Posted on 08/03/2003 7:42:08 AM PDT by RockyMtnMan
Michael Emmons thought he knew how to keep a job as a software programmer.
"You have to continue to keep yourself up to speed," he said. "If you don't, you'll get washed out."
Up to speed or not, Emmons wound up being "washed out" anyway. Last summer, he moved his family from California to Florida for the Siemens Co., makers of electronics and equipment for industries. Not long after, Emmons and 19 other programmers were replaced by cheaper foreign workers.
Adding insult to injury, Emmons and the others had to train their replacements.
"It was the most demoralizing thing I've ever been through," he told ABCNEWS. "After spending all this time in this industry and working to keep my skills up-to-date, I had to now teach foreign workers how to do my job so they could lay me off."
Just as millions of American manufacturing jobs were lost in the 1980s and 1990s, today white-collar American jobs are disappearing. Foreign nationals on special work visas are filling some positions but most jobs are simply contracted out overseas.
"The train has left the station, the cows have left the barn, the toothpaste is out of the tube," said John McCarthy, director of research at Forrester Research, who has studied the exodus of white-collar jobs overseas. "However you want to talk about it, you're not going to turn the tide on this in the same way we couldn't turn the tide on the manufacturing shift."
India Calling
Almost 500,000 white-collar American jobs have already found their way offshore, to the Philippines, Malaysia and China. Russia and Eastern Europe are expected to be next. But no country has captured more American jobs than India.
In Bangalore, India, reservation agents are booking flights for Delta; Indian accountants are preparing tax returns for Ernst & Young; and Indian software engineers are developing new products for Oracle.
They are all working at a fraction of the cost these companies would pay American workers.
For example, American computer programmers earn about $60,000, while their Indian counterparts only make $6,000.
"It's about cost savings," said Atul Vashistha, CEO of NeoIT, a California-based consulting company that advises American firms interested in "offshoring" jobs previously held by Americans. "They need to significantly reduce their cost of doing business and that's why they're coming to us right now."
Vivek Pal, an Indian contractor for technology consulting group Wipro, whose clients include Microsoft, GE, JP Morgan Chase, and Best Buy, is hiring 2,000 Indian workers quarterly to keep up with demand. Pal knows American workers resent the "offshoring" trend but says all Americans will benefit in the long run.
"Globalization whether it's for products or services may feel like it hurts, but at the end of the day, it creates economic value all around," said Pal.
At the end of the day, Emmons has a different view: "If you sit at a desk, beware," he said. "Your job is going overseas."
It's not Bush's responsibility to make you get off your duff and become more enterprising. That's your job.
I've done that before - it's quite fun.
Painting houses and cleaning toilets.
Actually, plumbing and carpentry are looking mighty tempting these days.
The problem is that we were assured that the whitecollar jobs would pick up the laid-off bluecollar jobs. And for the most part, they did. Now they aren't even pretending that there is a net at the bottom of this fall. We'll just be S.O.J. (S**t Our of a Job).
Sam, do you remember that the cashier had to hand ring up the price. Didn't have scanners back then so the baggers could keep up. Otherwise I agree with you about the rest.
Maybe. But it's a hell of a poor career path.
If he's smart, he'll side with labor and say "screw the campaign money".
In the end, it is We the People who will decide if he the same job next December...and he already has enough people ready to vote against him.
Campaign contributions don't mean squat if you lose the election.
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I'm a retired senior citizen now. Were I back in engineering the cost of auto insurance and gasoline to get to a job would be more than the yearly salary of a Chinese engineer. Were I to enterptis as you say, the coircitry would be sent to China, where patents are not recognized, in six months. My work would be out the window.
WTF are you babbling about?
Perot sold EDS to General Motors back in the mid-80s.
BTW, if the savings and productivity are shown, are you going to sell the stock "as a matter of principle"?
No, at a high level I would leverage the influence of my holdings along with like-minded fellow shareholders and affect the needed change in the boardroom. Shareholders are, after all, the owners of a publicly traded company.
You ask this of a person you just demeaned as a "high-school chum"?
Problem with people like you is that you expect everyone to do your thinking for you. No wonder: you're not even in the driver's seat of your own life's success.
And you still feel the need to consult the advice from "high school chums." tisk tisk
You and whiners like you are your own worst enemies.
You cannot even get a quote right, so incompetent are you. I, personally, only mentioned the decline and fall of rome, making an allusion to the book of the same name. I never once mentioned Rome burning.
And you get all upset that someone mentions the fact that the city that is burning is ones city where they believe that the world is not getting smaller every day and that a wall around a city will cure all the problems.
This is nearly incoherent. Back to school, boy!
That has been tried once, remember the Berlin Wall.
Au contraire: The concept of tariffs was dominant in the life of America until recently, and America grew into an innovative and thriving economy under this model. It is only recently -- now that we are abandoning tariffs -- that problems for the American middle class have arisen.
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