Tech job growth soars in Vancouver, as salaries remain cheap
Vancouver topped 19 North American technology hubs for job growth in that sector between 2019 and 2023, according to a new JLL Markets Perspective: Technology Industry report.
This is despite having the second lowest salaries among cities examined.
Vancouver's technology job growth was 68 per cent in those years, while Nashville, Tennessee was second with 43-per-cent growth. Austin, Texas ranked No. 3 among cities with more than one million residents with 41-per-cent growth.
The average Vancouver technology worker earned US$102,975, the report found. That was the second lowest compensation among the 19 cities, only beating Toronto's average US$98,469 in technology-worker earnings.
I found this wording strange:
"This is despite having the second lowest salaries among cities examined." .
Despite is the wrong word, I think it's partially
because of having the second lowest salaries that it grew so much, no in spite of it. The cities with the highest salaries (SF and Silicon Valley) had the lowest job growth, so this suggests to me that cost is at least a factor in job growth, and having salaries doesn't seem to correlate with growth... I also was surprised that Vancouver tech salaries are higher than Toronto's, I don't think that's always been the case? I always knew Canadian salaries were lower, but honestly thought Toronto's would have been higher than Vancouver's. Granted this is just one report, hardly gospel written in stone (especially when dealing with the tech industry, the term is so broad and open to a degree of subjectiveness depending on who is writing the report, which exact stats they gather, etc.). JLL is a massive global real estate services company (Google them if you aren't familiar) and not one of those dubious clickbait publications, so they would be a fairly good source (again, it's a study/report, not scientific absolute proof). So yes I was surprised to see the salary stat, maybe I'm the one who's out of the loop and this has been the case forever, but I seem to remember salaries in Toronto being higher?
Like it or not, having comparably lower salaries and a low C$ are major factors still in Canadian growth from foreign companies. Yes the quality of life, quality of education, diverse population etc. are huge advantages, but if our dollar was 50% more expensive than the US$ and asking salaries were comparable to the Bay Area, there would not be the same level of growth. All we can do is continue to support the industry, invest in all those good things that make a city attractive, maintain our education standards, and continue to have a relatively generous immigration policy for the industry. We can't control the C$, and the market determines salaries, so it is what it is. After tax wages for pretty much every good job (professionals, engineers, lawyers, doctors) is way higher in the US than Canada, so Vancouver and Toronto being the bottom two isn't a huge shocker, it's probably the same thing if you measured a bunch of different professions. It may suck for the employees in Canada who need higher salaries to afford a house, but the fact is that the aggregate benefit for both cities is job growth and a stronger tech industry. If that means the workers suffer with a $102,000 salary, I am not going to shed a tear. Plenty of people earn way way less than that, and can make do. Increasing wages massively would benefit a few, but could potentially hurt a lot, and destroy the industry. Easy choice if you ask me.