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Yet another outsourcing article, but a bit better than the rest, I
think. One point made was that the national discussions on this issue will emerge in ernest after the next election. By that time either the jobs will be recovering in the US, or there will be considerable objection to white-collar outsourcing. http://www.businessweek.com/print/bwdaily/dnflash/dec2003/ nf20031215_8942_db046.htm?gb ..and naturally, the key question for us: how do we respond to corporate research being outsourced to India and China? Its a tough question. We are seeing more technology jobs hurt either by foreign workers here willing to work for considerably less than american engineers and scientists. So the job drain goes both direction: jobs going abroad, and workers being imported. I suspect there are natural solutions making this less troubling than the shrill reporting would suggest, but I certainly haven't gotten my brain around it. Maybe we should outsource more management and even CEO/CIO/CTO jobs? I've always wondered why high-tech, and white collar didn't unionize. Owen Densmore 908 Camino Santander Santa Fe, NM 87505 [hidden email] Cell: 505-570-0168 Home: 505-988-3787 AIM:owendensmore http://complexityworkshop.com http://backspaces.net |
>>By that time either the jobs will be recovering in the US,
>>or there will be considerable objection to white-collar outsourcing. These are not mutually exclusive by any means. Having a job beats starving, but having a job that is not nearly as good as the one you had will not make you much happier with the government that brought it to you. The outsourcing issue is an outgrowth of the late 90's corporate cost optimization fetish and may abate when the brittleness of the approach starts to show up (and get recognized in the business press). Doing more with less is a sucker's game, anyhow. We all really want to do more with more (IBM TV commercials notwithstanding). Cost cutting and over-specification is no substitute for good day-to-day management. So, I think it will be an election issue, unless we're all shareholders by then. -----Original Message----- From: [hidden email] [mailto:[hidden email]]On Behalf Of Owen Densmore Sent: Sunday, December 21, 2003 8:27 AM To: The Friday Morning Complexity Coffee Group Subject: [FRIAM] Corporate America's Silent Partner: India Yet another outsourcing article, but a bit better than the rest, I think. One point made was that the national discussions on this issue will emerge in ernest after the next election. By that time either the jobs will be recovering in the US, or there will be considerable objection to white-collar outsourcing. http://www.businessweek.com/print/bwdaily/dnflash/dec2003/ nf20031215_8942_db046.htm?gb ..and naturally, the key question for us: how do we respond to corporate research being outsourced to India and China? Its a tough question. We are seeing more technology jobs hurt either by foreign workers here willing to work for considerably less than american engineers and scientists. So the job drain goes both direction: jobs going abroad, and workers being imported. I suspect there are natural solutions making this less troubling than the shrill reporting would suggest, but I certainly haven't gotten my brain around it. Maybe we should outsource more management and even CEO/CIO/CTO jobs? I've always wondered why high-tech, and white collar didn't unionize. Owen Densmore 908 Camino Santander Santa Fe, NM 87505 [hidden email] Cell: 505-570-0168 Home: 505-988-3787 AIM:owendensmore http://complexityworkshop.com http://backspaces.net ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9AM @ Jane's Cafe Lecture schedule, archives, unsubscribe, etc.: http://www.friam.org |
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