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  The Company > News > Hot jobs for recent
grads ATLANTA (AP) - Pete
Nguyen has friends graduating Armed with a degree in pharmacy, he had so many job offers that he and three buddies from the University of Michigan pharmacy school focused mainly on where they wanted to live, settling on Las Vegas. "When we were thinking about what city to go and where to move to - New York, L.A., Miami, Vegas - basically whichever city we decided to move to, we could pretty much be guaranteed a job as a pharmacist," said Nguyen, a San Diego native who graduated last week. Pharmacy is among a handful of industries - including nursing, accounting and education - that are starved for new college graduates even though most businesses aren't hiring. The National Association of Colleges and Employers reports that U.S. employers are expected to hire 36% fewer new college graduates this year. Manufacturers are hiring less than half as many grads as in 2000-01. "Looking at a 36% drop in hiring, it's quite an adjustment," said Camille Luckenbaugh, employment information manager for NACE, a nonprofit consortium of colleges and employers. "We've gone from people handing out their business cards at spring break to students beating down the doors and trying to find jobs that are available," she said. But graduates in high-demand
fields are finding companies competing for fresh talent. Accountants are still in great demand as well, despite the turmoil that has plagued that industry over the past six months. The nine or 10 accounting students at the University of Georgia who accepted positions with Arthur Andersen LLP had their offers withdrawn when the firm was indicted on federal charges relating to the Enron bankruptcy. But most have been able to find other work, UGA program coordinator Patti Hoyt said. "I think probably
by the end of the summer they'll have something lined up pretty easily,"
Hoyt said. Average starting salaries are up slightly to $45,000-$46,000 this year from $43,500 last year, Hoyt said. A common explanation for the abundance of jobs in high-demand fields is the time required to earn a degree in one of them. Many undergraduate accounting students go on to earn master's degrees, and pharmacy school often takes at least six years. |
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