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There are a lot of software engineers.
Canada, the European Union, Japan, Israel, and Australia will probably find corresponding numbers of SE practitioners.
Where can one find data?
http://europa.eu.int/index_en.htm
There has been a healthy growth in the number of India?s IT professionals over the last decade.
From a base of 6,800 knowledge workers in 1985-86, the number increased to 522,000 software and services professionals by the end of 2001-02. It is estimated that out of these 522,000 knowledge workers, almost 170,000 are working in the IT software and services export industry; nearly 106,000 are working in the IT enabled services and over 220,000 in user organizations.
Specific details on the type of qualification and the backgrounds of professionals in the industry is described in the external link below.
Source: and is one of the more authoritative sources of information.
Where can one find data?
About 1 out of every 200 workers is a software engineer. There are 55% to 60% as many software engineers as all traditional engineers. In 2002, software engineering had 612,000 practitioners; 264,790 managers, 16,495 educators, and 457,320 programmers.
Based on data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics from 2002, about 612,000 software engineers work in the U.S. The size of all software engineering is about 60% the size of all traditional engineering. This comparison holds, whether one compares the number of practitioners, managers, educators, or technicians/programmers. The following data comes from the following web pages.
| Role | # | SE Title | # | TE Title | Ratio of SE to TE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Practitioners | 611,900 | Software Engineers | 1,157,020 | Traditional Engineers | 53% |
| Managers | 264,790 | Computer and Information Systems Managers | 413,750 | Engineering Managers + Construction Managers | 64% |
| Educators | 16,495 | Computer Science (practical) | 29,310 | Engineering Teachers | 56% |
| Technicians | 457,320 | Computer Programmers | 516,170 | Engineering Technicians | 88% |
The following 2 tables compare the number of software engineers (611,900), versus the number of traditional engineers (1,157,020). The ratio is 53%.
There are another 1,500,000 people in system analysis, system administration, and computer support, many of whom might be called software engineers. Many systems analysts manage software development teams and analysis is an important software engineering role, so many of them might be considered software engineers in the near future. This means that the number of software engineers may actually be much higher.
Note also that the number of software engineers declined by 5% to 10% from 2000 to 2002.
Computer programmers (457,320) are considered to have less education, skill, or experience than software engineers. Engineering technicians (526,170) are considered to have less education, skill, or experience than engineers. There are 88% as many programmers as technicians.
Computer and information system managers (264,790) manage software projects, as well as computer operations. Similarly, Construction and engineering managers (413,750) oversee engineering projects, manufacturing plants, and construction sites. Computer management is 64% the size of construction and engineering management.
Until now, computer science has been the main degree to get, whether one wanted to make software systems (software engineering) or study the theoretical and mathematical facets of software systems (computer science). The data shows that the number of chemistry and physics educators (29,610) nearly equals the number of engineering educators (29,310). I estimate that similarly, ½ of computer science educators emphasize the practical (software engineering) (16,495) and ½ of computer science educators emphasize the theoretical (computer science) (16,495). This means that software engineering education is 56% the size of traditional engineering education. It is also worth noting that computer science is larger than all engineering, and larger than all physics and chemistry.
Software engineers are part of the much larger software, hardware, application, and operations community. In 2000 in the U.S., there were about 680,000 software engineers and about 10,000,000 IT workers.
There are no numbers on testers in the BLS data.