Cloud Computing: Job Creator

At SIIA we aren’t shy about touting cloud computing’s economic potential. We’ve highlighted it in a whitepaper for policy makers, showcased it in a collection of interviews from 45 member CEOs, and we plug it in the media every chance we get.

David LeDuc, our senior director of public policy, was happy to broach one of his favorite topics in a National Journal article by Sara Jerome called “Silver Lining” (print or online subscription only). The story explores the cloud’s effect on the job market: Will it help fuel a cross-sector entrepreneurial boom, or will it just lead to the end of the in-house IT manager?

Jerome’s article cites a British think tank’s study that predicts cloud computing will create 2.4 million jobs over the next four years in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. Though no similar research has been done in the United States, LeDuc says the gains should be even greater for the United States.

“The massive computing infrastructure in the United States gives us an edge,” LeDuc says.

The article goes on to say that “unemployment for IT professions was just 5 percent in September, far less than the national average,” and cites a Microsoft study that says 54 percent of IT decision makers are “hiring as a result of the cloud.”

With the national unemployment rate stagnant at 9.1%, areas of growth like cloud computing should be given the tools they need to thrive. Read our whitepaper or check out some of the research we’ve compiled to learn more.


Laura Greenback is Communications Director at SIIA.

App Platforms and Developers Create Jobs

Some commentators such as Tyler Cowen opine that social networks and other elements of the online ecosystem are good for mental stimulation and consumer benefits, but not for job creation or economic growth.  Cowen reported that despite having 700 million active users, Facebook had only 1,700 people working for it as of 2010

But Cowen’s conclusion is wrong. For one thing, employment at Facebook is growing very fast – it’s over 2,000 now in 2011. But its importance to the economy, job creation and growth is a function not just of the people it actually employs, but also of the economic activity it makes possible.  A recent study, for example, finds that Facebook generates more than 53,000 jobs at companies that provide apps for Facebook.  A major app developer like Zynga is one source of these jobs, but there are hundreds of other smaller app developers whose employees are focused on providing entertaining and productive apps for the Facebook platform.

But the economic effect doesn’t stop there.  Companies that supply the app developers also create more jobs and those employed at app developers create more jobs through the increase consumer demand that their own spending generates.   Using a standard estimate of these multiplier effects, the Facebook app platform creates as many as 182,000 jobs in other sectors of the economy.  Overall, the Facebook app economy generated as many as 235,000 jobs.  The wages and salaries associated with these jobs amounted to $15.7 billion.

Not bad for Facebook.  But the platforms for apps provided by Google and Apple and RIM also generate employment.   In a time of economic crisis, it is important to remember that the app ecosystem generates economic growth and creates jobs.