Posted on 02/15/2004 4:48:01 AM PST by sopwith
But you forgot to cut & paste page two:
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But for many unions, investment in foreign lands is undisputedly bad. "For every investment you make there is investment you don't make here," says Bob Baugh, executive director of the Industrial Union Council of the A.F.L.-C.I.O. , which has suffered a relentless decline in manufacturing jobs since the late 1990's. "People are concerned about their own job. They know it's a problem and they are absolutely stunned by the admission of this administration."
Fears of outsourcing have heightened even further, because it is no longer just manufacturing jobs that are threatened, but high-paying, white-collar service-sector jobs. Moreover, the worldwide pool of available well-trained workers is much larger, and they are only a mouse-click away.
The Internet and other technologies have enabled Dell, the personal computer manufacturer, to open customer support centers in India, and allowed Delta Airlines to send reservations jobs to the Philippines. The trend seems to be moving up the skills ladder: Oracle, a software company, and Ericsson, the telecommunications equipment manufacturer, have moved product and software development jobs to India. An often-cited report by Forrester Research says 3.3 million American white-collar service industry jobs will move overseas by 2015. People are afraid that they will be left with low-paying jobs at Wal-Mart.
Yet most economists agree that the impact on productivity, economic growth and jobs should be similar to that of the outsourcing of hardware in the late 1990's. Prices of technology services will fall, technology will become more pervasive, and jobs will be created as businesses find new things to do with the technology.
"We tend to keep the high end of the value chain," said Janet Yellen, an economist at the University of California at Berkeley who was head of Mr. Clinton's Council of Economic Advisers. "We're outsourcing the more standardized part of high tech."
Indeed, employment in the service sector - including those services considered most at risk of being outsourced to developing nations - has not done too badly compared with the rest of the job market.
The United States has lost many jobs of late. But that's basically because the economy fell into recession. From 1999 to 2003, as the economy peaked and went bust, 1.3 million nonfarm jobs vanished. Manufacturing lost 2.8 million jobs; 800,000 management positions disappeared - including C.E.O.'s and other executive jobs that are not easily outsourced to Bangladesh.
But business and financial service occupations - at risk of the kind of outsourcing that Forrester Research warns of - added more than 600,000 jobs during the period. Another sector that is supposed to be vulnerable, what the Commerce Department calls computer and mathematical occupations, added 150,000 jobs. Moreover, many jobs that are outsourced today - like call-center operators or data-entry staff - could just as easily be lost to automation.
"Productivity growth, however it occurs, has a disruptive side to it," Ms. Yellen said. "In the short term most things that contribute to productivity growth are very painful." Fast productivity growth is one reason that employment hasn't picked up despite fast economic growth.
What to do? Labor unions would support legislation that slowed globalization down. Others, like Mr. Reich, want more comprehensive employment insurance. Ms. Yellen supports better education and job training. But ending sources of productivity growth, she said, is not a good idea. "You could end up with an economy that does not show progress and doesn't improve living standards," she said.
Only if one uses payroll numbers have jobs been lost. If one uses the actual household survey, 2 million more people are working. The difference is, of course, that the latter are working as temps, have started their own businesses, or are working "off the books".
There are lies, damned lies, and statistics printed in the NYT.
"Hello, plumbing problems?
I can come on Thursday for $100.
Oh, an emergency?
$200. I'll be right over"
"Problems with your computer?
That'll be $75 an hour.Okay, I'll be right over!"
If you want to work at Walmart, good luck.
I aim higher.
I believe this is true and, if so, we should see the results in lower unemployment numbers.
Another point relative to the outsourcing of software development. I have spent a little time as a program manager that involved a significant amount of very sophisticated software development. What I observed is that the amount of work that goes into the design of a software system is about 80% to 90% of the work and it is the hard part of the work. The actual coding (the fun part) is left to the junior people. In the case of outsourcing I'm betting that it is the coding that is being outsourced and, in general, not the design.
This is not to say that software design cannot be outsourced. I'm sure it can but to do so you have to specify what you want delivered back to you and this is not a trivial task. A good analogy here is the growing need in American firms for system level engineers who can design big systems and define the requirements for the hardware and software implementers. The same is surely true in the software world. You need people who can define and document the requirements. That is what allows you to outsource the "easy work".
Just my $.02.
Well, here's another false premise. ALL technology becomes smaller and cheaper over time. It has nothing to do with allowing this technology to be made by foreigners.
If you read the glossary, it tells you "The unemployment rate is the percent of the labor force which is unemployed". Well, duh. If you look up "labor force", you get "people who are either working or unemployed". Double duh.
What they don't tell you is that you are considered a "member of the labor force" only if 1. You get a W-2 each January, or 2. are receiving unemployment benefits. The millions of people like me who lost their job but who exhausted their benefits become non-persons as far as that chart is concerned. We're still here - we're still looking for work, but we're not counted either as part of the labor force or as unemployed.
The "household survey" should be considered as well as the "payroll data" when trying to figure out what is going on.
In January, for instance, the number of nonfarm workers on a payroll went from 130,043,000 to 130,155,000 - an increase of 112,000 (seasonally adjusted). The household numbers went from 146,878,000 to 146,863,000 - an increase of 422,000.
IOW, there are roughly 10% more people actually working than are getting paychecks, and in January, the "real" numbers went up almost 4 times what the NYT is reporting.
Congratulations and thank you for your service to our country.
Maybe when you have completed your time with the Guard, our trade policies will be closer to what the Founding Father's intended (our nation enjoyed Protectionist policies for its first 200 years), and free trade always meant reciprocal trade, not one-sided, subsidized, unfair trade.
That might not be a good idea either. I would not want to risking be at the whim of a socialist.
Maybe they take those jobs to "get out of the house", but somehow I doubt it.
Aside: I am perfectly qualifed for those jobs, since I wore a headset and talked to people thru a microphone when I used to launch space shuttles.
Ouch.
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