IBM,
which has undertaken in recent years a restructuring of its activities, will
invest US$1 billion on employee training and development in the next four years
©Ethan Miller (Getty/AFP)
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US technology giant IBM
said Tuesday it would hire 25,000 people in the country over the next four
years, a day before President-elect Donald Trump meets with tech industry
leaders.
AFP
report continues:
About
6,000 of those hirings will occur in 2017, IBM chief executive Ginni Rometty
said in an opinion article published in the newspaper USA Today.
IBM,
which has undertaken in recent years a restructuring of its activities, will
invest US$1 billion on employee training and development in the next four
years, said the IBM president, chairman and CEO.
"We
are hiring because the nature of work is evolving -- and that is also why so
many of these jobs remain hard to fill," Rometty said, noting that many
industries were being reshaped by data science and cloud computing.
"Jobs
are being created that demand new skills -- which in turn requires new
approaches to education, training and recruiting," she said.
"This
is not about white collar vs. blue collar jobs, but about the 'new collar' jobs
that employers in many industries demand, but which remain largely unfilled."
Rometty
is a member of Trump's Strategic and Policy Forum, a group of US business
leaders focused on boosting economic growth and jobs.
The
IBM jobs investment news came before the highly anticipated meeting Wednesday
of the Republican property tycoon-turned-next US president and the leaders of
several major technology companies.
Among
those expected to attend are Amazon's Jeff Bezos, Apple's Tim Cook, Satya
Nadella of Microsoft, Larry Page of Alphabet (Google) and Elon Musk of Tesla
and SpaceX, according to US media.
Trump
is expected to push them to create jobs after saying last week that he would
like Apple -- whose coveted iPhones are made in China -- to open a large
factory in the United States.
But
he will be stepping into hostile territory. The tech sector overwhelmingly
supported the Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton during this year's election
campaign and has expressed fear about the effect Trump's policies will have on
the industry.
The sole notable exception is the controversial PayPal co-founder and early Facebook investor Peter Thiel, currently a member of Trump's transition team.
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