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Science and Engineering Employment

September 2, 2013

The STEM fields (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) are specialized occupations, so it's not always possible to find your first, or next, job where you presently live. For a known reason, half the members of the American Mathematical Society relocate to the Washington, D.C., area. The rest of us end up dispersed across the country.

Headquarters of the NSA at Fort Meade, Maryland.Headquarters of the US National Security Agency (NSA) at Fort Meade, Maryland.

The NSA is the largest employer of
mathematicians in the United States, but it can hire only U.S. citizens.

(
Via Wikimedia Commons.)

My wife and I enjoyed living in
Pittsburgh during my post-doctoral years at the University of Pittsburgh, but my first "real" job took us 350 miles east to Northern New Jersey. It could have been worse, since I had overtures at another research location 1,600 miles to the west. Since my wife and I originated in the Northeast, New Jersey was a comfortable choice.

The
National Science Foundation has just published statistics on the regional concentrations of scientists and engineers in the United States.[1] As an undifferentiated group, we're rather uniformly distributed among the states, although it's understandable that some specialties (e.g., oceanography) might be concentrated along the seacoasts. There would also be hot spots for experimental high energy physics.

The NSF employment estimate was derived from
US Census Bureau data for 2011. According to the NSF estimates, there are 5,677,410 ± 37,585 scientists and engineers in the United States. Since the US population stands at about 315 million, this means that employed scientists and engineers are less than 2% of the total population. When you consider the percentage among the working population, it's 4.1%.[1]

Science and engineering employment by state, percentages
Science and engineering employment as a percentage by state, with Washington DC, the largest employer (10.7%), included. The smallest percentage (1.7%) is Mississippi. A CSV file of these data can be found here. (Data from the NSF report.)[1]

The following table lists the top ten states in terms of percentage science and engineering employment.[1]

StatePercentage
District of Columbia10.7
Maryland7.0
Massachusetts6.4
Virginia6.2
Colorado6.1
Washington State6.1
California4.9
New Hampshire4.8
New Jersey4.8
Delaware4.7

One thing that always amazed me was the small number of my
colleagues who were members of professional societies. As you can see, the membership numbers of these representative organizations below fall far short of five and a half million scientists and engineers.

Professional SocietyMembershipReference
American Physical Society~50,000 (2013)[2]
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers429,000 (2013)[3]
American Chemical Society164,215 (2011)[4]
American Mathematical Society~30,000[5]
Association for Computing Machinery~100,000 (2012)[6]

Not surprisingly, some
urban areas have a high concentration of science and engineering talent. Santa Clara, Los Angeles, San Diego, the New York metropolitan area, Denver and Houston, accounted for 13% of science and engineering workers.[1] Nationwide, there were 3.1 million employed in computer or mathematical sciences occupation, and there were 1.7 million engineers. Of the remainder, 259,000 were in biological, agricultural, and environmental sciences, 368,000 in physical sciences, and 285,000 in social sciences.[1] Social sciences would not have been included in my definition of science and engineering.

One quarter of people employed in science and engineering lived in the three most populous states; namely,
California, Texas, and New York. Adding in Florida, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Massachusetts and Ohio accounted for fully half. Most states had a lower science and engineering employment intensity than the United States as a whole, which means that the median was remote from the mean.[1]

Fifteen percent of approximately 3 million computer and mathematical sciences employees were concentrated in the New York metropolitan area, Santa Clara, Los Angeles,
Denver, Fairfax County, Virginia, the District of Columbia, and Houston.[1] Ten percent of the approximately two million engineers lived in Santa Clara, Houston, Los Angeles and San Diego.[1]

The New York metropolitan area, San Diego, Los Angeles,
Boston and Montgomery County, Maryland, employed 14% of the 259,000 life science workers. The physical sciences were concentrated in Los Angeles, San Diego, Santa Clara, Oakland, Denver, Boston, Houston, and Montgomery County, Maryland. Seventeen percent of the nationwide total of 368,000 of physical scientists lived in these areas.[1]

There are 285,000
social scientists nationwide. I'm not surprised that thirteen percent of these live in the District of Columbia, Los Angeles, and New York City.[1]

Works Progress Administration posterSocial science in a different age.

The Works Progress Administration (WPA) was a depression-era government agency designed to create employment.

The WPA also funded musicians, artists, writers and actors.

(United States Library of Congress image cph.3b49400, via
Wikimedia Commons.)

References:

  1. Beethika Khan and Jaquelina Falkenheim, "Regional Concentrations of Scientists and Engineers in the United States," NSF Report No. NSF 13-330 (August 2013), Science and Engineering Indicators Program, National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, National Science Foundation.
  2. Official 2013 Unit Membership Statistics, American Physical Society.
  3. Jamie Moesch, "IEEE Membership Tops 429 000," The Institute, March 8, 2013.
  4. American Chemical Society, Council Agenda, August 22, 2012.
  5. American Mathematical Society 2011-2012 Annual Report.
  6. ACM's Annual Report (2012), Association for Computing Machinery.