Tech Firms Defend Moving Jobs Overseas 2064
bobcows writes "Yahoo is reporting about leading technology companies urging Congress and the Bush administration Wednesday not to impose new trade restrictions aimed at keeping U.S. jobs from moving overseas, where labor costs are lower. 'There is no job that is America's God-given right anymore,' Carly Fiorina, chief executive for Hewlett-Packard Co., said Wednesday. 'The problem is not a lack of highly educated workers,' said Scott Kirwin, founder of the Information Technology Professionals Association of America. 'The problem is a lack of highly educated workers willing to work for the minimum wage or lower in the U.S. Costs are driving outsourcing, not the quality of American schools.'"
Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't HP making money hand over fist? (Score:0, Insightful)
Trade restrictions.. (Score:3, Insightful)
is this the American today ?
You'd expect that from someone making millions (Score:4, Insightful)
Problems (Score:5, Insightful)
Finally fighting back (Score:3, Insightful)
Neoprotectionist policies help a few people out in the short run, but hurt everyone in the long run by imposing unnecessary costs on products.
okay... (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, isn't that kind of a fundamentally flawed problem? As a person pursuing a degree in higher education (dropping $100,000+ on said education) I don't feel like it would be worth it to work for minimum wage or less. I mean, isn't that really one of the points of college, so you don't have to work minimum wage?
HP CEO fails to understand basic economics (Score:5, Insightful)
And so globalisation goes (Score:5, Insightful)
so locality (Score:2, Insightful)
i dont care. 15 years from now if i'm making less cash than i am now and spending it with friends and family, i could care less. the internet is going to tear down and equalize all these partitions of money and popularity. newer innovations will keep certain wealth in the US, the rest will go elsewhere. face it, we have more stuff and now everyone else is going to catch up.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't like to see the US Govt. legislating corporate policies...but, I don't mind them giving them incentive to shape said policy towards thing beneficial to US citzens.
But, c'mon....minimum wage for an educated person? I can't believe any US business would expect that.....
Nice Quote (Score:5, Insightful)
There were never any jobs that were America's God-given right, but the sentiment does make a nice dodge from the real issue at hand.
What these corporations seem to have forgot is that privelege goes hand in hand with responsiblity. They fight hard to continue to be treated by the government (and thus the nation, by extension) as a citizen with all the rights thereof. However, they forget that those rights come with responsiblity. They move jobs overseas, they keep their funds in offshore tax havens so they don't have to pay taxes, and then they want they want to be treated like legitimate tax-payers. Globalisation is a nice idea, but not when it only serves as a tool to cheat.
Re:Outsourced CEO (Score:5, Insightful)
Holy cow (Score:3, Insightful)
Did she actually say that? Being highly skilled and not being willing to work for below minimum wage is a *problem*? I'm speechless. I don't know what to say. My mouth is currently agape.
This is certainly not a company I would want to work for at any price, if this is how they think of their employees. She probably thinks her employees owe *her* money for hiring them!
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Isn't HP making money hand over fist? (Score:2, Insightful)
But they aren't outsourcing the bloated overpriced jobs. They are outsourcing the barely over minimum wage jobs.
Morons in Tech Companies (Score:2, Insightful)
the rest of Carly's quote (Score:5, Insightful)
. .
. . .
The flaw (Score:5, Insightful)
It is the governments job to make sure that jobs stay here. I don't think any job is an americans god given right but why does this lady expect an educated engineer to work for min wage? I can get a McJob for min wage. She is essentially saying that HPs workers don't matter to the company. They find no value in their skills.
I'm not trying to be paranoid here but eventually won't most jobs be shipped over seas to countries who with lower cost of living and governments who don't care. This doesn't sound good for our country.
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:3, Insightful)
Want to sell a good or service in the US? Require that all folks involved in its growth/manufacture/transport/assembly/management meet US requirements for wage, working conditions, etc. Of course, this requirement would violate nearly every World Trade Agreement and is therefore infeasible under current legislation, but interesting nonetheless.*
* The caveat is that if the US&Canada and Europe continue to push for higher international standards on wage, workplace conditions, etc, than the minimum international cost of employment will continue to rise, thereby reducing the savings of moving jobs overseas. Whether or not you consider this a good thing(tm) is up to you...
Re:Problems (Score:1, Insightful)
Race to the bottom (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Problems (Score:2, Insightful)
Globalization is not a one-way road. (Score:2, Insightful)
But when you get the "negative" side effects you always start to whine and scream around, e.g. when a German company buys a second rate car maker or some IT jobs are outsourced to India.
But, sorry, this is basically imperialistic egoism. People in other countries have - believe or not - the right to be happy and succesful, too. Especially if they are more competitive and innovative. You cannot always suck all reasources and revenues out of third world countries. Especially if these countries cease to be 3rd world countries and become first world countries. It is indeed not required that Gunjaraa the Indian with eight kids and 2 wives has to be jobless and live in a slum just that you can afford you second hummer.
Make a note (Score:5, Insightful)
Were going to see the new megacorps in India (Score:5, Insightful)
On top of this, can someone please explain how sending good paying jobs out of this company is good for the economy? Competitive advantage doesn't mean anything if all the competition is doing it. The jobs that are replacing these are the low wage jobs in fields like retail that don't have things like health insurance.
Re:Minimum wage? (Score:5, Insightful)
Funny how the executives never have a problem justifying their massive pay and perks.
Also (Score:4, Insightful)
What value to the country does an 'industry' have if they send all the jobs away? Some tax bucks, sure, but a company with jobs is much more valuable to the country.
Re:Translation (Score:5, Insightful)
'consumer' and 'capitalist' are just the slightly nicer terms we use for ourselves.
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:2, Insightful)
You've had the bad luck (Score:5, Insightful)
Canada, Ireland & Israel not so cheap (Score:2, Insightful)
A Commerce Department (news - web sites) report last month said increasing numbers of technology jobs are moving from the United States to Canada, India, Ireland, Israel, the Philippines and China..."
Half of the countries in that list are not going to give much of a saving in labor costs. But at least you don't have to demean yourself by peeing in a bottle to get the job...
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:You'd expect that from someone making millions (Score:2, Insightful)
The problem here is that while offshoring is great for the overall economy, it does suck for the person that just lost their income. I'm with the camp that believes that while it's difficult and unfortunate it does drive people to do something for which people *will* pay them in their current location. If folks aren't willing to do that the I don't really have any tears for them. (Case in point: I had a friend get laid off, out of work for 12 months. When unemployment ran out, he was not "above" getting a $7/hour night security job. It's not great and he's still looking for an engineering job, but he's not complaining and sitting on his rear. I admire him for his ability to do what's necessary for income in these "adverse conditions". Oh, and his job wasn't off-shored; it was killed when his (large national telecomm company) went bankrupt.)
Whose minimum wage? (Score:5, Insightful)
Nor are highly educated workers willing to work for the (local) minimum wage or lower in places other than the U.S. It's just that the U.S. minimum wage provides a pretty good living in some parts of the world.
You know, painful as it is to those who pay the price, one can make the argument that this trend will, in the long run, help to minimize the economic disparities between the "developed" countries and the "third world." And that can't be bad for international security.
Re:Get a nice curry (Score:5, Insightful)
Go on any job board or discussion about outsourcing and you'll see the trolls and out-of-work complaining about how Indians are "stealing" American jobs, either through H-1B visas or overseas outsourcing. This is a case of blaming the wrong people.
The Indians aren't "stealing" anything. American CEOs, with the willing complacence of their bought-and-paid for politicians, are giving them the jobs. Until last year, the H-1B visa caps were permitted to increase despite convincing evidence of a slowdown in the tech market. Outsourcing advocates have convinced American companies that lower hourly pay rates are the savior of their bottom lines.
Some jobs, especially call center work and manufacturing are gone and aren't coming back. Others may drift back and forth as industry discovers a balance.
It's a supply and demand thing. One thing that you might also want to to worry about is those "schools" churning out paper MCSEs month after month, advertising big $$$ and life on Easy Street by passing a few tests and getting a few certificates. In an already overcrowded tech market, these places are turning out tons of folks with overblown expectations. Once their dreams are crushed, who knows how cheap they'll be willing to work?
Ok (Score:4, Insightful)
I know zero people who are gainfully employed in a full time job paying a living wage. Zero.
Management absolutely forbids telecommuting, unless the employee works for another company.
Hiring is a subjective popularity contest with no accountability. Qualified people are passed over reguarly and often as a matter of policy.
Education is meaningless. Absolutely meaningless.
Once hired, most people find their jobs are gray, dispassionate drudgery where they are not allowed to open their mouths to say anything or to offer even a single new idea. This after being required to have decades of senior level experience and years upon years of advanced education (where, one assumes, they were also expected to keep their mouths shut).
Why not just sell it all, Mr. and Mrs. CEO? Just ship the whole fucking thing FedEx to elsewhere Inc.? It's not like you'll notice the total collapse of the economy from inside your Navigator or your half-million dollar townhouse. Just fuck over all your neighbors and cash those options. Everything will be just fine in time for the next backyard block party.
24/7 advertising. No job. No career. No credit. Basket full of crap at 28% interest. Get back on that fucking couch and keep your fucking mouth shut, consumer. This is the "corporate dream."
you're the reason (Score:2, Insightful)
Look what happens when a tech company like Intel misses their "expected" earnings by a single penny a share. If you're a CEO, what do you do? When the stock price is a second derivative of the company's income, there is no other choice but to minimize costs at every turn.
Stockholders and daytrading crowd are what makes everyone look short-term instead of long term, and now we're all going to pay for it. Good job.
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:HP CEO fails to understand basic economics (Score:4, Insightful)
Face it -- when it comes to things like service, support, and even manufacturing of products that the average consumer is unfit to appraise, CEOs could care less what productivity is like because the quality of these things goes relatively unchecked, except by people like us who know better. But we represent a minority, and as long as the can keep fleecing an uneducated public, they're going to do it. Labor costs to them are nothing more than the wages and materials cost. Productivity be damned.
Re:HP CEO fails to understand basic economics (Score:5, Insightful)
I always liken it to the whole Napster/Kazaa thing. People realised that they could get the same music [software], lose a few unimportant bits (like the cover art [local employees]) and save a ton of cash by downloading [outsourcing]. Now the RIAA [tech workers] are worried that their market is vanishing so they try to get the government to pass laws making it illegal for people to save money. Sounds very similar to me.
Re:Finally fighting back (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Isn't HP making money hand over fist? (Score:1, Insightful)
moreover (Score:2, Insightful)
In fact, from the point of the rest of the world, this looks like a long overdue change of direction. For decades, companies like IBM, Ford, Apple, MacDonalds, WalMart, etc., have displaced domestic manufacturers and service industries in those other nations and only created low-end jobs in those nations. Skilled jobs, administration, and management have largely remained in the US and the US has received a disproportionate share of the benefits from those overseas business activities. It's about time that high-skilled and high-paying jobs associated with US-based multinationals also move out of the US.
Re:you want your global economy, here it is... (Score:5, Insightful)
Ok, this is the thing I don't understand....and maybe someone can explain it to me. Why would I want a global economy?? From what I can see, it is beneficial to everyone EXCEPT the US. It seems to do nothing but deplete our jobs...standard of living, etc. What possible good can it do for us? It seemed to be better when we led production and innovation in most areas....
I mean, life is a competition...we use to seem to win, and now we aren't, and it is our own fault for 'giving in' and this global economy our corporations are supporting with these actions is going to cause our spiral and downfall. Keep this up, and we'll lower our whole society's standard of living....
Re:Translation (Score:5, Insightful)
So why should business be forced to pay a higher price for the same commodity item - labor?
You want cheap goods, but do not want to lose your high paying job. You can't have it both ways.
Re:Finally fighting back (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, but wait 'till you hear her whine when overseas companies stop being cheap labor centers and start forming companies that take a nice, fat chunk out of HP's business. Once it's her ass in the fire--once the firms in India realize that they can make a killing by cutting out the middleman of overpaid American executives--she'll be screaming bloody murder.
I'm not disagreeing with your sentiment...rather, I'm suggesting that you reconsider holding Carly up as an example on this one.
Re:Minimum Wage (Score:5, Insightful)
I've got a friend who's got a master's degree in biochemistry, and he's squeaking by (but not by much right now) but he's aiming to get a Ph.D. and end up in the upper middle class later in life. Would he do that if highly-educated people would get the same amount as a high-school dropout flipping burgers at McDonalds'? Hell no.
By HP's logic, we should all go to grad school (or equivalent) for ten years after getting our BS/BA, and then live in debt for the rest of our lives because our McJobs won't pay enough to pay off the horrid student loan debt.
And this is okay? I can't believe that anyone would make a statement like that, even a corporate flunkie, and be able to keep a straight face.
Costs (Score:5, Insightful)
Even if they all suddenly would work for half the salary overnight, HP would have to reduce the price of their products too in order to ensure that people can afford to purchase them.
In other words, their percentage profit on an item would stay the same. The fact that educated workers can demand a higher salary in the US means that corporations can get away with providing more expensive goods. In many other countries, you'd never be able to sell something at US prices.
Re:Finally fighting back (Score:2, Insightful)
Fine, but the result of globalization is to level the standard of living. Not so nice when you're currently on the high side of the seesaw, is it?
Pretty soon your $120k degree won't generate anywhere near the returns it has in the past, and the US society will become even more polarized. The middle class will disappear, your kids won't be able to afford to purchase a house, etc.
Take is a step further and consumers won't be able to support the companies that have shipped their jobs overseas and down and down we go.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:3, Insightful)
In a bind (Score:3, Insightful)
I dont think you can really block outsourcing without restricting trade. I personally am for free trade (true free trade, not what we have now) but I think some countries that benefit from it and therefore pushed it are now stepping back now that job competition is starting to come into affect.
The US and others are just going to have to learn to better compete. For example whenever I look at an Asian electronics contract manufacturing facilities most boast how there raw materials and automated equipment come from Japan. Of course eventually the chinese and others will have there own manufacturing equipment but alsong as you keep innovating you will stay one step ahead of the game.
Of course I'm just talking about IT here and at the momentthis does n't apply to anything labour intensive, but having said that I can envisage Japan in 50 years time competing against China with robot automation instead of throwing people at the job.
Invisible Inflation (Score:2, Insightful)
This is particularly noticeable if you make the conscious choice NOT to buy things made in countries where workers have no rights.
In my personal experience of shopping this Christmas, I mostly bought things made in the U.S. and I payed a lot of money, sometimes 3 times the price for what that same item would have cost if made by a slave in China.
why would I want to work at below minimum wage? (Score:5, Insightful)
The initial comments are correct - we don't have inherent rights to jobs - if someone can do it better and cheaper than us, they will get the job and we'll have to do something else. I simply have a problem with the PHB logic that the stated CEOs seem to labor under - that others should sacrifice their well-being for their benefit while they have no duty to do the same. I'm certain that if their logic were applied to their jobs (I'm pretty sure someone as competent as these CEO's could be hired from overseas at 10% of their pay), they would not be so quick to advocate sacrifice for the benefit of others.
my my my ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Costs are driving outsourcing? How about wanting to make sure that ALL the money stays on the top? This is what completely amazes me in the world we live in, Joe Millionaire really believes that paying family providers a salary 1/100000th of his own is a COST.
Now don't get me wrong here, I'm not some hippie banging my Commie Drum here, but I wouldn't mind some honesty. When saying why you're outsourcing, simply tell what you are doing ...
1.) You are not outsourcing, you are laying off americans in a hope that every other company won't follow your lead (you still need people in america to buy your stuff right?)
2.) You are personally making the statement that you believe that it means more to have 3 yachts instead of 2, and the best way to get there is cheap labor.
3.) You believe that you are above 'regular' people in America, and would love to just keep screwing us all.
Well what's the problem with all of this? Think back into the history books for me a little bit here. At what point in America's history did we see an ever pressing economic turmoil because of extremely low cost labor? Was it, ohhh yes the bloodiest battle costing more American lives than any other war in our history?
Lets face it the Civil war was fought not to free the slaves, but in fact because the South was so rich because it legally could force people to work with no pay. This pissed off everyone else who HAD to pay their workers. Believe it or not some of the anger in the "Free North" was because they themselves weren't allowed to have slaves.
Getting a little bit off topic here, the point being is that this country was built on the backs of "Joe Average", who is in the lower to middle class. There's just one big problem with everything here, there are whole lot more "Joe Averages" than there are "Joe Millionaires" and you can only piss "Joe Average" off for so long before he and his buddies organize together.
So Mr Corperate Joe Millionaire, I implore you to please consider your actions and possibly not bite the true hand that feeds you, over and over and over and over again. "Joe Average" is collecting welare/unemployment because you believe he is not worthy. Lastly you can fight the government all you want, but remember there are more "Joe Averages" and if you keep pissing "Joe Average" o you may actually see democracy in action in which you as an American company will be spanked, because "Joe Average" also can vote.
Re:Problems (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Problems (Score:2, Insightful)
"They" work for the shareholders, not for anyone else. I don't think that's bad, just how it is. This whole article and some reactions illustrate pretty well a trend that's only going to continue. The middle class in America is going away. Anyone who has travelled extensively (out of the U.S. for us Americans) has seen that in a majority of countries in the world, the middle class doesn't exist. There are fabulously, fabulously wealthy people... and everyone else. Sometimes the everyone else could be considered sort of comparable to the middle class in America, but more often than not they are moving more towards being as fabulously poor as the rich are rich. In a lot of countries that is a major problem because there are no opportunities to get out of your social position. In America however, we have choices... albeit painful ones often. Let's say I'm a college student, always interested in Computer Science. I'm halfway through my major, when I start noticing precisely what we're talking about here: Holy Shite! No jobs for my chosen profession any more! What do I do? Well... either keep going and take advantage of the free market economy (ie; start a company, find an angle, etc) or switch majors. Or choice three, which a lot of Americans take: Bury your head in the sand, hope that it all goes away, and if it doesn't... lobby congress until they protect you somehow.
*Note* By way of full disclosure, I'm a business-aligned Republican and becoming more invested in politics. I've got my helmet on, let the bashing begin.
Re:Finally fighting back - Not true. (Score:2, Insightful)
If Dell can have all their operations moved to India where their costs will be 1/10 of that it is now do you think that that shmancy new Laptop will sell for 1/10th the price?
How about 1/4? Or even half-off?
No, it is going into the CEO's pockets, and those of their lobbyists who they pay to fight daily in the Capital for their right to ever-increasing salaries and bonuses while their workers get laid off.
And they have won again...
When they attain final victory and all the domestic well paying US jobs are gone who will buy their goods?
We always hear how the US is the world's greatest consumer. Well, how will the consumer fare when his pockets are empty because the best job available is that of a greeter at WalMart?
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:2, Insightful)
I think you mean every economy.
Re:walmart, anyone? (Score:3, Insightful)
This will continue until they have the same costs.
If their currency is allowed to float freely, it will rise if they have a large net export.
The cost of buying their goods will increase, and make them less competative.
Right now it is cheaper to buy and transport the goods. Eventually the cost to buy will be such that it is cheaper to make locally than buy and transport, then the jobs come back.
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:5, Insightful)
Not everyone can do the same things, some are blessed from birth with inherit capabilities, some work harder for them, some don't. So yes...your hard work (education) to attain skills that everyone else does not have DOES entitle you to better pay for your job...because is not something any 'joe' can do.
I'm not happy to see the blue collar jobs moved either....I think by putting our manufacturing outside our borders along with much of our intellectual work out there, will at some point become a national security danger. If other countries at some point get pissed at us...and cut off steel supplies (add whatever other industry here) to us...what will happen? WE don't have the manufacturing capabilities dues to shipping them overseas and across borders. Right now, we're worried about oil embargos? Well, wait till it is MUCH more than that that the world can threaten us with...
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:4, Insightful)
Speaking as an American, do we really care if a company is headquartered here if they don't give anything (jobs) to the local economy? If this proposal were fact, I'm sure some of these "skeleton" companies would relocate and we would lose their tax dollars. On the other hand, many more companies would likely stay and choose to hire local talent (all things being equal). That would help tremendously.
Re:Isn't HP making money hand over fist? (Score:4, Insightful)
Not Funny! (Score:5, Insightful)
Executive compensation is way out of whack, and it's because the executive club takes care of itself. Boards of one company are filled with executives of other companies, and vice versa. It's a circle of people writing each other checks out of corporate accounts.
There's always the line of defense which is, "but we're critically important, and we're doing very difficult jobs." The same could be true of the IT personnel who have been outsourced. So therefore, the executives should be outsourced as well.
Imagine the millions each company could save if their executives were paid an Indian's King's Ransom, instead of an American's King's Ransom?
If the American execs want to keep their jobs, well heck, they can take a pay cut to be on par with their Indian counterparts, right?
The whole executive compensation issue wouldn't be so aggravating if all execs did a good job. But many suck. Many run their companies into the ground, resign when things get bad, get a parting gift of a few million, and then go become CxO at another company. Rinse repeat. Once an exec, always an exec, unless of course you're tied up in a federal country club.
Re:Minimum Wage (Score:2, Insightful)
Capitalism for workers, protectionism for mgmt (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, I disagree. I think some protectionism IS worth it. I like my way of life, and I'm not willing to sacrifice it so the capitalist elite can get bigger bonuses or the pedantic economists can proclaim "more efficient markets".
"More efficient markets" sound great, but that perfect efficiency risks turning us all into faceless cogs of some huge machine, having to justify our every move and every need on the basis of its economic efficiency and benefit to the markets. Yuck.
Re: okay... (Score:2, Insightful)
I think that Scott Kirwin, founder of the Information Technology Professionals Association of America, is being a tad sarcastic in his quote. If you look at the ITPAA's web site [itpaa.org] (I couldn't access it at the moment, but I used Google's cache), they're opposed to outsourcing.
The Yahoo article states that the same tech firms defending moving jobs overseas are also pushing for better education in the U.S. Kirwin's quote is presented in the article as a counterpoint.
Re:you want your global economy, here it is... (Score:1, Insightful)
Which is something someone in the US wants? Why would that be again?
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:5, Insightful)
When the overpaid factory jobs went elsewhere, it wasn't that hard (in theory) to retrain those workers for something else. In many cases I believe, those workers had other skills, but stayed with the factory jobs because they paid very well and were very stable. When they lost the jobs, they used their other skills to find other employment. If you're already skilled in assembling cars, how hard is it to learn how to do oil changes, and go to work at Jiffy Lube? Construction also is a manual labor job that doesn't require any education, and it pays very well too.
Tech jobs are different: they require years of education to become qualified for. Sure, help-desk operators don't have Master's degrees, but companies are also moving engineering jobs overseas. If you have a Master's degree in engineering, which probably took 5-6 years to achieve, along with tens of thousands of dollars in student loans, you can't just retrain on a whim and get a different job.
Worse yet, just a few years ago all these same companies were whining about how there weren't enough engineers for them to hire. They yelled at the government to improve science and math education and encourage more kids to go to engineering school. Now that a bunch of people have gotten engineering degrees, they're being kicked out the door because these same companies found out they could outsource the work to 3rd-world countries for much less. Now these engineers are stuck with too much education to easily change jobs, and high student loans they still have to repay.
What I don't understand is why these stupid execs are still calling for better education in this country. What's the point if there's no jobs for the kids to go into because they've all been outsourced?
A brief rant (Score:3, Insightful)
When you buy an American made car, it is made in Mexico, most of the time. I think that Nissan is one of the few cars assembled in America, nice irony. American Express, has even asked a freind of mine, who does billing, if she wanted a "free" trip to india, to train nice young Indians to work on the phones. The poised this as a bonus for her productivity, but actually is them trying to con her into training her replacement.
Such is the way America goes. I'm all for trade restrictions, no matter how unPC that is to say in our ubercapitalist/globalist society. If some random developing country offers a good education, and cheaper service, let them develop their own companies, then let them compete in the global market.
BUT... Same as with GM leaving Michigan, it is partly the employees fault. If you keep on demanding more and more, wages benefits, whatnot, then you might as well excpect that they eventually will give up, and give the job to someone more humble in needs. If you expect, after leaving college, to receive a huge wage, huge benefits, options, and all the other perks, then then you are truly deluded as to our economy. You should be happier, in the long-run, to accept a job of modest wage and benefit, knowing that the market sucks, and their is a cheap pool of more grateful employees elsewhere.
Now here lies a real problem for these companies, as well. Right now they are alienating their consumers, and American support people, but more than make up for it in increased profitability. BUT... What happens when these new foreign, and cheap, employees also realize their worth? In a foreign studies class I took, we studied Malaysia. In said country, Intel is a LARGE employer, dependant on the cheap labor pool there. But as the Economy grows, the people start to expect more. They unionize, they demand benefits, they demand more rights, wages, a higher standard of living. They become more American, for the purposes of the company.
So either the companies leave, and crush the local economy they built, further alienating more people, or they are forced to bend to the will of their employees, making the whole point of moving pointless. But in the short term it is a great idea for making a shitload of money.
No answer here, except a no-brainer, 'greed sucks'. Sorry for the rant, I'm of rather harsh opinions on out-sourcing.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Get a nice curry (Score:4, Insightful)
2. CEOs are hiring people who can do the work for the least money. In some cases they get burned by that because it turns out that the outsourced workers are inferior. However, in those cases where somebody can do your job just as good as you for a fraction of the wage... Guess what? You were getting paid more than you were actually worth. C'est la vie.
3. The "paper MCSEs" are not going to be willing to work cheap. Most of them went chasing after the advertising of "big $$$" because they wanted to make a lot of cash, not because they love to work in IT. When it they discover that they more as a plummer than as a PC help desk worker, they will change jobs, and we will be right back to needing H1Bs to fill some of our jobs when the market picks up again.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:4, Insightful)
Not everyone has the LUXURY of taking 4 years off of life to pursue education. Those *non-traditional* students that aren't racking up loans and are working themselves through school are heros, but they are not the students to use as the average example.
Todays univerisites are pumping out too many liberal arts degrees, which is fine if your degree in Psychology leads to your a profession in psychology, but does that same degree demand you get more money working a help desk with someone who didn't go to university? But you feel *entitled* to more money, that's fine, I invite your DEMAND it during the hiring process, I know plenty of guys that'll be there to pick up your scraps and will work damn hard once in the door.
I say all this being a college grad and having gone back twice for additional degrees. Although none of them are in the area I work in, I barely mention them on my resume and don't feel they entitle me to anything.
Re:Translation (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:HP CEO fails to understand basic economics (Score:4, Insightful)
No, they are outsourcing because they THINK they can get the same work done for less money. This is a crucial difference. Just because an action is taken, especially in the corporate world, this does not mean that the action was well founded, beneficial, or even has the desired effect. It means the action was "sold" to upper management.
The jury is still out as to whether offshoring will be a good thing, even for the long term bottom line of the corporations employing it. (Not even talking about the general economy, here.) It's become so widespread so quickly because a) it's a quick fix for strained budgets, and b) it's a popular fad in business management circles.
Re:Problems (Score:5, Insightful)
It's just as tough for the experienced people too - many think graduates are getting their jobs as graduates are cheaper and willing to whore themselves working stupid hours, and be keen about it!
Think yourself lucky that your financial commitments are lower now than they will be. I have a friend looking for a job right now. He's senior and well paid. He's got a car, a mortgage, a wife, and a baby on the way. Oh, and he doesn't want to work stupid hours, but wants enjoy life a little. Taking a paycut for him is much harder - you don't have the same expectations, commitments, nor are do you have a lifestyle that will get worse. After being a student, virtually amy job will improve your quality of life, even if it's very poorly paid compared with a few years ago.
Many graduates seem to have the attitude of live to work, although maybe it's because their lives are simpler and that they're younger and they can still party and work without burning out. Wait a couple of years. Trust me: working to live is a much better outlook, unfortunately it brings the stress of knowing that foolish managers will look often look you for somebody with a different attitude. I have the same attitude: I worked stupid hours in the dot com boom but I won't do it now. Why should I break my back, make my life worse, and all to make somebody else rich? Next time I work like that it'll be for my own business... when I finally come up with an idea that sells.
Re:you want your global economy, here it is... (Score:3, Insightful)
Your incredible standards of living have been so far sustained by a global economy created in great part by the USA for his own benefit. That is, the rest of the world is a global provider of cheap resources than you then sell in your market or resell outside at whatever "value added" price "you" decide.
The problem is that "you" is your Goverment and your Corporations. Now they find a way to get human "resources" cheaper on their global market, so you, the guy on the street, are screwed.
It boils down to what most Americans dont want to hear because they have been indoctrinated since birth against it, but the only solution is to start putting GLOBAL goverment labor laws, salary scales, syndicates, etc. Because without that you are just what the rest of the world is to them, a resource with a price, and they find yours to high . If the global economy is going to be anything else than make the rich richer and screw the rest, it needs a global systems of checks.
Either that or in 100 years the world is going back to feudalism with you being a serf of HP, Intel, Microsoft, etc, because you have to compete to somebody that would be happy to work for food.
Jesus Couto F
Re:Trade restrictions.. (Score:2, Insightful)
It's all well and good for them to claim that they should be free to make a profit, yet when they are being nailed by foreign companies who can sell goods at a better price, THEN they scream for market tariffs.
See, softwood lumber. See, fishing. See, banking.
Classic case of "I only want what's best for me, the rest of you can go hang"
Re:you want your global economy, here it is... (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean, hey, catch up...I have nothing against other countries raising their standard of living, and wealth. I just have a problem of them doing it at the expense of OUR standard of living and wealth. And I have a problem of us willingly helping this process at our expense!!
Like I said before...life is unfair...it is a contest. Not everyone starts out the same or has the same capabilities. But, if you work hard and succeed...they you deserve what you get. If you don't, you don't deserve a handout. There will always be haves and have nots in the world. No one deserves any wealth or standard of living given to them. We did it...let others catch up if they want, but, we are under no obligation to help them...especially not at risk of losing what we have attained.
"2: Corporations are (were?) only taxed on profits, and shareholders are only taxed on their share of the profits. More profits for US corporations = more US tax dollars = a more sustainable "new deal."
I dare say that MOST people in the US do not make their livelyhood as shareholders. This arguement is not valid...this only benefits a few, not a countries economy.
Neither "solution" is very attractive. (Score:5, Insightful)
1) "Screw you, you lazy bastards. It's Capitalism, compete or shut up. Just like I'm going to do as soon as I graduate from college with my CS degree. I can't wait!"
2) "Let's outsource the CEOs! nyuk nyuk" [about five or six times per thread, always ranked 5:Funny]
3) "Dammit, if they want to work for US tech companies, let 'em come here!"
None of these responses is an effective means of addressing the problem. The Western system of democratic capitalism has worked so far specifically because it harnesses capitalism to acheive wealth and social stability. Notice that I said "harness". Capitalism is a great tool, but left to its own devices it destroys the middle class.
Banning job exportation completely is stupid. The US will quickly lose its competitive edge in IT. Already we're seeing Indian companies churning out quality, high-margin software (such as Flexcube) that's making significant inroads into US markets. When the Chinese start getting warmed up, watch out.
Allowing the exporters free rein is also stupid. It will destroy the US IT industry, put millions out of work, and we'll lose critical mindshare (as all the bright kids who would've become engineers wind up as lawyers). And people with families and other responsibilities DON'T HAVE the resources or time to retrain, you knuckleheaded Objectivist brats. They'll drop out of the middle class and screw the rest of the economy, destroying jobs they might have otherwise tried to retrain for.
Really, what we need are measures to soften the blow of global capitalism. That's what governments are there for. We need controls (but not a ban) on job exports, perhaps a tax-credits-per-domestic-employee plan. We need federal retraining incentive program, giving out vouchers to unemployed people who can redeem them for tuition to get new job skills. And we can take a big chunk of the cash to do these things out of agribusiness subsidies. Fuck Monsanto, the US stopped being an agricultural economy about a hundred years ago. Let's keep our leadership role role where it really matters: in science and technology.
What about unionizing? (Score:5, Insightful)
We could use them here, and they could use them in India. Unions with some kind of international perspective (instead of the nationalism of the AFL-CIO and others) are the only kinds of unions that can be effective in a globalized economy.
This is why we have to be concerned about the economic conditions of the third world, and need to support their right to organize. Our decent jobs are going to be much less likely to cross overseas and become sweatshop jobs if we give support to people in the third world who are trying to form unions.
What a friggen bunch of whiners (Score:4, Insightful)
Look at history, the unions did the same thing. They started raising their salaries to a 'livable wage', then when companies went elsewhere to get the labor cheaper, they all started to whine to.
I knew far too many programmers that wanted to command +60K salaries that weren't worth crap. But because companies needed them, and didn't have a cheaper source, they had to pay it. Now, they have an alternative and are using it. Well boo hoo, don't cry in your lite beer too much.
It may surprise you, but Bill Gates and all the other CEOs didn't go into business to give you jobs. They went into business to make money. Get over yourselves, and if you want to be rich, do the same thing. Otherwise, settle for what other people are willing to pay, not what you think you are worth.
What role did Open Source have to play in this? (Score:3, Insightful)
It gives them a legal OS, a legal compiler, documentation, and support, all for free.
If Linux and Gnu (or some equivilent) didn't exist they'd be paying for licences, or pirating the software. Ok - quite a few would pirate the software, as most of Asia has been for the last 10 years.
But without competition from Linux, Microsoft might have put the licence-checker into their software alot sooner than they did with XP. Schools would have had to pay for licences (and paid for the more powerful hardware required to run a Microsoft OS).
This doesn't mean I think Linux is bad; I am in no way stating that we should keep India barefoot, pregnant and in the kitchen, so to speak. I just wanted to make the point that Gnu/Linux has played a huge role in training software developers in 3rd world countries.
Or am I wrong? Do they run Solaris, XP, 2000, or Mac OS X?
Re:Translation ...WRONG! (Score:2, Insightful)
I find it best to define greed as having to lie, cheat or steal in a small way or a big way to gain your ends.
BTW, *weasel is a good name for you. You would probably take the coins off of a dead man's eyes for own ends.
Re:Get a nice curry (Score:3, Insightful)
If the cost of living in the US were the same as India, I'd be willing to be paid the same as an Indian software engineer. Guess what, it's significantly more expensive to live in the US.
this is what globalization is getting us (Score:5, Insightful)
I realize protectionism is not a viable long-term strategy. I don't want to steal the potential for economic development from nations transitioning to an advanced economy.
But here's the problem: we are growing production capacity without growing the markets to support them. Everyone would be getting rich and improving their quality of life in this equation if there was a demand from within India for IT work. There isn't one to speak of.
Without such markets to support the expanded production capacity, the benefits of globalization are realized only for corporations -- and they are short-lived. The net money going to workers drops as companies utilize cheaper labor. By shipping capital out of the country to foreign workers who will not inject it back into the corporations' native economy, that economy will suffer, people won't be able to afford services and the corporations will collapse.
The corporations are not really to blame. This is irresistable poison fruit. If they don't take it, they will starve long before their competitors die from the toxicity of the practice.
Protectionist measures are not a permanent solution, but they MUST be put back into place to slow the bleeding. They can slowly be relaxed as foreign markets expand and produce consumers to support their industries.
The hard truth is that there is no shortcut to developing a nation's economy. To do it right takes a slow process. Otherwise all you get is short term corporate enrichment, the establishment of unsustainable foreign labor markets, and the destruction of local economies and cultures.
This is what we are choosing (Score:4, Insightful)
His point was that they were taking wages earned in the American economy and pumping the profits to another country where labor costs were lower.
Today American workers expect high pay (certainly even minimum wage is VERY high pay from a worldwide perspective) and great benefits, but we all want CD players made in China. We can't have it both ways.
If we want to keep our standard of living, we need to choose to pay more for American-made goods. I make a practice of looking for American made goods when I buy, but I know that I'm totally in the minority when I do so. I'll pay more to help sustain my standard of living. I'm hoping that someday soon others will figure that out and start doing the same.
I'm not really expecting that.
The good thing is that overseas manufacturing can be difficult because of lack of infrastructure, and overall productivity is pretty low, making our products more competetive in spite of different labor costs. This is changing and it will be interesting to see the landscape in 20 years....
Broken record... (Score:5, Insightful)
[Remember records... they were vinyl (in earlier days, wax) discs approximately 2 to 2.5 times the diameter of CDs or DVDs in which data was stored as a physical groove on the edge of a track spiraling towards the center.]
Offshoring is a good thing. The "lost jobs" in IT are creating a pool of capital (in the form of labor) that will allow the next great step forward to be taken.
Industrialization could only occur on the scale it did if, thanks to increased efficiency in agriculture, millions of family farms went under, sending their labor capital to the cities to work in the factories.
The "information industries" (IT, law, medicine, finance, media, etc.) could only occur on the scale they have over the past 50 years if industrial employment declined (largely because of greater mechanization and also because of offshoring of production). The evidence can be seen by looking at Europe, where those nations that vigorously tried to protect their existing industrial wage bases (through guaranteed employment laws, massive subsidies, etc.) found themselves years behind the US in terms of the state of the "information industries".
Much like the slashdotters complaining about offshoring, the RIAA and MPAA complain about technological changes that, quite frankly, doom their current models, if not their existence themselves. And much like the RIAA/MPAA, these slashdotters are calling for the government to come in and preserve their business models that have brought them prosperity.
Yet these slashdotters, in general, decry the RIAA and MPAA, while failing to realize that they are doing exactly the same thing for exactly the same reasons.
As far as I can tell, this indicates that these slashdotters are either:
What'll it be.
P.S.
Re:Outsourced CEO (Score:3, Insightful)
Well said. Let's watch her go crying to the government the first time someone infringes one of HP's "intellectual property" holdings. I guess then she will feel like HP has a God-given right to make money! I guess the same doesn't apply to individuals.
Real issue: loss of ability to innovate and create (Score:1, Insightful)
It's like killing the goose that lays golden eggs.
By sending the R and D overseas, we're actually sending the technology and paying others to learn how to innovate and create, while losing those abilities ourselves.
But the short sighted CEO's and the Prez and his gang don't care about the long term. All they care about is grabbing that little pile of money that's sitting in front of them right now.
Trade ware? Give me a break. The 3rd world has declared a trade war on the US a long time ago.
It's time we all woke up and smelled the stink that's brewing right under our noses.
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:3, Insightful)
This whole bitch session is so funny as isn't a common rationality for p2p that selling music is a broken business model and the record companies (and record shops who are getting hurt the most) should evolve. Well we should all evolve, get a job in the service sector, Doctors, Nurses, Pharmacists, Police, and Firefighters will always find work.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:5, Insightful)
The following is an opinion commonly expressed on Slashdot, sometimes with more and sometimes less vitriol. Note that I am not accusing you of making this same statement, or anything like it.
However, when the shoe is on the other foot, geeks who've got those beautifully framed CIS degrees on their wall, are entitled to make money, and have a job, and it's very important for businesses to take a hit on the bottom line for their sake, or for the government to legislate some kind of program or incentive to keep their precious jobs safe.
You may work for somebody else, but you're still a "business." Your business model works something like this:
1. Get CIS degree
2. Market skills to a company for cash
3. Profit!!!
Well, sorry, your business model doesn't work anymore. Businesses have found they can get the same work or a reasonable facsimile thereof overseas for much, much less. Either your price is too high, or your services are insufficient. Now, some will come back and argue that programmers in India or wherever suck, and their code stinks, and it winds up taking more time and and and... So? Obviously it's making sense for the company, or else they wouldn't be doing it. Sounds like you need to change your business model.
Re:Translation (Score:1, Insightful)
Who's going to by the damn products American Companies make, if there are no employed American's with spending money? The top 2%? Foreign workers?
Why would a foreign worker living overseas buy (tariffed) expensive American products when they can buy local products - in some cases just as good or better?
Re:Make a note (Score:2, Insightful)
Global Fascism (Score:4, Insightful)
This is part of the global fascism movement that is turning the whole world into a corporate slave state. The liberal/progressive way to approach the problem of world poverty and wealth creation is to lift up weaker states with workers' rights and environmental protections so that we can all grow on an equal playing field.
The fascist approach is to destroy or prevent any kind of human rights or environmental protections from being applied in poverty-stricken areas and then use those areas and their nearly slave labor to force down rights, wages, and protections in the US and other free nations so that we go on a race to the bottom.
Don't believe me? Look at the example we just set in Central America:
I bet competent Indians could do the CEO's jobs (Score:2, Insightful)
I work on the edge between IT and corporate/executive sphere and while I'm generally pro open markets,when they're fair. However it seems the upper executive class holds itself immune from market trends.
They don't recognize that they're eroding the middle class and thereby the market for their products...like those small town people across America that lost their manufacturing jobs because they started to shop Wal-Mart and eroded the market for the products their factories were making...
There's also that little picadillo of history that when people are out of work, they have a tendency to take a more critical look at their 'leaders'
Can we start the revolution yet?
Re:Outsource expenses - CEOs (Score:-1, Insightful)
Perhaps I'm just dense, but how do you get 2,290 people earning $50K with $500K? $500K split between 2,290 people is just under $220. Seems to me you can only get 10. And that's only if the company isn't offering any benefits or doing tax withholding.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:5, Insightful)
I fully agree with you. People should be paid what they're worth. The problem is, what you ARE worth, and what you THINK you're worth, seem to be two completely different things. People with CIS degrees seem to think they're worth $50,000/year, when, in fact, according to the companies outsourcing their tech jobs to India, they're in fact worth something like $10,000/year. Either you need to lower your price, or increase your services.
Your education has nothing to do with how much your services are worth. Your services are worth whatever somebody is willing to pay you to perform them.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:3, Insightful)
I have a Master's degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering, which took about 5-6 years to get. I decided I didn't like where the tech sector was heading nor the general volitility involved with working for somebody else. I retrained myself to be a photographer instead and now own a photo studio. The problem is not that you can't retrain, but that you won't retrain.
Re:Get a nice curry (Score:4, Insightful)
> bought-and-paid for politicians, are giving them the
> jobs.
Exactly. Fiorina, for example is a Bush supporter, having given thousands of dollars to his campaign according to opensecrets.org [opensecrets.org]. Then she's rewarded by the Bush Administration by raising H-1B caps and reducing restrictions of corporations to move more work offshore. So it doesn't surprise anyone when she flippantly suggests that Americans lose jobs to cheaper workers overseas.
Eventually, middle class jobs will be sent to countries like India, leaving America as the land of the millionaire heir (thanks to the Bush administration for getting rid of the estate tax), the millionaire CEOs, and millions of minimum-wage Walmart greeters.
Well, that's not fair; we'll also have illegal immigrants [yahoo.com] who get a 3-year work visas but are denied U.S. citizenship.
Globalization vs. Adam Smith (Score:3, Insightful)
These days, however, large corporations have absolutely zero connection to any town or city. If a city can no longer afford their product or service because no one has jobs, so what? There are thousands of other towns and cities they can deal with.
Take IBM, for example (because their ad is currently at the top of this page). In some locations, they are a major employer. They recently announced they are closing some offices and shipping the jobs over-seas. If they are that town's major employer, the local economy will be devistated. It has a rippling effect. At first the luxury businesses will feel the pinch (movies, restaurants, etc). Later, staple businesses such as supermarkets will be hurting. This does not concern IBM in any way since they only answer to the stockholders - most of whom don't look at the long term effects of these decisions, just at today's stock price.
The knee-jerk reaction is to implement protectionist laws. This typically results in a trade war and everyone ends up just as bad off as before - if not worse.
Workers can accept lower salaries, but when you are competing against a cost-of-living measured in pennies a day, you simply can't drop your salary that far and still be able to pay rent and buy food.
Personally, I think the world is in a transitional period between local and global economies. As places like India gain more jobs, the competition will heat up, raising the salaries. Eventually it will reach some kind of equilibrium. How long this will take is way beyond my amateurish guesses. It could be a few years or it could be decades. Or I could be completely clueless since economics is not a field I know anything about.
And yes, I'm looking for work.
Re:Radical idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Most multinational companies already list on foreign stock exchanges in addition to their home exchange. Also companies can be registered as a company in multiple countries. Much of this is a requirement of the laws [us and abroad]. Also listing on an exchange is a financial action rather than a legal one. You typically list on an exchange in a country where you need to or you think you can raise funding.
Now here's a counterpoint to your argument. If you want HP or Microsoft and other multinationals to only list as a foreign corporation, the entire US economy would disappear. If a company moves its headquarters to another country, the US government loses out on all the tax revenue from the corporations, same thing as using a tax haven like Bermuda as your corporate headquarters. Many of the large companies have threatend to do this in the past if they don't receive preferential treatment.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not a market fundamentalist (i.e. one who believes that market forces always magically coincide with the public interest) but if someone works hard all the way through college and gets a degree in something not very useful, like thermionic valve design, that does not automatically entitle him to a higher wage than the guy who left school at 16 and invested in the qualifications necessary to drive a truck carrying hazzardous goods.
If the market dictates that workers in a call centre earn more than a software engineer with a degree, why shouldn't they earn more? Supply and demand.
Interesting point you make about steel supplies. Only recently George Bush had to back down on his illegal steel tarriffs under threat from the European Union who were preparing to retaliate with tarriffs on goods produced in politically-sensitive American states. The USA's vulnerability is already here, and it's no bad thing. Bush was forced to behave himself, which was good for Europe, and good for America. Only a few special interests (the steel producers) got hurt.
Re:Translation (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeh, that's true, but you still want to pay the amount that you think it's worth, not the amount that the person who is selling it to you thinks it is worth.
Re:Our REAL problem at companies (Score:3, Insightful)
Just make it federal law that you must pay your employees the minimum wage, or higher, regardless of their citizenship, place of work, or whatever.
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:4, Insightful)
Perhaps you've never traveled outside the US. I'm guessing that's the case here. one US dollar in America buys you exactly jack shit. A can of soda maybe. One US dollar in a country like Zimbabwe buys you 10 loaves of bread and a new kitchen table.
When we heat that some factory worker in China is getting paid "10 cents per hour", you have to take that in context. If a loaf of bread in the same town is two cents, and rent at an apartment building is 80 cents per month, then I'd say that 10 cents an hour is a pretty damn fair wage.
Just my two cents.
Re:Not Funny! (Score:5, Insightful)
Funny, I'd say exactly the same thing about IT people. Just because you work in IT doesn't mean you're qualified to do it.
There are few good CxOs, just like there are few good IT people. Most are average and don't have any special ability or knowledge.
Re:you want your global economy, here it is... (Score:2, Insightful)
How is the US's prosperity unfair? It was hardworking American's that brought our country into the industrial revolution, that invented many technologies we use around the world today. The US rose to the top of the world's properity on its own. Its not our fault if other people around the world haven't done the same on their own.
I don't have a problem with other country's increasing their prosperity, I do though when its at the expense of the US.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:5, Insightful)
"Well, I came up with the schema!" -- sure, but the "innovation" was the relational database model, innovated some twenty years ago.
"Well, I coded it!" -- sure, but did you write mySQL? Did you "innovate" that? No, you're just using it.
Fact of the matter is, your high-tech "skill" of database design is not much different that the skill of an autoworker installing the drivetrain on a Buick. These days, it's easy to learn, and repetative. That's not innovation.
Thankfully, most of the real innovation is still right here. New standards, protocols, specifications, fabrication techniques, etc, are still being developed right here in the U.S. We still make the tools. You just can't get paid near so much for merely using the tools anymore.
Re:you want your global economy, here it is... (Score:2, Insightful)
The problem with you attitude is that you don't realize it's a zero sum game here. You can't raise everyone up to the living standards of the middle class of the United States without decreasing something somewhere. It's just not sustainable on the amount of resources in this world.
Also, life is not a contest. We are not on this world to see who wins the race. We are on this world to advance the human condition. Life is unfair, but life is also what we make it. Fairness is something we can give to the world. If you think it's okay for us to live in luxury while others in this world live in filth and poverty, so be it, but what you don't realize is that those who live in poverty become jealous quite easily and then things like 9-11 happen because they cry vengeance when they see those with wealth stomping on those without it, all while chanting "Life's unfair. Get a job!"
You also think that just by working hard, you will be rewarded. That's not how it works, bud. There are millions of people in this world who work far, far harder then you ever will and they a paid a pittance of the amount of money you are paid. If you consider that fair, I weep for you.
By just being born into a beneficial system, you are countless years ahead of others in this world. There is no competition there. You didn't earn your place in this world, but were born into it. Therefore, it is your Christian/Buddhist/Jewish/Moral/etc. duty to spread the benefits that were given to you to those who surround you. You purpose is to advance the human race, not just yourself.
When you talk about how you "did it, let other catch up" you're actually talking about all those who came before you. You actually didn't do anything special yourself to put yourself in your situation. You were most likely born into a strong family, a solid home, had a good education, got a good job (based on your education), etc. You were *given* these things, remember. You should try to give some of it back to others so that they may have the same opportunities and advancements as you.
You talk about every man for himself, but you don't realize that when more and more people start losing the race and fewer and fewer people are winning, then progress slows, because the people on top get lazy in their wealth. We've become lazy as Americans and lost our competitive edge because we've gathered up so much wealth that we think we're entitled to just by going to work each day. We've stopped actually *working* for it. If others are doing it cheaper and more efficiently, then we need to do find a way to compete.
Whatever, the point of this rant is that life is no longer a competition. It's not a game of survival of the fittest as it was in our caveman days. It is a quest for the betterment of all human life and progress of the human condition. If we have to sacrifice a little so that others might eat for a day, I'm more than willing to give of myself.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:3, Insightful)
It's kind of like natural selection. Those that survive adapt to suit the world. Those that insist the world adapt to suit them do not survive.
Re:Executive Compensation (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps the solution would be establishing a minimum duration for any executive job of, say, ten years. That would make them care.
Not why, but who? (Score:5, Insightful)
Part of the problem is these same executives also have the most influence over American politics, which is why trade organizations like the WTO help US corporations, help some foreign governments, and hurt the average citizen (lack of adjusted minimum wage per country, no requirement to respect civil rights in China, etc.). The reason WTO meetings about public policy are held in private is because if the public heard what our politicians were setting up there would be much larger riots and some of these officials would not get re-elected.
So it's not about what you or I want. The global economy is about what the upper class in America wants.
Re:you want your global economy, here it is... (Score:3, Insightful)
we command an economcy that consumes a share of the world's resources wholly disproportionate to our population or land size.
This is what we call "unfair." I didn't say that it was wrong, just not fair. The world isn't fair, and you're correct that there is no rule that we have to be fair--but we tend to like to try and be fair when we can.
Maybe we're just all shmucks. That would explain globalism and cutting taxes while going to war...
I am not an economist...however... (Score:3, Insightful)
My advice is this; get OUT of any part of the IT business that involves retail, including component design, software programming, product marketing, and support. All that is lost, and will never come back. Services and consulting remain good but limited, and there is always the Next Big Thing (tm) whatever that turns out to be.
Think of it this way. America innovates (we invented most of this technology, or developed it) then America profits richly for a few decades (yes we have) while the rest of the world tries to understand what the foosh we're so excited about (but they get over that quickly) then things become commoditized (as they must) and we lose monopoly control (which is probably a good thing). Then there is a certain suffering and retrospection, then we innovate again. Repeat as needed until the world is a better place to live. What is critical to our leadership role is that Americans NOT become either complacent, or discouraged, or bitter. This is our part, we've played our part well, and in generally the world thinks Americans are brilliant (if egotistical
As the East Indians always say; "do the needful."
Re:What about unionizing? (Score:1, Insightful)
i'm a tech worker and a member of the iww, but i just dont think that the iww will have much pull amongst tech workers. remember, the iww is an anti-capitalist union, and i dont think many tech workers would be friendly to anti-capitalism.
and those who are would join the iww anyways to support them, i think.
How does this work? (Score:4, Insightful)
OK, so let me get this straight. To guard against "ultimately higher unemployment" we should be firing the local employees and moving the jobs overseas... :-/
I don't still get it. Well anyway, I'm sure that all the people who just lost thier jobs will sleep much better now that knowing that by being unemployed they are doing thier part to combat unemployment.
--
Simon
Re:you want your global economy, here it is... (Score:3, Insightful)
Not a valid argument.
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:4, Insightful)
You can't just impose your standards on other countries - it makes a mess.
However, you can impose your standards on corporations which are based in your own country.
And the only mess it would make is that it would move the vast majority of the jobs back to the United States. Low level call centre techs wouldn't be outsourced any more, because the cost savings would disappear.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:5, Insightful)
Ideas don't generally come from the clear blue sky...they usually are built upon something else a person is familiar with. If no IT jobs are here for a person to live off of and stay in the environment where he can see a need to invent something...it will be lost.
That's the basic argument I'm making...
Re:Not Funny! (Score:5, Insightful)
Here is a recent study:
http://www.cgms.org/media_exec_pay_page.h
The claim that executives are worth their outrageous salaries is scienfically verifiable bullshit.
Re:Intel - Craig Barrett (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Intel - Craig Barrett (Score:2, Insightful)
Barret wasn't complaining about producing food, he was complaining that the US government is wasting resources on a obsolete, tecnologically behind and not efficient industry.
Even agriculture can benefit from tecnology. There are countries producing more and better food with less resources, being much more efficient than the US industry.
"We have to compete for jobs." (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:3, Insightful)
you can't live well here on 10k/year.
This problem is not my fault,
You know, there are less expensive places to live, hell, most of the continental US has to be cheaper than Silicon Valley. You claim, and rightly so, that you can't live there on 10k or even 50k per year, did you ever think that maybe it's time to pack it in and move somewhere cheaper? The not my fault line is a crock. Unless you're indentured to the land, and slavery was abolished many years ago, you're free to leave for greener pastures.
I'm looking at the same situation next june, I'd love to stay in Boulder but if it comes down to it, I may pack up and head back to NE Ohio, where the cost of living is feasable.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:4, Insightful)
Serious Problems with Outsourcing Model (Score:2, Insightful)
Has anyone else run into serious issues trying to effectively communicate product specification and work collaboratively across half the planet? I have. I don't think there will ever be a replacement for the efficiency with which a focused, communicative, and geographically coherent development team can execute.
Has anyone seen the Dilbert cartoon about outsourcing to Elbonia?
The biggest challenge faced when outsourcing any project is that of communication, and especially specification. Offshore outsourcing has two major strikes against it: 1) language barrier, and 2) time zones. You can't deny either of these.
When the hell is the tech biz community going to realize that it jest don't wurk?
The industries of the 19th century and the 21st... (Score:3, Insightful)
This has happened, over and over, in the U.S., and around the world. I think of my father, who (still) manages to manufacture embroidery in the U.S., but the entire industry has gone to Asia. Did we say that the US competitiveness in the world marketplace was going to go down the tubes because the textile industry went overseas? No.... We might have 75 years earlier, but innovation occured, and new technologies and industries arose.
Now, I know IT is different. But, we do have a tendency to pay very careful attention to what's in the rear view mirror, rather than focusing on what's ahead. Would a steel worker, or steel industry baron, for that matter, have ever predicted information technologies as being a driving force of the U.S. economy?
So, I agree with the poster who said that government's role is to soften the blow of global capitalism, not prevent it. If we had banned exportation, we might still be the world leader in lace, dress making, and steel, but would we have necessarily been the world leader in any other industry, and would that be better?
One caveat: I agree that the U.S. shoudl at least remain self-sufficient in certain areas, liek agriculture, so I have no problem with farm subsidies (in general, not for specific products like corn vs. another crop), especially when so much farm land is being developed into housing.
On a similar note....agribusiness might actually be the future. Without getting in to the whole GM crop issue, I still feel that there will come a time when pharmaceuticals will be grown, rather than manufactured. Whether or not you agree with this isn't the point, as much as we don't know what will be the industry of the future.
How did the U.S. survive after cotton/steel/textiles/etc etc etc went overseas? I hope you don't consider it too much of a cliche to point to a culture that (usually) fosters innovation, that (usually) values education (needs to put alot more money there at the moment, though), and, ultimately, lets those who can make money, make money. By the time an industry is at the huge corporate level, it has already played out, and it is only a matter of time when it goes overseas.
Be worried when education is cut, to save money for defense or for tax cuts (read: California). That is far far more shortsighted....the industries that allowed for uneducated entrepreneurs were exhausted al long time ago....
Re:Not Funny! (Score:3, Insightful)
Umm, American steel is of good quality, it's the price that is the problem. Someone earlier pointed out that a real global economy only works well when most participating countries are on the same/similar socioeconomic standings. Other countries can pay their labor less and then sell the steel cheaper (including having it shipped to the U.S.). I do agree, however, that the tariffs are not the answer.
Re:India (Score:3, Insightful)
I wasn't speaking solely about threats to the US.
But even there, it's problematic to predict what countries will be future security threats. Local problems elsewhere in the world tend to become problems for the US.
And some of the anti-US sentiment around the world is fueled by envy. We've got ours and they don't have theirs. That's not the whole story by any means, but it's certainly part of it.
Finally, it will be a lot easier to combat the present and future threats if we have the wholehearted support of other countries. That will come more easily the better our economic ties -- meaning trade in goods and services.
Re:This is what we are choosing (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll pay more to help sustain my standard of living.
Except that paying more _decreases_ your standard of living. Your dollars don't get you as much.
I prefer to buy foreign. Not only does it increase the real value of my income, but I view it as a charitable contribution to people who need it. And it's the best kind of charity program, too, because they work for it, which means they not only improve their lives and those of their children, they also retain their self respect.
I think "Buy American" is one of the most selfish mottos I've ever heard. What it really translates to is "I got mine!".
In the long term, we're all ("we" being "the human race", not any artificial subset thereof) better off if we buy the cheapest product that is adequate for our needs, and allow everyone to compete fairly. I'm certainly well aware that this approach is neither easy nor painless, and that in the short term the money going into other parts of the world can sometimes have more negative effects than positive, but open, free competition will ultimately enable *everyone* to have a decent standard of living. It'll probably be lower than Americans are accustomed to, of course.
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh, but your expenses are higher than in India. It's not fair. When online businesses with near-zero overhead started competing with the brick-and-mortar world in the mid 90's, did you complain or did you just enjoy the convenience and lower prices?
Welcome to Econ 101.
Re:Minimum wage based on cost of living would work (Score:3, Insightful)
If I pay someone $12K/y to flip burgers, paying another peon $1K/y looks pretty attractive. So I fire my $12K/y person and put up a "Help Wanted - Burgerflipper - Paying $0.50 an hour, 5 days a week, 8 hours a day" sign.
But if I earn $0/y, earning $1000/y for 8 hours a day ain't gonna help me enough. I can sit on a street corner and provide momentary flashes of emotional comfort to altruists who feel guilty about having jobs. This form of self-employment (commonly referred to as "begging") earns more than $0.50 per hour, so why would I flip burgers when there are better opportunities available to me?
And if I offered $24000/y, I'd probably have prospective burgerflippers lined up outside my door.
But somewhere between $0.50 ($1000/y) and $12.00 ($24000/y), there'll be a price where someone will decide that my burgers are worth flipping. That price is the price at which someone thinks they're getting a fair shake for flipping my burgers - or they wouldn't have signed up with me, preferring another employer, or going into some form of self-employment - be it begging or opening up their own damn burger stand. It's also the price that leaves me the most money left over after paying my flippers to open another burger shop down the street.
Markets aren't Gods. Markets are merely a means of determining a price at which commodities can be exchanged to the benefit of both buyer and seller. To be buzzword-compliant, markets are massively parallel, decentralized, P2P-based mechanisms for real-time price determination. A glance at the activity on the trading floor of the CBOE or any other open-outcry commodities market should provide more than adequate proof.
Re:moving jobs overseas (Score:5, Insightful)
Why arent these mgmt types outsourcing *their* jobs?
They are.
They're creating large pools of trained, experienced people in foreign countries who, once they've obtained a bit of capital, are well-positioned to form their own companies and compete with their former employers.
Look at how much of the PC industry has outsourced itself to Asia, for example. A few years ago, it was just US companies building component factories in the far east to cut production costs. Next the US companies started buying components from Asian companies. Next the US companies started outsourcing entire products to Asian companies, from design through manufacturing. Now the US companies are increasingly finding themselves trying to compete with foreign products that are going head-to-head with their own.
The next step is what happened to Zenith.
Of course, this process will take a while, so the people doing it will retire with their millions before it becomes a serious problem.
Good idea in concept (Score:4, Insightful)
For example, our trade deficit with China more than funds their defense budget. We effectively pay them to produce missles that they point at us, and to create governmental structures that imprison and torture their citizens without the benefit of due process.
If we look at countries with more open policies toward business and profits, the challenge is that the profits go to the companies not the workers directly.
I concur that people worldwide need our help. I choose to give to organizations that I know provide help and have relatively low overhead costs so that the maximum benefit goes to the people who need it.
I mean you no disrespect, but it seems a bit selfish to say that you buy the cheapest thing available (so that you get what you want) and view that as a charitable contribution to others. Perhaps this is more a reflection on our cultural viewpoint overall than it is a reflection on you personally.
So are you willing to:
a) try to live in the US on the median worldwide income, or
b) relocate so that your egalitarian view of wealth redistribution can allow you to live on what you could make in the developing world?
Respectfully,
Anomaly
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:2, Insightful)
And how, praytell, do you expect people to make rent ? And tell me... HOW is the minimum wage law unconstitutional?
Re:Not Funny! (Score:3, Insightful)
No, managers like that are worthy of being loyal to. But there aren't bloody many of them. (Actually, managers a whole lot less dedicated than that are worthy of being loyal to. And there still aren't many of them.)
Re:And so globalisation goes (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem with this theory, namely, that we enjoy our high standard of living because goods are cheap, and goods are cheap because we use cheap foreign labor, is this: those goods are cheap because you're paid a fantastic sum of money by world standards. As the jobs dry up, those cheap foreign goods won't seem so cheap. Go from making $50k a year to $25k a year, and the price of everything has effectively doubled. And once sales decline, you start to lose all of the nice economy-of-scale effects of mass production, and the prices start to go up as well.
This is short-sighted, half-assed pseudo-economics along the lines of Rush Limbaugh snorting "Rich investors make jobs!" as if the economy wasn't a cycle. If there are no affluent consumers to buy your products, then there's nothing to invest in, and no jobs to create. This chain is only as strong as its weakest link.
Re:What about unionizing? (Score:3, Insightful)
Mostly, it's because the bulk of the crowd here are, as another poster put it, "knuckleheaded Objectivist brats," or as they would no doubt describe themselves, "Libertarians," or, as they were known in the 19th century, "social Darwinists". Sure, it's an intellectually bankrupt philosophy and has been so since well before the labor movements it provoked into existence, and it's even harmful to the people who believe it most strongly, but if that were an objection, we wouldn't have mass religion running loose in the world, either.
But from a practical (and sympathetic) standpoint, it won't work. Unions are as weak as they are today because of the supply of cheap foreign labor. You can get cheap labor in the US from illegals -- apparently with the approval of the current regime, which sees in them their own profits -- and if the unions put up too much of a fuss, you can just create a foreign subsidiary and move the jobs offshore.
To be effective, you'd need an international labor movement. But there are two major obstacles there: Firstly, the biggest source of offshore labor is China, which is not a free country. And secondly, the current regime and its cronies would dust off their old anti-communist rhetoric so fast it'd curl your hair while making sure that Red China remains available as a source of cheap and democracy-resistant labor.
Re:Broken record... (Score:3, Insightful)
It finally took globalization for Americans to realize how truly dirt poor the rest of the world is.
Short term, wages will be set at the minimum level. Long term, production will increase and everyone will enjoy a higher standard of living.
Already we are starting to see the benefits of international trade in the form of less expensive goods and higher standards of living. My mother-in-law used to make her own clothes because the American made textiles were too expensive. Now imported textiles are so cheap that it is no longer cost effective to make your own. People may not make as much (excluding artificial inflation), but what we make goes further.
If the problem is that someone has too small of a piece of the pie, the solution isn't to cut the pie differently, because then you are taking pie from someone else. The solution is to make the pie bigger. Everyone wins.
on national and multinational corps (Score:1, Insightful)
Americans are justifiably angry that their jobs are moving out of the U.S., what they dont realize is that this has been happening for years, by their beloved brand name companies. Company A opens factory in Singapore, moves out 7 years later to cheaper malaysia, moves again to still cheaper China, leaving a wake of environmental devastation and relatively high paid workers who studied hard to get job at said factory, who now arent fit for whats available to them.
Some posts here also imply that the US gains nothing by Globalization. This statement is shocking to non-americans, or to americans living abroad, since we see so much "American" stuff around us (e.g. disney stores in london, MacDonald's in Tokyo, holywood everywhere, Coca-Cola etc.).
Heads of Global corporations are equivalent to, if not actually more important and powerful than, heads of states. GM employees how many people? 100 thousand I think, HP has 30K or something close. Most countries are "worth" less (financialy--GDP) than these companies spend in a year. The combined GDP of all the countries of the middle east, excluding Israel, is equivalent to Spain, one of the worst economic performers of western Europe. And Microsoft made more money last year than Spain did.
Implied ethnic slurs only confuse the issue. This has nothing to do with India per se, or any particular country for that matter. Nobody on HP's board gives a rat's ass if you are an American worker, or living in Bangalore, or learning English in Malaysia so you can understand your new Amerian bosses when the factory opens. They care about the bottom line, short term gain.
If Americans voted for people with merrit instead of looks (question to a friend: "hey bob, why did you vote for GW?". Answer: "because he looks trustworthy"), if they voted them more often out of office based on their record (crazy incumbencies abound--20 years, 30 years of near morons are in office), things might be different. If the market rewarded companies for taking care of their workers, customers, etc, things might be different too.
When was the last time you, anybody in your family, or any of your friends asked yourselves where something you buy came from? I dont mean reading the label "hecho in Mexico", I mean really came from?
Re:Problems (Score:1, Insightful)
Workers, stand up for your rights!
The person who makes the decision to outsource work to foreign countries, do not have to worry about their job or their income. But the majority of people do.
Should a small minority decide how _your_ daily life is going to be? Should they be the ones to decide that you will not be able to pay the bills, and put food on the table?
The politicians are supposed to reflect the wishes of the people. Can you honestly say that the current administration does that? Can you honestly say that any other party will do that?
I think it's time to let the _real_ people control politics. Not "representatives" (ie. politicans) that often represents other interests than the people's interests.
Re:Get a nice curry (Score:2, Insightful)
The more you tax corporations, the more you hide how much you are actually taxing the American people. A tax on truck fuel will raise the price of your salad, because it will cost more to ship the lettuce. You won't see it as a tax, but it will be you paying it.
Personally, I favor abolishing all taxes other than income tax. Everybody pays once for all the services government has to offer. Then, when the masses see that our government actually slurps up about 40% of our entire economy, we can have some long-overdue tax revolt. We rose up violently against King George for taxing us far less than our current government does.
Re:Pay foreigners US minumum wage! (Score:4, Insightful)
Not any more. Thanks to free trade agreements, the cost of living in the third world is soaring. This is especially true in Mexico thanks to NAFTA: if there is any good that is ten times cheaper in Mexico than in the US, you can move it to the US and get ten times more. The result is that it's hard to survive in Mexico if you work there; you have to send a family member to the US and have them mail money back to you.
Re:Ok (Score:4, Insightful)
Right. Let's start by questioning the attitudes of the lying fuck managers.
Might I suggest reading some self help books on communication and people skills?
I have extraordinary communication and people skills. I'm not a cheating lying asshole, however, which puts me at a disadvantage in the average workplace, I've found.
You already figured out that there's a lot more to getting a job than being the best qualified candidate to perform that particular job function.
A premise which I reject completely. This is precisely the kind of subjective horseshit that makes the hiring process its own caricature.
Now that you've figured out what employers are looking for, why don't you work towards obtaining those qualities?
Because I won't become a liar to impress a cheat.
If your employer is oppressing your views, maybe you need to think about how you're presenting them.
Yeah, it's all my fault. Notice how employers are always blameless? Are you actually suggesting that I should choose to countenance oppression? Why does management always have a ready supply of apologists while former employees, whose careers have been unjustly destroyed, must bargain for the benefit of the doubt?
Passive bitching really doesn't do anything except make you look like a trouble maker.
No, what makes me look like a troublemaker is competence, education and initiative, backed by the experience and qualifications to build successfully from the ideas I present.
Instead, present your ideas to the decision makers like you're selling them the idea. Point out the benefits and give a list of reasons why your idea is better than their current process.
Re:this is what globalization is getting us (Score:2, Insightful)
True, but you make it sounds like all these IT workers are living in mud huts. The assumption that you're making is that all this money that's being invested and created there will solely go into creating a countrywide infrastructure (houses, cities, municipalities) across India. This will probably not happen. Look at America: even when we had a tech boom we still have millions starving everyday. We are the richest planet on this country too.
The truth is that the cities that hold much of this IT business already have all that infrastructure. You should read some articles on the tech boom there and how everyones already driving nice cars, buys tech toys and go clubbing while working hard. I think you've got the wrong picture of what it's like over there.
We're already sending away chip fab, customer service and software engineering. Don't think it can happen? Look at steel. Look at consumer electronics. Look at automobiles. All of these industries have either fallen into a sleepy trailing position, or are in serious trouble.
I have no illusions on foreign competition but I don't think isolating those business here will help us more than it helps them. Here's why:
1) Our costs become high. Today's world is a global world. You have to stop thinking domestically. Companies like IBM serve companies around the world. So imagine that IBM and SAP have an identical product (SAP being german). Let's say we restrict moving jobs overseas but SAP doesn't? Now SAP can sell superior software at half the price. Guess what's going to happen to IBM? Guess what's going to happen when SAP sells their software in America for 75% of the price? More business AND a bigger profit margin. The US needs to embrace this in order to compete.
2) Their competition. You're assuming that if we restrict business here we'll improve our own economy. I think that's far from the truth. The reason is because even if we restrictied business here, the rest of the world can do business without us. India can create her own SAP, her own IBM (etc) and do business with wealthy oil companies in the middle east, construction companies in the rest of the world, and the economies in Europe.
So I sincerely feel that fighting this will only make us lose (faster). It's a fool's dream to think that if we restricted the work to Americans that our economy would suddenly get better. It won't.
Re:this is what globalization is getting us (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, yes and no. Perhaps there is investment latency in IT but not in other areas. Sure companies might not be fighting to buy more IT products in India, but I'm sure the amount of dollars they spend on 1) American clothing, 2) American Coca-Cola, 3) American SUVs/trucks have skyrocketed. America actually has brands and products that people like outside of IT.
The yawning trade gap tells us that we're sending much more money overseas than we're getting from them. The world still need us more than we need them.
Ok, but it still seems like a fool's errand to try to keep the money here. It assumes that if we started hiring people in droves (less than 1999 but more than now) that it would remarkable improve our economy. I think this is very, very wrong. Companies have had to cut costs to offer cheaper prices JUST TO SURVIVE. Look at how much profits have fallen for companies since the bust. There just isn't the demand for IT, so even if we hired more here we wouldnt' necessarily have more people to sell it too. The only way it seems to increase demand is to decrease the cost (which increases the supply).
It's to slap a 33% tariff on SAP until they can certify that they're paying all of their workers and all their subcontractors' workers a fair wage while maintaining environmental and human rights standards.
I know how you feel but I don't think it's a solution. If anything I think it's throwing a wrench into the system because what it means is that companies here will have to spend more for products. That money lost could've been spent producing other things, or making other things cheaper. On their end, their companies make less profit and the same happens to them. It's the classic fall behind isolationism and protectionism. I guess you can call me a free trader considering how I feel that Clinton's free trade policies help produced a record amount of jobs.