
Much to the ire of advocates, the general public tends to conflate – which is the tech underlying – and the digital assets themselves. Despite their strong connections, the two technologies are separate in many ways, and many analysts believe that as the general public becomes more interested in , they will eventually grow more comfortable with -powered digital currencies.
Now, data composed by The Next Web that was ascertained from Glassdoor signals that the United States currently has an edge over with regards to -related job growth as the two countries engage in a quasi- employment arms race.
The Blockchain Job Market is Booming
In late-2017 and early-2018 became a piping hot hype word that was widely associated with – which at the time were experiencing massive, albeit unsustainable, growth.
Although the hype surrounding has faltered as the ongoing bear market persists, job growth relating to the industry is on the up-and-up, and recent data signals that some major US-based companies are leading the hiring charge.
According to the , out of the 5,711 jobs being advertised on Glassdoor globally, employers in the United States account for half of all those jobs, followed by the UK, and then India.
Of the employers that account for the majority of these job openings, IBM takes the cake, as the tech-giant currently has nearly 110 open job positions for people familiar with the relatively new technology.
Other notable companies with an abundance of -related job openings are Ernst & Young, Oracle, Deloit, and PWC.
Interestingly, of the top ten companies with an abundance of job openings, only three are directly related to , with Foris Limited coming in at number four, Crypto.com at number nine, and Wirex at number ten.
China Could be the United States’ Main Blockchain Competitor, Despite Data
Although the Glassdoor data places quite far down on the list of countries with large -related job offerings, The Next Web importantly notes that because Glassdoor is a US-based, English-centric, site, the results may be skewed.
A report from in late-August of 2018 explained that is only a behind the US when it comes to development of the nascent tech, and that the rapidly growing country is widely expected to overtake the US when it comes to development in the next three to five years.
As the digital technology industry continues to grow by leaps and bounds every month, it is likely that the technology’s inexorable ties to will ultimately lead some of this development to spill into the crypto industry.
Featured image from Shutterstock.
Published at Sat, 09 Mar 2019 19:53:55 +0000