National Post

Toronto soars in ‘tech talent’ rankings

- NATALIE WONG AND STEFANIE MAROTTA

TORONTO • Toronto’s tech scene is so hot the city created more jobs than the San Francisco Bay area, Seattle and Washington, D.C., combined last year, while leapfroggi­ng New York in a ranking of “talent markets.”

Toronto was the fastestgro­wing tech-jobs market in 2017, according to CBRE Group Inc.’s latest annual survey, released Tuesday. The city saw 28,900 tech jobs created, 14 per cent more than in 2016, for a total of more than 241,000 workers, up 52 per cent over the past five years, CBRE said. Downtown, tech accounted for more than a third of demand for office space.

Canada’s biggest city took fourth place in “tech talent,” a broad measure of competitiv­eness, pushing New York down a notch and coming in just after the Bay Area, Seattle and the U.S. capital. CBRE ranked 50 markets across North America, using measures such as talent supply, concentrat­ion, education and cost as well as outlooks for job and rent growth for both offices and apartments.

The real estate services firm cited some 5 million technology workers in the U.S. and more than 830,000 in Canada, across all sectors.

For employers, combined labour and occupancy costs increased in every market, by 13 per cent even in the least expensive one, Montreal.

“Companies looking to house operations are putting serious thought to locating in Canada,” Paul Morassutti, executive managing director at CBRE Canada, said in a statement accompanyi­ng the report. Toronto is among the best values for tech firms, he said, citing cheaper labour and real estate and a welleducat­ed workforce. The U.S. Midwest offers good value as well, the report noted.

A 500-worker company requiring 75,000 square feet (7,000 square meters) of office space can expect total annual costs, in U.S. dollars, to range from US$27.6 million in Montreal to US$32.2 million in Ottawa, with Toronto in the middle at US$30.2 million. The costs in Rochester, N.Y., the cheapest U.S. market of those CBRE studied, amount to US$36.3 million, while the Bay Area adds up to US$57.4 million.

“The forces that are driving innovation and technology are really in the early stages here,” Morassutti said by phone. “When it comes to overall costs, even if you assume upward pressure on office rents, housing and salaries, our major markets still constitute a significan­t bargain to the U.S.”

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