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American jobs must not be lost, says Kissinger
TIMES NEWS NETWORK ^
| JULY 16, 2003
| KALPANA SHAH
Posted on 07/16/2003 10:42:49 AM PDT by IonInsights
LAS VEGAS: When a former US secretary of state of the stature of Dr Henry Kissinger walks into a technology conference, 10,000 techies filling up the Ballroom at Mandarin Bay stand and applaud, even before he says anything. When he answers a question about outsourcing of economic activity, his reply draws a bigger applause from the largely American audience.
If outsourcing would continue to the point of stripping the United States of its industrial base, and of the act of getting out its own technology, then it requires really careful thought of national policy and probably create incentives to prevent it from happening.
It was Mr Sanjay Kumar, chairman and CEO of Computer Associates (CA) who put the question to him. Mr Kumar mentioned the increased outsourcing of technology related work, from insurance claims, airline reservations, computer programming to countries like India and China and asked Dr Kissinger whether this would erode middle class power bases in Europe and the US.
Dr Kissingers answer: I dont look at this from an economic point of view but the political and social points of view. The question really is whether America can remain a great power or a dominant power if it becomes a primarily service economy, and I doubt that. A country has to have an industrial base in order to play a significant role in the world. And I am concerned from that point of view. The mood was unambiguous American jobs must not be lost.
Mr Kumar also reminded him about his acceptance speech after winning the Nobel Peace prize where he had voiced concerns about the rise of technology, and asked whether he had changed his mind about technology since then. Dr Kissinger said, My concerns have mounted since then. I am of a generation that grew up on books. It helps you develop concepts. With computers, you dont have to remember things because the information is all there. He worries that despite the fact that there is an explosion of information, the problem is how to transform information into knowledge and knowledge into wisdom.
I worked with leaders who had an intuitive sense of the future although they didnt have so much information. Statesmen have progressively more information but they have progressively more insecurity because they have no sense of the evolution of the system, he said. The role of technology should be to bridge the gap between availability of information and the ability to use it, Dr Kissinger said. An idea that the IT industry will have to mull over.
TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: economy; employment; jobmarket; jobs; kissinger; outsourcing
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Kissinger at least has common sense when it comes to this issue. I wish our elected officials would demonstrate a little.
To: Willie Green
If outsourcing would continue to the point of stripping the United States of its industrial base, and of the act of getting out its own technology, then it requires really careful thought of national policy and probably create incentives to prevent it from happening. bump
2
posted on
07/16/2003 10:45:28 AM PDT
by
Rodney King
(No, we can't all just get along.)
To: A. Pole; sarcasm; hedgetrimmer; harpseal; crazykatz
Dr Kissingers answer: I dont look at this from an economic point of view but the political and social points of view. The question really is whether America can remain a great power or a dominant power if it becomes a primarily service economy, and I doubt that. A country has to have an industrial base in order to play a significant role in the world. And I am concerned from that point of view. The mood was unambiguous American jobs must not be lost.
To: IonInsights
Outsourcing can be stopped only by protective legislation. Protective legislation is 100% guaranteed to end in bankruptcy for the protected industries. This is a solution? Has no one studied the histories of the US auto, steel, and ship-building industries?
4
posted on
07/16/2003 10:47:56 AM PDT
by
pabianice
To: IonInsights
I think this is the first time I've ever agreed with Kissinger. Is that a snowball in Iraq I see?
5
posted on
07/16/2003 10:51:56 AM PDT
by
lelio
To: pabianice
Protective legislation is 100% guaranteed to end in bankruptcy for the protected industries. Amen! Just look at what Ronald Reagan's tariff on 700cc and over Jap bikes did to Harley Davidson.
*uffda
6
posted on
07/16/2003 10:52:24 AM PDT
by
Jim Cane
To: pabianice
we have a 25% tariff in place on foreign light trucks in the US, and foreign companies are building light truck plants in the US and employing Americans.
7
posted on
07/16/2003 10:54:25 AM PDT
by
oceanview
To: Jim Cane
I don't think that a tariff is a solution. I would look at tax adjustments for companies that send work overseas. I don't want to punish a foreign company but there is no way that American labor can compete with Indian labor. Just a thought.
8
posted on
07/16/2003 10:55:35 AM PDT
by
DonaldC
To: Rodney King
If outsourcing would continue to the pointIt WOULD -- does this mean we have to wait until it DOES?
9
posted on
07/16/2003 10:57:37 AM PDT
by
Ed_in_NJ
To: IonInsights
Which face was he speaking out of
10
posted on
07/16/2003 10:57:39 AM PDT
by
joesnuffy
(Moderate Islam Is For Dilettantes)
To: DonaldC
We can't compete as long as we allow our "trade partners" to manipulate their currency exchange rates in their favor.
To: Willie Green; Wolfie; ex-snook; Cacophonous; Poohbah; Jhoffa_; FITZ; arete; FreedomPoster; ...
Dr Kissingers answer: I dont look at this from an economic point of view but the political and social points of view. The question really is whether America can remain a great power or a dominant power if it becomes a primarily service economy, and I doubt that. A country has to have an industrial base in order to play a significant role in the world. And I am concerned from that point of view. Bump
12
posted on
07/16/2003 11:01:39 AM PDT
by
A. Pole
To: pabianice
we need a sliding scale for corporate taxes based on the ratio of profits earned in the US to US workers employed. Earn $100 profit in the US with no US workers, tax rate is 90%. Earn $100 in the US with only US workers, tax rate is 0%.
To: pabianice
14
posted on
07/16/2003 11:01:40 AM PDT
by
Jason_b
To: joesnuffy
Which face was he speaking out of True, but at least somebody, somewhere of some significance is saying this.
Question is, is anybody listening?
15
posted on
07/16/2003 11:03:23 AM PDT
by
riri
To: StolarStorm
True, that is a large part of it. But just on employee costs, American workers are at a disadvantage (Social Security et al). Something is needed to give some balance to the equation. Hire an American at $60 (wages and benifits included) or go to India at $20. Business will naturally gravitate to the cheaper cost, unless there is an incentive to do otherwise....:)
16
posted on
07/16/2003 11:04:10 AM PDT
by
DonaldC
To: riri
Hillary is listening. Come 2008, she will know what to pitch to these displaced workers. They are the swing vote she needs to put her over the top.
To: DonaldC
I don't think that a tariff is a solution. I would look at tax adjustments for companies that send work overseas. Tariffs are a Constitutionally sanctioned means of protecting domestic production. Social engineering via different tax breaks/penalties on individuals and corporations based on state sanctioned behaviours are abominations. That's why the Founders chose tariffs. Jefferson considered his successful funding the Federal government completely via tariffs alone as his great accomplishment as president.
18
posted on
07/16/2003 11:07:50 AM PDT
by
Jim Cane
To: oceanview
That's right. Imagine how unhappy just all those "soccer moms" will be by 2008.
To: pabianice
Bump. It's impossible to stop globalization. We can only try to dominate it, turn it to our advantage. I'm surprised that Kissinger isn't saying this.
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