Out of all the vitriol surrounding the offshore-labor question, remarkably few concrete suggestions have emerged to address this controversial trend.
In stripping away the hype, this CNET News.com special series examines the social, economic and political dimensions of offshoring and offers tangible steps that can be taken for the U.S. industry to maintain its historical lead in high technology. The report includes a poll of nearly 500 key industry decision makers, conducted jointly with Harris Interactive, the research firm that created The Harris Poll.
Government officials, business leaders and academics agree that the future of America's technology complex depends on education, professional training and research investment.
Although many U.S. technology businesses are contracting or considering some form of foreign outsourcing, they are adamant about keeping intellectual property at home--for now.
In stark contrast to the heated reaction among many U.S. workers, the country that is most associated with offshoring is both subdued and puzzled by the opposition that has arisen.
Rather than trying to reverse the outsourcing wave, the best way for America to fend off foreign competition is to invent technologies that will drive a new industrial cycle.
President George W. Bush and Democratic challenger John Kerry have yet to take definitive stands on the controversial topic of offshore outsourcing, but both candidates have made various proposals to strengthen America's global position in high technology.
Those corporations doing offshoring are living off the perception that somehow things are cheaper in India.
Globalization is a name for the circumvention of the labor laws of developed countries and the denial of basic rights in developing ones.
Check the prices of some items in India:
www.fabmall.com
www.motozone.yahoo.co.in
www.lgezbuy.com http://www.cushwakeasia.com/publication/pdf/india/ND%20Q103.pdf
More on India's patent laws: http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,48153,00.html
http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,47643,00.html
Personally, if I were going to school I would pick a field that I knew could not be outsourced. Say, medicine (not radiology, though!). And I would tell my kids NOT to go into tech work.
BTW, the CEOs say there are not enough tech workers in the US, and that's a reason they offshore. That's a blantant lie. If that were the case, why are there so many qualified programmers out of work? I personally know more than a few excellent programmers who have been laid off. The real reason is cost.
And people don't consider the spiral:
1) many jobs get offshored. Not just tech, radiology, CPA work, legal work, anything that does not need face-to-face interaction can be offshored. We're already seeing it with all of the above examples I gave.
2)Yes, we get cheap stuff, but who can buy it, if all the good-paying jobs go overseas? Certainly people in India and China are not going to buy $5000 HDTVs.
3) All these people out of work = lower tax revenue (this has already been seen; CA is very worried about this) for both income tax, SS tax, and sales tax.
4) All these people out of work will need unemployment and perhaps public funds for medical care at county hospitals etc. But there's less tax revenue to provide these services.
5) Less SS tax means SS will run out of money sooner.
6) Less people can buy stuff. This means there will be less product demand. This will hurt corps (in the long run).
There's more and more. You don't need to be an economist to see this. Just have common sense. Watch Lou Dobbs on CNN for more of this info, if you want more.
Basically what corps are doing is getting a short-term gain (lower wages) for a long-term cost.
Note: when it comes to less $$$ for the corps, they are against offshoring. Case in point: offshoring of drugs (meaning, importation of drugs from Canada). I'm sorry, I trust Canadian drugs. You can't tell me they sell their people stuff that will hurt them, or us.
I'm disappointed that CNET is taking a pro-offshoring stance.
- Well, these people are just plain stupid...
- by nazzdeq May 6, 2004 11:11 AM PDT
- 1. How is "education" the answer for Americans when you can
- Reply to this comment
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(14 Comments)find an Indian programmer with an MBA who's willing to work
for 5k US per year? Education is NOT the answer.
2. Company's are outsourcing to save a few bucks all have CEO's
making millions, which is absurd. They could afford US
programmers if they cut their own salaries in half.
3. US Taxpayer dollars should NEVER go to foreign company's
period. It's immoral to use US tax dollars against the same
citizens who supplied the money in the first place.
4. The solution is simple, stop supporting companies that
outsource. They have every right to outsource your job, you have
every right to boycott their products.
5. If Indian company's were that good, why aren't there any
Indian Operating Systems, Databases, Office Products, etc. for
sell in Best Buy? Surely Wipro or Infosys could make a few decent
apps. The reality, most of the good Indian developers are
already in the US. Productivity levels in India are not that great.
6. In the end, there's nothing to worry about in the long run,
because the companies that have outsourced will eventually
come crying back.