Posted on 06/25/2004 2:20:16 PM PDT by Willie Green
For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use.
No threat to US jobs because America alone can be the birthplace of ideas. Bangalore techies can only help them reach the market quicker
Yamini Narayanan is an Indian-born 35-year-old with a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Oklahoma.
After graduation, she worked for a US computer company in Virginia and recently moved back to Bangalore with her husband to be closer to family. When I asked her how she felt about the outsourcing of jobs from her adopted country, America, to her native country, India, she responded with a revealing story:
''I just read about a guy in America who lost his job to India and he made a T-shirt that said, 'I lost my job to India and all I got was this (lousy) T-shirt.' And he made all kinds of money.''
Only in America, she said, shaking her head, would someone figure out how to profit from his own unemployment. And that, she insisted, was the reason America need not fear outsourcing to India: America is so much more innovative a place than any other country.
There is a reason the ''next big thing'' almost always comes out of America, said Narayanan. When she and her husband came back to live in Bangalore and enrolled their son in a good private school, he found himself totally stifled because of the emphasis on rote learning rather than the independent thinking he was exposed to in his US school.
They had to take him out and look for another, more avant-garde private school. ''America allows you to explore your mind,'' she said.
The whole concept of outsourcing was actually invented in America, added her husband, Sean, because no one else figured it out.
The Narayanans are worth listening to at this time of rising insecurity over white-collar job losses to India.
America is the greatest engine of innovation that has ever existed, and it can't be duplicated anytime soon, because it is the product of a multitude of factors: extreme freedom of thought, an emphasis on independent thinking, a steady immigration of new minds, a risk-taking culture with no stigma attached to trying and failing, a non corrupt bureaucracy, and financial markets and a venture capital system that are unrivalled at taking new ideas and turning them into global products.
''You have this whole ecosystem (that constitutes) a unique crucible for innovation,'' said Nandan Nilekani, the CEO of Infosys, India's IBM. ''I was in Europe the other day and they were commiserating about the 400,000 (European) knowledge workers who have gone to live in the US because of the innovative environment there.
The whole process where people get an idea and put together a team, raise the capital, create a product and mainstream it that can only be done in the US.
It can't be done sitting in India. The Indian part of the equation (is to help) these innovative (US) companies bring their products to the market quicker, cheaper and better, which increases the innovative cycle there. It is a complimentarily we need to enhance.''
That is so right.
As Robert Hof, a tech writer for Business Week, noted, US tech workers ''must keep creating leading edge technologies that make their companies more productive especially innovations that spark entirely new markets.'' The same tech innovations that produced outsourcing, he noted, also produced eBay, Amazon.com, Google and thousands of new jobs along with them.
This is America's real edge. Sure, Bangalore has a lot of engineering schools, but the local government is rife with corruption; half the city has no sidewalks; there are constant electricity blackouts; the rivers are choked with pollution; the public school system is dysfunctional; beggars dart in and out of the traffic, which is in constant gridlock; and the whole infrastructure is falling apart.
The big hi-tech firms here reside on beautiful, walled campuses, because they maintain their own water, electricity and communications systems. They thrive by defying their political-economic environment, not by emerging from it.
What would Indian techies give for just one day of America's rule of law; its dependable, regulated financial markets; its efficient, non corrupt bureaucracy; and its best public schools and universities? They'd give a lot.
These institutions, which nurture innovation, are our real crown jewels that must be protected not the 1 per cent of jobs that might be outsourced.
But it is precisely these crown jewels that can be squandered if we become lazy, or engage in mindless protectionism, or persist in radical tax cutting that can only erode the strength and quality of our government and educational institutions.
Our competitors know the secret of our sauce. But do we?
New York Times
You must be terribly disappointed that the economy is improving, eh Willie?
Its NOT your job! Its the companies job.
We used to be. Then we let lawyers take over. Now, we are just waiting until some idiot Democrat gets back in office to crash the whole thing.
Friedman had to get the friggin dig in at tax cuts after all! Last line even! Just once !
Bwahahahahahahha!
radical tax cutting
A 7% top federal income tax would be radical.
Which was, of course, made in China.
So shall we encourage companies to be Free Traitors?
Well, maybe it was made in China.
We should encourage companies to turn a profit, therre's nothign traitorous about seeking lower labor costs. The traitorousness lies in the government and unions that force companies to look outside america for those lower labor costs.
Guns and butter? I say guns and lard, to dip the bullets into when we shoot at terrorists.
And America is going to have to decay to that before trade with India reaches an equilibrium?
India has 'food stamps' and 'welfare'......?
This article promotes the expecatation that America can maintain an edge economically because of its culture of innovation. I don't think that is realistic, in any sense. Any useful aspect of our culture can and will be copied.
There's no unemployment insurance either.
Friedman is clearly smothering us in globalization manure.
We're supposed to be unconcerned that high-tech jobs are being outsourced to India because of all the entrepreneurial money-making opportunities that exist printing T-shirts.
Speaking of Bangalore, I get to spend hours on Dell's tech support tonight Weeeeee!
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