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Non-Tech : Deflation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (105)6/16/2002 9:45:04 AM
From: Jon Koplik  Respond to of 621
 
Reuters story on pay for nurses (and ... everyone else).

June 15, 2002

Nurses Get Generous Job Offers

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The fat salaries and signing bonuses being thrown at
college graduates just a few years ago have all but disappeared -- unless you are a
nurse.

The San Jose Mercury News reported on Saturday that while many graduates seeking
work in business or high-tech are taking low-paying, low-skilled jobs and moving back
in with parents, those graduating from nursing school are being offered starting salaries
of up to $65,000 plus generous signing bonuses of as much as $5,000.

The report said hospitals remain one of the few work places grappling with a labor
shortage, as many other businesses have been forced to delay start dates for new
hires, or even rescind offers altogether.


The Mercury News is the hometown paper of Silicon Valley, the center of the high-tech
boom that just a few years ago was so hot that even inexperienced recent graduates
were able to negotiate hefty stock option packages and signing bonuses.

"The power has shifted to employers for the first time in a decade," the paper quoted
Irene Peck, a San Jose State University career consultant saying.


The report said other job sectors still seeing limited demand for new workers included
pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, computer security, government and other areas of
healthcare.

But it said many of those just entering the work force had to compete not only with
other recent graduates but with more experienced workers who are now unemployed.


Copyright © 2002 Reuters Limited.