Posted on 12/25/2002 5:40:15 AM PST by sarcasm
Edited on 04/13/2004 2:08:46 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
Leading the way will be the information technology industry - the sector often credited with fueling the US economic boom of the 1990s - says the Cambridge firm's forecast.
Back-office accounting and customer-calling work are already being shipped abroad. But in the future, professional positions in technology, law, art, architecture, life sciences, and business management will be, too, says Forrester.
(Excerpt) Read more at boston.com ...
More prosperous for who? Who's left?
Back a couple of decades ago when all the manufacturing jobs started going away, we were told that these "service" jobs were the wave of the future, that the US would become a "service economy", and that these types of jobs were inherently difficult to export overseas, and thus were more secure. So much for that.
So are we all going to end up just flipping burgers for each other?
Who exactly will get prosperous?
So they will get more than this $40,000 American was getting before he was laid-off. In total balance it is a gain.
What are the Republicans supposed to do about this? Or anybody, for that matter?
All a company needs is a communication line, and India is instantly accessible.
High-tech is not unionized, so the Democrats have little appeal here. Plus, there's nothing they can do about it, except demagogue.
Anyone who contributes unique value.
If an Indian programmer can do the same thing you can do at half the salary, why should I hire you?
Do you have any national preference? Do you expect this country to protect you and your property, if so why?
For illegal Mexicans, the excuse is "no American wants to do that kind of dirty work". For high-tech, the excuse used to be "we can't find anybody talented enough". Now for plain old white collar work, it's truthfully "we can get it cheaper in the third world", only they don't say it too loudly.
In none of these instances were the company's requirements laid out in front of its workers, so they could offer a counter-proposal. This is the "dirty little secret" of American business, that, like the turd in the punchbowl, can't be overlooked for much longer. The American worker, who led the world in increased productivity in the 1990s, is now being painted as some socialist slacker who doesn't deserve to earn a living.
As far as the "advantages" of having two sets of people working half a world apart, I contracted with the American research arm of a Japanese automaker. There's a 13 hour difference in time zones between Detroit and Japan. Engineering "conferences" consisted of a bunch of guys doing a teleconference to a VCR running on a timer on the other side of the world. The next day, people on the other side would view the tape, and respond to another VCR on the sender's side. A two-way exchange took 48 hours, as opposed to meeting face-to-face. This was tolerated, but it wasn't pushed as a "great advantage".
India is not open to free trade. That can be addressed. So, for example, if Indians were importing American cars and other goods, it would help to offset the dollar flow of US tech jobs heading over there. Here is a direct example. An Indian friend of mine bought a $22,000 SUV in the states, then found out he was recalled to India. He wanted to take the SUV back to India but get this, the IMPORT tax in India was almost $20,000. The Indian government has huge tariffs protecting their industries. There are many other ways the Republican side can address this type of imbalance as well as the job loss.
Yes. Yes. I pay taxes.
This is not about me. It's about the value of particular jobs. You no longer compete with just your fellow Americans, but with everyone else in the world.
Global markets require a global workforce. Like it, or not like it, that's the way it is.
As defense industry contractors, I do not see how they can claim to have integrity and outsource to our enemies.
The profit they gain today will be cut off in the not-too distant future, when China can strangle our defense industry and Armed Forces.
How? India must become a prosperous country before it can be open to free trade. It's on its way.
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