake out, and start
thinking about how you
might adjust business
plans accordingly.
Get results of a January
2008 survey to more than
1,400 government
purchasing officials.

Survey Highlights:
-
80% of respondents
across local, state, and
educational entities
expect to maintain or
increase spending
activity in 2008
-
Government
infrastructure spending
should continue to
compensate for the
residential construction
downturn. Overall, 41%
of agencies plan to
increase spending
activity on
infrastructure in 2008.
-
School districts
responding to the survey
are preparing for the
largest year-over-year
spending increase
compared to other
segments, while
municipal governments
facing revenue
shortfalls say they will
spend more cautiously
than other segments.
Get the news straight
from Onvia, the leader
in government
procurement market
intelligence.
Since 2001, Onvia has
helped companies plan,
market, and sell using
real-time actionable
sales opportunities.
Download the Free Report
For more
information on becoming
involved in AeA's
Government & Commercial
Markets group contact
Goldy Kamali at 202.682.4432.
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AeA is pleased to
announce a
new member benefit that
provides free IT training to
companies with employees working
in California. This training is
now available through AeA's
contract with the State of
California ETP (Employment
Training Panel). The course tracks
offered are all online
instructor-led, so you will get an
in-depth understanding of the
course curriculum. Additionally,
the classes prepare you and your
employees for certification
examinations. This means you are
able to directly offer career
development options for yourself
and your staff while strengthening
your IT infrastructure.
AeA's
Cyberstates 2008 report shows
that California continues to
rebound from the bubble bursting.
The state gained 21,400 high-tech
workers between 2005 and 2006 (the
most current state data
available), but AeA member
companies continue to struggle in
finding high- and specialized-
skilled employees to fill the
thousands of vacant job
opportunities that exist today.
California's overall unemployment
rate was 5.4% in 2007, but just
looking at technology specific
jobs AeA's report shows nationally
many tech occupations have
unemployment below 2%. In
economics terms, this is full
employment. AeA's new IT training
program -- in partnership with
Saisoft -- offers the opportunity
to improve California's existing
technology workforce and fill
these jobs so our companies can
become more competitive.
For more
information on this free program,
visit
www.aeanet.org/ETPtraining. |
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