Shortage in a sentence as a noun

How suddenly would they forget about that hiring shortage?

But when they can't hire according to their plan, they're going to tell reporters "there's a shortage of good engineers!

Given a shortage of programmers, IBM placed an ad in the newspaper, hired smart people, and taught them how to program.

Then when nobody or only fraudulent people apply, they reject them all and claim a skills shortage.

The whole "shortage of IT talent" hysteria is way overblown when you look at the actual numbers.

At least go and read up a bit more about what actually happened, it's not as if there is a shortage of information.

This idea, however, seems entirely lost on most HR departments, and the result is an almost entirely "fake" skills shortage.

When companies talk about a "shortage of engineers" what they mean is that there is a shortage of people willing to work as engineers at the prices they would like to pay.

I recall wondering at the time why, if there was such a shortage of talented developers, newly minted lawyers were still making several times as much as good programmers.

It's a strategy Asian hardware OEMs have been pursuing with success for decades -- there's no shortage of people who used to be IBM and Dell customers who are Lenovo and Asus customers now.

There is no shortage of diplomats, and a few eccentric and unwavering voices is then much more useful to maintain the goals of where we want to actually go without moving the goal in favor of diplomacy.

Shortage definitions

noun

the property of being an amount by which something is less than expected or required; "new blood vessels bud out from the already dilated vascular bed to make up the nutritional deficit"

See also: deficit shortfall

noun

an acute insufficiency

See also: dearth famine