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U.S. Jobs Jumping Ship

An anonymous reader writes "As painful as February's big job cuts were, they're even more painful since many of those jobs are never coming back as U.S. employers in a wide range of industries move more and more jobs overseas. CNN has the story." Salon has a good piece detailing how job requirements are changing, asking more and more for less and less pay.

36 of 1,179 comments (clear)

  1. World ending! News at 11! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Humanity is so ridiculous in its endless tendency to linearly extend every trend into the infinite future. As a "Daily Show" the other night humored: If an infant keeps its rate of growth for several decades, soon it will be the size of giant office buildings and killing us all! Of course we know that isn't the case, just as we know that the economy shifts and sways, and companies try endless tactics to seem to be doing something. In 3 years this will all seem idiotic, but that won't stop the idiots from doing the same thing during the next cyclic downswing.

  2. US vs. other countries by pjp6259 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Other than the U.S. most other first world countries have had terrible economnic conditions in the recent past (Japan, most of Europe). Often times this is attributed to their more socialist government. I wonder if their closer proximity to cheap labor has been a larger factor, and if this is true, if this predicts the future of the U.S. economy as physical distances become less important.

    --
    Computers don't make mistakes. What they do, they do on purpose.
  3. I hate to point fingers but... by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Perhaps there is a tradeoff to unionized auto workers getting paid 20$ an hour for working basic assembly lines? Or mandatory health benefits for full time workers? Or phony lawsuits? Or any number of social policies that cost businesses tons of money.

    Not that veering to the "right" too much doesn't cause catastrophe with monopolies and such, but we really have made doing business in this country incredibly difficult (especially small businesses). Haven't we asked for this?

    There was a senator or rep who was a staunch Democrat who, when he retired, tried to start a small business (a hotel I think). His business floundered because of many of the extremely harsh policies that he himself had pushed. Also, former NYC mayor Ed Koch (of People's Court fame) began his term quite social minded, but he lamented that his ideas for transportation of homeless actually costed more than just paying for cab rides for every homeless person (there's more to it than this, my memory is just a bit shaky).

    Basically, I feel the pendulum has swung too far to the right perhaps, and overseas business has gotten too attractive, since we've essentially pushed these businesses into a corner with our well-intentioned programs.

    --
    Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    1. Re:I hate to point fingers but... by wulfhere · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Take the auto workers, for example. Let's say they made just 8$ an hour. That's a large cut in pay, but still about ten times what a Malaysian would make.

      Have you tried raising a family on $8/hour lately? Here in Indiana (where prices are also much less than on the East Coast), there are McDonalds hiring for $7/hour. Good luck buying a house, or even renting one, on $8/hour.

      Or cut down on the programs, let business boom, and pass that economic gain to the average American? The biggest problem I see with this is that trickle-down economics DON'T WORK. When the people at the top of the economic food chain make more money, they don't pass that money down to the guys making $8/hour, they keep it.

      --
      -- Sent from a computer.
  4. So what's the solution? by HealYourChurchWebSit · · Score: 4, Insightful



    The CNN article makes an intersting point good point
    In the 1990s, it seemed all one had to do to buy a ticket to Easy Street was learn a programming language or how to manage corporate computer networks.

    Okay, so I've learned a dozen ways to shoot my foot clean off -- and now this article asserts that my skills are just as easily found abroad as here locally.

    But is that really what is happening. When I read the above quote, I wonder, how many QUALITY programmers are losing their jobs to concerns overseas?

    Similarly, if this is the case, okay, so now what? The computers didn't disappear, nor is the need for software going to go away.

    Do we work for less? Do we (dare I say it) unionize? Pass laws? Comments, please.

    --
    --- have you healed your church website?
  5. Protectionism by Sgs-Cruz · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Sorry guys, but this is what you get. That's how capitalism works. When it's cheaper to have guys in a cheaper area doing the work (i.e. PROGRAMMERS IN INDIA), then the jobs will move there.

    IMO, it's somewhat hypocritical to defend the U.S. as the great bastion of free-market capitalism, and then get extremely protectionistic when the jobs move somewhere cheaper.

    That's the problem with a global economy --- it's global. If the standard of living in the U.S. can't be sustained because people elsewhere are willing to work for cheaper, then the standard of living will have to adjust. Of course, you know as well as I do that there's no way any politician will ever let the standard of living ever decrease, so we have protectionistic measures like repeatedly trying to save the steel industry, when market logic dictates that it should be mostly moving to Korea.

    To end this comment on a bright note (hey, it's Friday, let's be optimistic about the future.), this could all be obviated by the march of technology. I'm betting on life being good once nanotechnology comes of age. Yeah, it's a while off, but then, today seemed a while off to the people of 1903.

    --

    Karma: pi (Mostly due to circular reasoning in posts).

    1. Re:Protectionism by Taldo · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I'm getting a little tired of the attiude I see from so many that we should either 'just suck it up and deal with it' or 'move.'

      Tell you what.... when it's as easy for me to go to another country and work as it is for foreigners to come HERE and work for peanuts.... then maybe I'll think about not complaining about it.

      As it is, I'm competing with foreign workers, college educated (at no cost to themselves generally, or they're from one of the few wealthy families in their home region,) who are willing to do the same job for less money because they don't care about having an american standard of living even tho they're living in america, and they aren't as deep in debt as I am from student loans.

      Know what? I'd love to spend a few years working in another country. Australia? Yeah.... I can work for three months at a time. Most of Europe? I have to either be independantly wealthy... (be able to prove I can support myself for a given number of months) or have a business to start up. (No.... websites don't count.)

      People are bitching about 'protectionism' a lot on this thread... but none of them ever seem to mention the protectionist policies of OTHER COUNTRIES.

      When I actually CAN 'follow the jobs' the way people from other countries can, we can talk.

  6. Re:So much hand ringing over jobs... by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Insightful
    No company is going to hire anyone until this mess with Iraq starts to straigten out. Once that happens though, look for mega job listings to start appearing.

    It's my firm belief that we are about to invade Iraq because the current batch in W. DC can't figure out how to improve the economy. (Hint: Economies flourish in a stable and peaceful world)

    There has to be a lot of pent up demand out there considering that everyone has been stalled for a couple of years now.

    No. If there's no demand, there's no demand. Interest rates are at incredibly low levels. Go an idea and can convince a bank to fund it? Go into business, best time ever for loans, no competition for the money. Why? People afraid nothing will succeed and they won't be able to pay back the loan.

    I'm quite positive the image projected by the president has 90% to do with the health of the economy, and Bush projects fear and loathing. Clinton (what ever his other warts) projected a positive, inclusive image. It took a while, but economy grew. It started to shrink when it sunk in that the ride was almost over.

    If we're saddle with Mr. 'Axis of Evil' for another 4 years, after 2004, we might as well open trade schools for ditch diggers.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  7. Re:Estate of the Nation by frodo+from+middle+ea · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You can't expect the current administration or house to insist upon a tariff on imported services, can you?
    Sure you can, but remember that the american companies like coke, pepsi, McDonalds, KFC, PnG, Nike , etc etc have huge markets outside US, especially in far east populous countries like india, china, japan, korea
    Now if govt. of these countries were to impose the same tariff that you speak of on imported american goods, .... Well you get the picture.
    face it, the world is shrinking day by day, and if affects everybody's life in some way or another
    America is a super-power in the world not because of its military , rather because of its economic dominance. But that economy can not be self contained, To be a world leader you have to play the same game on equal fields
    To stay competetive in world markets the american companies need to reduce costs at all options, and labor cost is a very convenient option.

    --
    for the last time people, I am "frodo from middle eaRTH", not "middle eaST".
  8. Recessions by Galvatron · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Jesus, you'd think people had never lived through a recession before. This shit happens. This recession is no more likely to be eternal than the Dot Com boom was. Of course salaries are falling from their formerly inflated rate. Then, once they've fallen sufficiently, companies will start moving jobs back to the US, and salaries will rise again.

    Christ, if you think this is bad, thank God that we weren't alive during the Great Depression. That didn't sink us, and this won't either. Also, for those who argue that this time it's different because of globalization: the world was more globalized in 1910 than it is now, because of European colonialism.

    --
    "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
  9. Aren't we being Selfish? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hey, aren't we being selfish?

    Think of the people in India that just had their standard of living raised. Who is to say that their living standard is less important than your living standard?

    We complain and complain about the Recording Industry backing up a "inferior business model".

    So are we! Its time we found something else that we can do better/different.

  10. Welcome to a free trade world by 00_NOP · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It makes me laugh how the Americans - the inhabitants of a state founded on the revolutionary concept of liberty - are so phased by the idea of free trade and are always quick to see a conspiracy when lower skilled jobs (yes, folks, that's what they are) go abroad.

    Having spent days hacking around with some perl code that my (non-IT literate) colleagues think is just magic, I know that this sort of thing is really not very high skill at all and so of course graduates in Bangalore could do it for less money.

    In the mean time we ought to use our greater capital stock and education systems to learn even higher skills and stay ahead in the game.

  11. I had an Indian Dell Encounter... BAD! by hirschma · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I had a real problem with a Dell box I got a few months ago - the sound card just didn't work under Win2k (it only supported WinXP drivers... whole 'nother story).

    Trying to make anyone on their phone or email support understand was equivalent to banging my head against the wall, at least when they had a foreign accent. It went like this:

    ME: " I have this problem"
    DELL: "Here's a suggestion that is irrelevant to your problem" - something along the lines of, put in your System Recover disk.
    ME: "No, you don't understand...blah blah blah"
    DELL: "Here's the same suggestion, verbatim, that is still irrelevant to your problem"
    ME: "You're not listening!"
    DELL: *Repeats same scripted response again*

    Finally, after doing this about 6 times, they finally broke down and handed me to an American supervisor. Once they did:

    ME: "I have a problem..."
    DELL: " OK, we have this solution, OK?"

    And with that, a new Linux/Win2k compatible sound card was sent out. What should have taken 10 minutes instead ate up a full day. I guess a full day of 800 phone charges is cheaper than 10 minutes of American salary.

    The lesson I learned: it may be cheaper to buy a Dell than building it yourself, but it is just not worth the aggro. Which means that I'd buy or recommend Dell if the support were actually an added value, and probably pay more than they're charging now.

    Yeah, I'd say that this free trade thing ain't working out.

  12. Prosperity went down in the 80's and 90's by hirschma · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's see...

    In the early 70's, you could:

    Buy an average car for 1/4 to 1/3 of a yearly average household income.

    Buy a house for 2x-5x of a yearly average household income.

    Today, its more like:

    Buy an average car for 1/2 or more of a yearly average household income.

    Houses start at 5x yearly average household income.

    But here's the kicker: in the early 70's, there was almost always ONE breadwinner making up the average household income. Now, its almost always TWO.

    When I was a kid living in Brooklyn, taxi drivers routinely owned homes and cars, and mom didn't work. Today, Mom and Dad work in some service drone job, and can't make ends meet. And that was true 10 and 20 years ago.

    Things have gotten a lot worse.

  13. Re:Estate of the Nation by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I honestly would vote libertarian if their candidates weren't usually total cooks.

    I don't vote for people like Bush, because they're only concerned with War and God (in that order). I think most of the Republican Party's core values are good, and would benefit this country, so voting Republican is a pragmatic decision to get those policies implemented. IF the Republican party swung things too far to the right, then I WOULD vote democrat.

    Liberal-conservative is a phony paradigm that defines the parameters of the debates in a rather silly fashion, but I can't help but to be annoyed with Democratic policies with respect to the economy (and the other way around with civil rights, but only within the last 5 years).

    --
    Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
  14. Unions by Bull999999 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Perhaps they are sending jobs overseas because they won't have to deal with unions. Remember not too long ago, the dock workers went on strike (at the cost of US economy) despite the fact that they were already highest paid blue collar works and management promised job security. How about the mechanics of United Airlines? UA was facing bankruptcy and they still refused a paycut. RTD (Mass transit system for Denver metro area) bus drivers are threatening to go on a strike lately. RTD already were being subsidized by the cities even when the economy was good because they weren't making any money. Now dispite the fact that the cities are hurting for money and jobs are scarce, they want a raise?

    --
    1f u c4n r34d th1s u r34lly n33d t0 g37 l41d
  15. and I'm glad we still have H1B's galore by CrudPuppy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    gosh, in hindsight, I cant believe I could have ever doubted the government's plan to increase the number of H1B's to such a ridiculously high number.

    now I see that they truly did have our best interests in mind. Employers say "the industry no longer pays salaries like that" when they mean "there are hungry immigrants that are willing to do your job for half your salary"

    a big "cheers" to the US government.

    --
    A year spent in artificial intelligence is enough to make one believe in God.
  16. Re:Estate of the Nation by vsprintf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To stay competetive in world markets the american companies need to reduce costs at all options, and labor cost is a very convenient option.

    Oh, really? Then why is it that it's only the worker's jobs that get offshored? American companies could save many millions of dollars per year by offshoring management jobs, but that never happens.

    We have American companies claiming offshore workers are better and cheaper (which is one-half bullshit) except when it comes to management. Now isn't that remarkable? We have American CEOs getting obscene salaries and bonuses for putting American residents out of work.

  17. I don't buy this by The+Bungi · · Score: 5, Insightful
    While many jobs are being shipped offshore, consider the following points:
    • The quality of the work being done by Indian (or whatever) programmers (or whatever) varies wildly. Some of it is good, a lot if it is not.
    • In my experience, companies like Amex who outsourced their entire IT needs to IBM India (yes, IBM India) and let loose hundreds of employees are now rehiring those same employees (mostly analysts and PMs) through third-tier consulting firms at a much lower cost. So they get the quality they need (because they can't get it from Indians) but they save a bundle of money. It's not uncommon to find a project manager at Amex directing 15 indians that used to be manager or director of so-and-so two years ago. This is (I think) more about deflating the job market than shipping jobs to other countries.
    • The perennial "web programmer" and "web designer" and so on is out of work because there is no more market for them. There are no more dotcoms hiring teams of 20 people to "design" three web pages at ~$60K+ per year. No way. But software developers and architects and so on with solid experience and real skills are still finding jobs. The subject of the Salon article sounds to me more like one of those foofy "html programmers" or equivalent than anything else.
    The dotcom boom created thousands of jobs that were filled by people with 6 months of experience and a "computer degree" from a community college or Devry. Sorry, but those are gone. No more demand. These people should go back to what they were doing before the went into "computers" to make "big bucks".

    It sounds callous, but it's true.

  18. Re:Supply and demand by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    in 1980, the nhouse I am currently living in sold for 40K. Now it is worth 200K. gas was under a buck.
    so don't compare 1980 money to tadays.

    I would gladly lower my salary to 25K, if the price of everything I pay for was in 1980 prices.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  19. Re:Here's a job I saw last year by Billly+Gates · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I would be willing to do that for 15k a year!

    %100 dead serious!

    I am unemployed and I am about to apply for a 7.50/hr job at OfficeMax stocking shelve's. I moved back in with my parents because I can no longer afford rent. It would look so good on my resume to do any tech work that I would be willing to work for the same pay as a merchandiser at a store.

    This is the reason why many jobs are going to India. You guys are not willing to work for this price range. Believe it or not an Indian could do that job for 5k a year! No shit!

    20k a year is expensive in the eyes of CIO's. If we volunteer to work for 15k then they might not ship us off to India. If we demand 40k then you can kiss your career goodbye.

  20. Re:So much hand ringing over jobs... by JWW · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Oh if only the president had a more POSITIVE attitude, then every thing would be better. What a load of crap!!

    True the uncertainty over Iraq is stalling economic recovery, but the flip side to this is that the bust is so bad precisely because the boom was waaaaayy too big. Nasdaq worth 5400?

    No, the Nasdaq was never really worth 5400, people just kept throwing money at the market, inflating it to unsustainable highs. One of the big problems we're facing now is people are complaining about when the Nasdaq will get back that high, when in reality it never should have been even clost to that high in the first place.

    In reality the "irrational exuberance" of the late 90's, whether or not attributed to Clinton, is the reason the downturn is what it is and why it is so hard to get out of. In reality the President at the time has very little to do with economy in many circumstances. The .com boom wasn't Clintons charisma, it was collective investors' flight of fantasy.

  21. Falling off the Wave by ChaoticCoyote · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've had my share of ups and downs in this industry. I started my career in the Savings & Loan industry -- and after that industry went bust in the early 80s, I had to find a new place to make a buck. A similar collapse hit the "web industry" over the last five years (lots of unjustified hype, bad management, etc.) -- and while I wasn't writing web pages or Flash animations, I was affected nonetheless. I worked as a development director/lead technologist at a couple small businesses that killed themselves by leaving reliable industries to "webify" their product. Both companies are gone, but I'm still here.

    There's nothing unique to the computer industry when it comes to bust-boom cycles. It happens all the time in other industries. My wife began her working life 25 years ago as a geological drafter -- you know, with pens, ink, fancy templates. The collapse of the oil and minerals industry did more to end her career than any new reliance on computer-aided drafting. Is she crying in her soup? Heck no -- she worked for various social agencies, often for low wages or free, and built herself a new career in disaster recovery and education. Businesses may come and go, but there'll always be disasters. ;)

    Right now, I'm doing contract work, writing a book, and placing myself for a "coming thing" that may or not be big in our industry. My wife has a nice, stable job; our kids learned long ago that their Mom and I don't listen to "gimme, gimme." It's sometimes difficult, but we keep surviving. Never surrender, never give up -- a good philosophy from a very funny movie.

  22. Let me break it down for you by asscroft · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First Ammendment - Why is this even an argument? Republicans tend to want to censor speech more than the dems, so the dems win this one.

    Gun Laws - ridiculous. 2nd ammendment is there in the CONSTITUTION. Republicans win this one.

    4th Ammendment - Republicans want to search you, your house, your moms house etc in the name of the "war on drugs" and now the "war on terror" Dems aren't much fuckin' better. But dems are a little looser so dems win this one.

    Abortion - Well in reality making it illegal doesn't prevent it from happening, it simply makes it punishable. so even if you are against abortion, you have to realize outlawing it is futile. Dems win this one. Women truly have a choice in reality. A choice between a safe & legal abortion or no abortion is better than a choice between a dangerous illegal abortion or no abortion. Even God would agree with this logic.

    Corporate welfare vs worker rights/ Labor. Until I own a corporation, I have to consider myself a worker. Dems win this one. How anyone can vote for something that will reduce their wages, reduce their health care, make them work longer hours all so that some asshole in a board room can export thier job to india to make even more money is beyond me. WAKE THE FUCK UP. How 'bout a little self preservation!!!! Unless you own a corporation, you need to see the light!!!

    Jails versus Education: hmm, spend money on educating our children so that they will be prepared to lead our country when they inherit it, or cut spending in schools and parks & rec programs only to eventually spend more money on jails to house our misguided uneducated forgotten youth? tough one here. gee, what should we do ?
    Democrats win. Republicans are greedy assholes who can afford private shools for their children. What about the rest of the nations. Those punk asses that are not getting education and resort to crime will hopefully rob your house you greedy fuckheads. (unfortunately you rich bastards live ina gated community, so they'll rob my house and the house of other working men and women, which is unfortunate because it's YOUR POLICY that destroyed thier chances of making it in this world).

    Corporate friendly env. policy versus environmental friendly environmental policy. Hmm, in my short life time I've seen 200-500% growth in my home town. Land Development is BIG BUSINESS. It's sad to see them rape the land to build a shitload of cheap ass houses all crammed in tight next to eachother. If those greedy fucks would build one or two less houses per project then all the families that moved in would get yards and a little bit of privacy. Instead they are living in a future ghetto that frankly looked better as natural land. That's the friendliest of the land uses. Chemical plants, manufacturing plants, refineries, junk yards. SHEESH!!! This whole country will be one paved piece of shit in less than 50 years. It's fine if you own a big ass ranch in texas, who cares if your refinery pollutes the fuck out of some poor neighborhood in the wrong side of town. Maybe it will kill those "niggas" before you have to arrest them after they drop out of that shitty high school you wouldn't approve the tax dollars to fix up because you wanted some tax cuts to afford to pay off the crooked politician who allowed the refinery. FUCK!!! Democrats win this one too.

    You see, aside from the gun thing, republican policy benefits only a small minority of wealthy assholes. The rest of us get screwed every which way in a increasingly painful cycle. We lose our jobs so our kids go to cheap schools which don't get good funding because money is going to corporations so our kids poor and pissed off do drugs or get pregnant or drop out or graduate and go to college despite the odds, then they lose their jobs and their kids go to crap schools, etc. etc. over and over again while more and more of us become poor and a few fortunate a-holes get richer and richer.

    well, it can only go on for so long before we unite and kill you you fuckin rich assholes

    --
    because I have been enjoined by this Holy Office to abandon the false opinion which maintains that the Sun is the centre
  23. Re:Estate of the Nation by rppp01 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If I had mod points, you'd get them all. Well said.

    If companies like HP would simply hire management offshores, or even a low cost, intelligent CEO from another country, they could save millions a year.

    But somehow, that isn't happening, is it?

    I am for tariffs on good from other countries. Impose them left and right. As I recall, prior to income taxes being imposed (which was supposed to be a temporary thing, btw) we mainly relied on tarrifs. This brought the 'best and brightest' here, instead of now where we ship the best and brightest jobs to them.

    I do not see how creating a 'world economy' helps anyone but the rich. It deflates wages. Maybe I am missing the picture here. Maybe there is a grand schema that will allow balance across the globe. If that is the case, then this isn't capitolism, it is socialism, right? Get everyone on an equal ground? But I can't and don't see that. I only see that somehow jobs are harder to find, and those I do find pay a lot less. I am not speaking of .Com era wages, but prior to that- the early to mid 90s era.

    --
    They stuck me in an institution, said it was the only solution, to...protect me from the enemy, myself
  24. Re:So much hand ringing over jobs... by BalkanBoy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think it's you that needs a hint - America has been exporting war to the rest of the world, and has become what it is now primarily because of that cohesion of the military/economic machine that exists in this country. What they paint you on CNN or these propagandist AM stations I keep listening to is something comprehensible to the average shithead ("Iraq/Saddam/whoever's rouge regime/state is bad and a threat and will kill if unrestrained now! Let's do him NOW!"), religious follower, etc.

    When you cut through the bullshit, America will not be what it is today had it not known how to lead and win(and lose some) wars. War, as ugly as it is, is necessary for the health of the state. For those dumbfucks who do not grasp the concept of war and how it applies to economics - well too fucking bad. The writing is on the wall.. 'cept that most of us are blind to see it.

    --
    'A lie if repeated often enough, becomes the truth.' - Goebbels
  25. Re:Estate of the Nation by Tackhead · · Score: 5, Insightful
    > I do not see how creating a 'world economy' helps anyone but the rich. It deflates wages. Maybe I am missing the picture here.

    I can think of one part of the picture you're missing: In the eyes of 5,000,000,000 people of the 6,000,000,000 on the planet, you are "the rich".

    > Maybe there is a grand schema that will allow balance across the globe.

    If by "balance", you mean "equally distribute all wealth among all 6,000,000,000 people", here's another part of the picture you're missing.

    If you want that kind of "balance", be prepared to give up air conditioning, your automobile, your paved roads, your heart surgeon, your chemotherapy, your MRI scans, your broadband and 56k modems for a 2400-9600 baud serial line, and a couple of hours a day of electricity.

    In short, be prepared to live a lifestyle below that of the poorest inner-city welfare mother. If that offends you as a racist stereotype, replace it with "the most inbred hillbillies in the Appalacians".

    I won't presume to speak for you, but as for me, I'm not prepared to do that. As a citizen of a Western nation in a capitalist economy, I was born into the top 15% of the planetary socioeconomic pyramid. I like it here. I'm staying here. And I'm willing to pay 20% of my earnings, every year, to the top 1% to keep it that way. (The top 1% currently takes about 40% of those earnings, but that's haggling over price, not a fundamental argument about the principle :)

    > I only see that somehow jobs are harder to find, and those I do find pay a lot less. I am not speaking of .Com era wages, but prior to that- the early to mid 90s era.

    The first part is called a "recession". They tend to be finite in length.

    The second part is called "deflation". It happens to CPU prices when better CPU designs reach the market, and/or when competing companies design a comparable CPU but charges less. It happens to wages when skills become obsolescent, and/or when competing workers offer the same work you do, for less price.

    If you're in the CPU business, you can either cut your price, or build a better CPU. If you're in the job market, you can either lower your salary expectations, or learn about a new technology.

  26. Re:So? What's wrong with that? by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Since when did the CEO or owner of any company owe you or anyone in the US a job?

    Since the government started granting charters for corporations being a public good? Since businesses get many tax benefits that individuals don't get and cry about "lost jobs" any time anyone talks about getting rid of them? Since our tax dollars pay for the promotion of their products to overseas markets? Since we send our sons and daughters overseas to protect their economic interests in other countries?

    Perhaps they don't owe me a job, but they sure as hell owe some people in this country jobs for everything that we provide to them.

    --
    That is all.
  27. Re:So much hand ringing over jobs... by Tackhead · · Score: 3, Insightful
    > > No company is going to hire anyone until this mess with Iraq starts to straigten out.
    > That's just silly - why not? Are they waiting to see if Iraq maybe wins?

    Actually, they are.

    In order for me to make good money selling widgets, I need to build widgets cheaply, and you need to have enough money to buy them at a price that allows me to make money.

    If oil is expensive, widgetmaking is expensive. My widget factory needs electricity and heat. My widgets might be made out of plastic. My widget factory might have to fly widgetparts in by FedEx, or hire truck drivers to deliver pallets of finished widgets to widget stores.

    Likewise, if oil is expensive, you're spending more money on gasoline and have less money left over to buy widgets.

    Right now, oil is expensive becase we don't know how much of it is gonna flow after the war. If Saddam manages to drag this thing out long enough to permanently destroy his wells and pipelines, or to spread this around and destroy other nations' oil infrastructure, oil will remain expensive. Last time around, he made a big mess, but we got the mess cleaned up in less than six months, and I'm sure you know what happened to the economy from 1991 forwards.

    By the way, the price of oil fell to around $10/barrel in 1997. Funny what else happened to the economy around 1997, isn't it?

  28. Re:It's not that bad. Quit whining. by iggymanz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    actually, I think alot of systems and systems integration will go offshore too.

    There have been other U.S. industries that have been moved offshore permanently....the steel industry & heavy tool & die, for instance, is but a shell of its former self here (my dad's industry)

    What're the next Big Things? Healthcare, biotech, nanotech, alternative energy, security....plenty of things to keep a geek happy, but first our employment recruiting process needs an overhaul...we geeks can learn new things, and don't want to be doing the same thing for 10+ years. Hopefully HR & recruiters will sprout a brain stem in this matter soon, as there will be new kinds of jobs, and NO ONE will have 5+ years experience doing them.

  29. Re:We Do that by killdashnine · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sure, and that is totally pathetic ... A plant that I worked at had settled on a Union contract where uneducated laborers were to make $33/hour. Even PhD scientists started to think seriously about pulling levers for a living. Until the US kills Union mentality and starts rewarding people for their technical abilities, we'll see this trend continuing.

  30. Re:News at 11 by Phragmen-Lindelof · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The great depression occurred, IN PART, because worker productivity increased (e.g. more cars and washing machines) but wages did not increase sufficiently. After some time, everyone (OK, many people) had many "things" and a lot of debt. Companies could not sell their new products in sufficient quantities and started having trouble.

    If too many US jobs go overseas, something similar might possibly happen. Economics "says" that if too few people can afford to buy your products, you may go out of business. If it happens to too many companies, the "economy" starts going downhill. Eventually, the accumulated capital in the US may be depleted and companies who moved jobs overseas will have no customers.

  31. Re:News at 11 by xchino · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Here's how it breaks down: They are just as good as you, and work just as hard, for a fraction of what you want to get paid.

    No. Here's how it breaks down: They aren't protected by labor laws and work twice as hard for a fraction of a fraction what I HAVE to get paid. We have minimum wage in this country to protect people from working for $1 a day, a majority of the countries being outsourced to don't.

    "You are not obligated to live in the US. Companies are not obligated to hire US based employees. "

    No, but I am obligated to pay an import tax on foreign products to protect the same companies that are shipping jobs offshore. If they can ship off jobs so cheap, I should be able to import goods/services just as cheap. Why is it that a coproration should enjoy protection that the people of the nation supporting it don't receive?

    "If you don't like it, well, shut up because you can't change it. It's called economics, and even if you want something else to be true, it isn't going to happen."

    That was a pretty stupid statement. Yes, we CAN do something about it. We can elect officials into office who support an export tax on offshore work. and It's not economics, it's politics. Why should they be able to sell my job to foreigners for cheap, when I can't buy their product from foreigners for cheap?

    "Why do people continue to bitch about this? You are over-capitalized, and are obsolete. Find another profession."

    Again.. stupid. So if Uganda starts instituting slavery, and forcing slaves to do tech support, all paid tech support around the world becomes over-capatalized and obsolete? Find another profession where?

    --
    Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. It's just that yours is stupid.
  32. Re:Estate of the Nation by FredFnord · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, basically what you're saying is, 'I'm not even willing to be sympathetic.'

    See, there's a choice 4. There are ways to bring the standard of living in other countries up toward what the US now enjoys, without getting the entire US to give up everything it has. Wealth doesn't have to be a zero-sum game (as the dread Mr. Limbaugh is fond of saying), although the rich are dead set on keeping it one.

    The problem is, this would be terribly counterproductive from the point of view of US companies, because the people offshore would start demanding salaries that are closer to those of the American worker. Much better if we can bring the standard of living in America slowly DOWNWARD until it's closer to those offshore.

    (Not that I'm saying that there's a conspiracy to do this or anything. Doesn't need to be... shipping every possible non-executive job offshore to places where workers are paid pennies on the dollar for a long period of time will do it just fine without anybody PLANNING anything.)

    There is not only enough food in the world to feed every single living human being, but DRAMATICALLY MORE THAN NECESSARY. And yet people starve. Because if everyone in the world had enough to eat and a place to live, they'd start thinking in terms of other things they could do besides slave away for almost enough to keep from starving. We have the capacity and the money to make basic (flavorless, nasty, unappealing) food free for every person in the world. We will never do it, because we need slave labor.

    -fred

    --
    Sign #11 of Slashdot overdose: You see the phrase 'moderate Republican' and you wonder if that would be a +1 or a -1.
  33. Re:Estate of the Nation by Rinikusu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I was reading through a Java Developer's Journal that had a slight discussion about all these "brilliant" java programmers out of work due to the recession. They made an offhand remark about "Well, now that they have all this spare time, let's see what they come up with if they're really all that brilliant". I don't think I've seen much..

    Really, folks, this is really the break some people need. Remember when IBM laid off those thousands of engineers in the 80s? Those engineers couldn't find work, but had lots of ideas, and went and started their own small tech firms which fueled the Silicon Valley upswing. (No, not the .bomb people, but the real, honest to goodness engineers).

    Instead of blogging about not having a job, why not write something? Why not create something that you've always wanted to do but never had the time to do it (and now you're unemployed and you still don't have time?)? Don't just "learn" a new technology, CREATE the new technology. A recession/depression is simply an opportunity for many people and the seeds for success are being sown now.

    --
    If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
  34. i AM an "outside worker" by Suchetha · · Score: 4, Insightful
    this article hits home because i am one of the people the jobs are coming TO.

    i live in Sri Lanka and work for the webdev section of a british dotcom. at the moment the company has 20 webdev people in the UK and 4 in SL (the rest of the team are support staff and grafx ppls), but according to the ceo they are thinking of downgrading the entire uk structure and hiring more people here in SL.

    my point is here... by UK standards they are paying us peanuts!! i get paid less than 7% of what the job i do would cost if it were being done by a brit. (trust me, i checked the numbers, a dev guy would get UKP2,000 there i get the equivalent of UKP150)

    but this amount lets me make about 10x of minimum wage here which is a decent amount.

    but there are downsides to this.
    • MOST ASIANS ARE DRONES!!! if you want them to do a piece of work and keep doing it they are perfect. but our society and education system which puts more weight on conformity and herd-following (and no i DO NOT mean chasing a bunch of cows around 8-) ) means that if you want to do something innovative here you got to find those exceptional types who can think and improvise. and those ones are already in the US on their H1B
    • most people in asia don't speak english all that well. this leads to confusion and problems in communications with the westerners
    i was hired because i am one of those few nonconformists who decided to come back to my country (went to uni in OKC, USA, saw the dot bomb about to drop and buggered off, also my parents run a moderately successful company here), i can think on my feet and i am am bilingual (i speak both languages well enough to pass for a native, in fact when i was in the US i frequently was)..

    i see my friends trying to make a living in the US and i feel sorry for them (degree holding CS guys stacking shelves in wally world...) personally i would love to get them down here where the cost of living is low, and if you know how to manipulate the system (which, believe me i do) you can live and work. sure you'll miss your mega malls, and seeing the latest movies as they come out, no mtn dew, no game arcades and no DSL.. but we got great weather, cheap housing (by us standards anyway) and beaches...

    personally i would LOVE to have a few slashdotters come join me here, and i am already running a dotcom that could use some help (so its not making money atm but i'm working on that part)

    i guess the point i am trying to make is this. the US has been training its people for freedom and creativity, the east for drones. put the two together and you get a potent mix. we could use some creative thinkers here, you could do with some drones there.

    anyone wanna come mix it up??

    Suchetha
    --

    learn from yesterday, plan for tomorrow, party tonight
    or one out of three ain't bad