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The Full Outsourcing Discussion

GileadGreene writes "Thomas Friedman of the New York Times recently did an interesting Op-Ed piece about the "silver lining of overseas outsourcing": the growth that it generates in the US job market as Indian companies outsource work that US workers are better at. Apparently total exports from US companies to India have grown from $2.5 billion in 1990 to $4.1 billion in 2002 as well. So maybe this outsourcing thing isn't so bad after all." Ultimately, free trade works out well; I think one of the issues is that white collar jobs are just beginning to feel the pinch, and are acting like manufacturers did in the 1970s and 1980s.

14 of 1,097 comments (clear)

  1. With no blue or white collar jobs, what's left? by ClubStew · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I think one of the issues is that white collar jobs are just beginning to feel the pinch...

    With blue and white collar jobs fleeting, what's left? Pin-stripe lapels? The money gained from exportation primarily helps out those at the top, and most people can't be at the top. So while that's great for people with far too much money anyway, where does that leave the majority of people who need money to survive?

  2. Re:Free Trade helps megacorps by grub · · Score: 5, Interesting


    Also note how the fellow mentions that people want a good brand when buying water: The people don't care about the bottle, just who bottles it.

    A good book on branding BS and the marketting that goes with it is No Logo (Naomi Klein). A decent read.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  3. White collar jobs haven't felt the pinch? by Puls4r · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Oh really?

    I'd wager that the person who submitted that article is probably about 25 years old, and not a student of history. Let me explain.

    We were pushed out of the consumer electronics industry by the Japanese before the end of the 80's. 10's of thousands of white collar jobs were lost. Likewise, we were pushed out of textiles, steel, and many many other goods.

    In the early 70's all the way up till now we've seen a steady decline of the auto industry, and the ONE THIRD of the country's economy that the auto industry directly or indirectly touches.

    There are many other examples. Read your history and learn about it. Or you'll be certain to repeat it.

  4. Please think it through by fnj · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "Most of the shares are owned by individuals through: 1. pension funds, 2. 401k plans, 3. mutual funds."

    Think about it. If the entire employment of the US is outsourced (other than politicians, lawyers, doctors, nurses, hair dressers, and food preparation workers), there isn't going to be much of a market for stocks among the peons. Not only that, but the lawyers will sue the doctors, the doctors will malpractice the lawyers, and the politicians will have no constituents, only a rebellion.

    And don't bother accusing me of parroting "democrat liberal mantra bs lines" because it won't wash. I bucked the trend by backing Barry Goldwater in high school in 1964, and have always favored conservatives.

    UNTIL NOW. Until this issue opened my eyes.

    Face it, this isn't a liberal/conservative issue anyway. The US is staring at its onrushing demise just like the USSR was a few years ago. In both cases it will be due to corruption and selfishness.

    In the USSR, the State owned industry, and corrupted its house to death.

    In the US, industry owns the State, and is corrupting its house to death.

    When you travel 180 degrees on a circle either to the Right or the Left, you end up in the same place.

    1. Re:Please think it through by taumeson · · Score: 4, Interesting

      you're also forgetting about the ratchet effect. prices are ratchetted up because of an increase in costs...but when costs go down, prices don't go down unless they are forced to go down.

      cars don't get cheaper. they will always be more expensive. even in years when there is very little innovation, cars are still more expensive. why? even when costs go down, multinats would rather profit margins be up than pass any savings onto the consumer.

      okay, cars might not be the best example...but you get what i mean. i have little faith that the price of local goods and services will drop below the cost of foreign made goods for quite some time...if ever. we started the PC craze, but we can't make cheaper PCs here... the only way that's going to happen is if lawyers disappear along with our quality of life.

    2. Re:Please think it through by JustAnotherReader · · Score: 4, Interesting
      The reason why the unemployment rate has been falling is because people have been being crapped out the other side of the unemployment intestine, so to speak.

      In addition, the very statistics our government uses to compile thase numbers are flawed. The quote below comes from The Daily Reckoning

      "By now my readers should have a PHD (pretty high disdain) for Capitol Hill math," writes Crudele. "This one, though, is a cake taker. I'll translate: Included in the 112,000 new jobs in January were 76,000 jobs that supposedly exist because people who weren't hired in December couldn't be fired in January. Got that? They didn't get hired in December, or fired in January, so they showed up as new employees in January as a statistical fluke. So, really there were only an abysmally small 36,000 new jobs in January."

      In other words, the 76,000 jobs are a fraud. "Weak holiday hiring," wrote the Labor Department in its release, "... meant that there were fewer workers to lay off in January, resulting in seasonally adjusted employment gains for the month." The key words here are 'seasonally adjusted' - meaning that although holiday hiring was weak, government quants went ahead and added imaginary seasonal jobs to the total figures anyway. [unquote]

      So don't tell me that the unemployment numbers are going up. The real indicator of new job growth is the number of overtime hours being worked. When that number starts getting bigger then it indicates an increase in jobs is about to occur. But overtime hours have been flat for months. These "lower unemployment" numbers are a total fraud.

  5. Capital is free to move, laborers are not by Morganth · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Sure, let's all just pretend Free Trade Works No Matter What. Once upon time, people used to emphasize Communism Works No Matter What, and the results were excellent. Such is how idealogy works, except in America we don't look at "Free Trade" as an ideology because all its proponents have convinced of the wonderful brainwashing trick called TINA--"There Is No Alternative."

    Capital is free to move, but laborers are not. If a corporation sees a market that has cheaper labor, it is free to move its capital into that market (read: country) and start up factories there, reaping the benefits. Meanwhile, if I, as a poor suffering laborer, want to move into another market, things are not quite so easy.

    "Free Trade" is a misnomer. It's "Free" for corporations and concentrations of wealth to do what they want, while it's chains and shackles for the rest of us, the laborers. We're stuck exactly where we are, stuck with whatever hand the prevailing corporations of the day deal to us.

    I want to remind everyone that the reason corporations exist is because at some point we granted corporate charters (that's We, The People, granted corporate charters) which could be revoked if the corporations did not serve our economic interests. During many years of judicial distortion, corporations gained rights of personhood, and, through further distortion, became not just people, but people who get the rights of being a person but do not have any of the responsibilities (if a corporation steals, it is not prosecuted as a person who steals, but as an entity with thieves within).

    What a distortion it is to think that we, the people, want corporations whose leaders can enjoy the benefits of the US but not give anythink back the country that allowed it to exist. What do I mean by this? They don't give us taxes, because they base their corporation in the Caymans, or whatever. They don't give us jobs, because the outsource. But the upper crust of the corporation benefits from the American lifestyle, and the corporation itself benefits from the captive American market.

    If this were a different day, any corporation that could be described in this way would not be allowed to exist. But nowadays, we have schmucks like Friedman telling us it's just the matter of course, that Free Trade will prevail. That people accept this as anything other than a heavy pile of bullshit blows my mind.

    This is not about us American laborers being able to compete with those cheap Indians. It's about us not jumping headlong into a world where we allow corporations the rights to do whatever they want, include exploit our market and our laws, without serving the public's economic interest in the slightest.

    I hope this becomes and STAYS a national issue. If we have politicians worth a damn, they'll understand that this may be the single most important issue in the coming years. We cannot be manipulated into buying into an idealogy that does serve us. And this is an idealogy, like any other.

  6. Don't stereotype liberals by 2marcus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As a liberal who believes in free trade, I take offense at your remark. While there are "protectionist liberals" (eg Gephardt), there are plenty of "free trade liberals" (eg Clinton), and on the other side, there exist "protectionist conservatives" (eg Bush).

    The ways in which I (as a free-trade liberal) might differ from a free-trade conservative is that I believe in more unemployment protection, lower taxes on the middle class, figuring out how to deal with the Cayman Island issue, and ensuring that environmental and worker protection occurs worldwide.

    However, all of these issues are complex: there may be reasons to delay certain elements of free-trade to ensure that it is done properly (the same way that implementing capitalism in post-USSR Eastern Europe worked best when they waited for the appropriate institutions to be developed rather than just saying "free market! go!"). Read Stiglitz, Globalization and its Discontents, to see how a free-trade believing economist can see major problems with how free trade is being implemented...

    -Marcus

  7. What Silver Linning? by NetNinja · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The article points nothing out about how the average worker is going to benefit.

    I read Thomas Friedman but this little snipet has nothing to do about a Silver lining.

    WOW an indian anmimation company outsources to the US for animators and writers to put a Hollywood finishing touch on an Indian Folk tale.

    I think Thomas Friedman is spot on about Arab/Israeli issues but he is way off in the America outsourcing jobs issue.

    Probably the solution is for American workers to move to India and teach the Indians that they need to unionize and create medical insurance, workers Comp and stock benefits.

    What this really comes down to is that US companies are finding it harder to find Slave labor to create mega profits for themselves.

    The US was built on Slave Labor.
    The RailRoads, Textiles, the industrial revolution.
    Hell they put Henry Ford on trial because he wanted to pay his workers $5.00 a day!!!

  8. Free Trade helps everyone by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The Economist had a well-argued case in favour of globalisation and free trade last week in which it claimed that "Contrary to what John Edwards, John Kerry and George Bush seem to think, outsourcing actually sustains American jobs."
    EARLIER this month the president's chief economic adviser, Gregory Mankiw, once Harvard's youngest tenured professor, attracted a storm of abuse. He told Congress that if a thing or a service could be produced more cheaply abroad, then Americans were better off importing it than producing it at home. As an example, Mr Mankiw uses the case of radiologists in India analysing the X-rays, sent via the internet, of American patients.

    Mr Mankiw's proposition, in essence, is the law of comparative advantage, first postulated by David Ricardo two centuries ago and demonstrated to astonishing effect since. Yet the Republican speaker of the House of Representatives, Dennis Hastert, joined Democrats in their rebuke of Mr Mankiw for approving of jobs going overseas; another Republican called for his resignation. The White House gave Mr Mankiw only lukewarm support--unsurprisingly, since George Bush recently signed a bill forbidding the outsourcing of federal contracts overseas. And the Democratic presidential contenders? Mr Mankiw had just written their attack ads.

    The article goes on to make three points about what is going on:
    • The vast majority of job losses since the start of the decade are cyclical in nature, not structural
    • Higher productivity is the only way to lower prices and increase wealth across the whole economy. Outsourcing helps companies to lower prices and improve the standard of living across the board. In any case, outsourcing's contribution to the overall jobless figures is overstated. Over 2 million jobs a month are in a state of flux in the US economy, with jobs being created as others disappear.
    • Although IT jobs are currently undergoing what manufacturing went through in the 1990s, many more jobs will be created in the US as a result of the lower costs associated with outsourcing IT work. The jobs created at home will be higher paid too.
    I think of this in the same way as the metaphor of the digger. Two men are walking past a building site where a house is being constructed and see a man working with a mechanical digger. One says to the other, "If it weren't for that machine you could have ten men out with shovels doing that work." The other says, "If it weren't for your shovels, you could have a hundred men out there with teaspoons doing it." What would be the point? All that would result would be the house being too expensive for anyone to buy.

    Bottom line: If you make stuff cheaper, society as a whole benefits. Yes there are painful individual cases where people lose their jobs, but because the house is so much cheaper, they don't have to work huge hours to buy a house when they do get a new job.

    One final point of my own. I'm a bit worried by the rising tide of protectionism in the US. It was protectionism and xenophobia that ultimately set up the economic conditions for two world wars.

    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
  9. Transnational Coporations will .... by Vaystrem · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Transnational corporations will destroy their own markets. Perhaps this seems apocalyptic but allow me to clarify.

    There is the historical "fordist" model of development. No when Ford started out - very few people could afford to purchase his products - so he paid a very good wage to his employees which granted them sufficient buying power to purchase his product. The spinoff benefits from this increase in buying power spread through the economy and the buying power of many increased. (This is of course over simplified)

    Many people believe that:
    "Ultimately, free trade works out well; I think one of the issues is that white collar jobs are just beginning to feel the pinch, and are acting like manufacturers did in the 1970s and 1980s."

    The real problem is this. Transnational corporations (this term is interchangable with multinational corporations but it is a more effective term in that it accurately demonstrates that such corporations exist among many nations and also supersede the boundaries and perhaps legal jurisdiction of nation states) are moving jobs out of the country to areas where workers have the necessary skills but not the same level of income requirements as workers within developed nations. Therefore Company X may move its software development efforts to India. Great, these people are now receiving a wage they might not otherwise have had - BUT they do not have the same purchasing power as the now fired employee in the developed nation had.

    This is key. Transnational corporations WILL NOT lower their prices because their costs of production are lower - simply because their costs of production are lower (such a move would be dictated by external competition or another initiative) so the prices of these products remain relatively constant. But the buying power of the United States, Canada, and Europe etc. is decreased. They will be producing a product at a price their traditional markets cannot afford - and they won't pay their new markets enough to improve their buying power to the point where they can consume the produced goods.

    This is how transnational corporations are slowly destroying their own market. A revisitation of the Fordist perspective or an understanding of the importance of the strength of key domestic markets would be helpful.

    Susan Strange has written two books that would be an excellent primer regarding many of these issues and other issues surrounding globalization and financial capital. Mad Money - and Casino Capitalism are very much worth the read.

  10. Social Security DID NOT FAIL by Catbeller · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Social Security DID NOT FAIL.

    On paper, it is flush. This is because back in '78 or so, we passed a major Social Security tax hike, with the express purpose of funding the payouts for Baby Boomers retiring post 2010.

    In 1985, with eyes wide shut, the Social Security trust fund was completely wiped out. How? It was "borrowed". The fund is full of IOU's, due whenever. The money was grabbed with the sole reason of masking the humongous national deficit created by the supply sider's tax cuts.

    The fund did not "fail". The same neocons that passed the tax cut made up the idiot idea that Social Security was "failing" to cover their own deception, and to create a meme that the more gullible would swallow. They knew it wasn't "failing" -- they were stealing it to get yummy tax breaks. And they had a Randian hatred of public programs, SS in particular, so they not only got gobs of cash, they also killed their hated liberal program, AND got to blame the program for a liberal "failure". A momumental game of chicanery that most Americans have swallowed.

    Now, the national debt, that seven TRILLION dollars, is comprised somewhat of the IOU's owed the Social Security trust fund. IF the money was paid back, Social Security would not "fail". And as a sidenote, if the money had been left in the fund to gather interest, rather than being stolen by "borrowing" to finance giveaways to the wealthy, it would have generated large amounts of interest on investment over the last 23 years. Enough interest to have lowered Social Security taxes today.

    And, one more thing: the Social Security program is still taking in more than it needs, even today. BUT THE MONEY IS BEING "BORROWED" AGAIN, for the same reason as in '85 -- to hide deficit spending.

    To recap: Social Security was a success. Neocon ideologues hated it. They wanted tax cuts in '81. They hid the fiscal disaster of the tax cuts somewhat by robbing the trust fund. They blamed the trust fund for being a "failure" for having no money after they themselves robbed it. We have a stack of IOU's 7 trillion dollars high. And they are back in power, and are robbing what dreggs are left in the fund -- and Greenspan, that consistent Randian, proclaimed that we should cut SS because of the budget shortfalls.

    Circular blame-the-victim garbage that will impoverish tens of millions of elderly people someday.

    Let's keep this real. The program worked, was well funded, and was sucked dry by greedy rich people who didn't want to pay taxes. We need to pay the IOU's off, and restore the fund. That means RAISING TAXES. Go ahead, cry.

    1. Re:Social Security DID NOT FAIL by Catbeller · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Nope. It was a success then, and it would have been a success in the future.

      You see, as I said, we had a massive FICA (SS) tax hike in '78. The hike ensured that we would take in far more money into the trust fund than was needed in the '70's, the '80's, the '90's, and the '00's. Jimmy Carter was lambasted for pushing the tax hike through. He took enormous political damage for it.

      If the money would have remained untouched, the fund would have had hundreds of billions, if not trillions, ready and waiting for the Boomers come the teens and '20's.

      The massive increase in retirees had been factored in by Carter and the tax hike supporters. Carter was an engineer, and could do arithmetic. They calculated exactly how much would be needed, and met the numbers with the tax. They made the fund successful and sustainable for all time.

      The meme, as I have said, was exactly what you said. It just happens to be a lie, a marketed tool, a mathematical hoax. The fund had the cash. It did not matter how the old:young ratio increased. It was anticipated.

      What was not anticipated was the outright theft of the trillions.

      And your comment illustrates my "meme" comment in my original post. The devil's greatest accomplishment was in convincing others he did not exist, but the necon's greatest success was in convincing young libertarians that Social Security was bust. The numbers simply don't support it. I lived through it all; I watched it happen. It just isn't politically correct to discuss the theft anymore.

      The young were never meant to support the old! The trust fund was invested in conservative instruments. It was to increase in value as taxes flowed into it over the decades, and additionally to accrue all that lovely interest. If it had not been stolen by 23 + years of ideologues and political ass-coverers who wanted to pretend that the tax cuts weren't bankrupting us, we would now be in no trouble funding the retirees. We were sold out in the '80's for tax cuts for the rich, as David Stockman, the Brock of the '80's, told us after he left Reagan's employ. And we are being robbed now, to cover up a fraction of the financial disaster caused by the present tax givaway.

  11. Stop the madness!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm personally disturbed by the outsourcing trend currently occuring since I am an employee in the US IT field. However, I have to respond to the whining that I see going on with regards to this subject.

    It seems naive when an employee is upset that someone else won't take responsibility for maintaining their standard of living.

    It's been a very very long time since businesses felt responsible for the financial security of their workers. Legally, companies are only required to pay their employees the minimum wage for work delivered. Anything outside of this has been offered strictly because companies want to acquire and retain those workers that provide better services than the norm.

    People that work for a living are deluding themselves into thinking that they are more secure than if they started their own business. If you really want to beat downsizing, outsourcing and whatever the next big business buzzword is, stop working 80 hour weeks for someone that has no interest in your financial future and spend that time building your own software package, service or product.

    I know that's what I'll be doing.