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White-collar jobs also going overseas
By RALPH NADER In the past four decades, many millions of manufacturing jobs in this country have been shipped overseas. This transfer was supposed to be part of the “win-win” process of free trade. But 27 straight years of growing trade deficits with the rest of the world makes one wonder: Who’s winning? Conventional economists and their Republican and Democratic converts try to cushion this job-export machine by saying that the large majority of jobs in this country are white collar, not blue collar. The implication is that white-collar jobs are not as easy to export. Well, welcome to the computerization age. U.S. companies are rushing headlong to export computer programming work to countries such as India and Malaysia and now China, where English-language proficiency and cheap labor cut costs by more than two-thirds. Payroll processing, airline passenger billings, insurance computer applications and new software designs are only some of the labor that is done in foreign countries for U.S. companies. Computerworld magazine calls “Offshore’s Rise” relentless. By next year, it reports 40 percent of U.S. companies will have completed some kind of pilot program or will be using nearshore or offshore services. It is difficult to find any estimates regarding the total number of American jobs displaced in this sector. But Gartner Inc. uses the jargon “human resources outsourcing services” and puts a $46 billion price tag on them for this year. Moreover, U.S. firms are opening subsidiaries in countries such as India to compete with Indian firms for outsourcing business. Accenture CEO Joe W. Forehand is reported by Computerworld as comparing the trend to the previous exodus from the United States of many manufacturing operations. “The way we look at it, the industrialization of IT (information technology) is a reality, and we have to embrace that,” he said. IT has been in a bit of a slump, not to mention the rest of the computer industry. So, when outsourcing is combined with massive layoffs in this country and the continuing inflow of lower-wage computer technology workers under H-1B and L-1 work visas, it is not surprising to see the gloom besetting American technology workers. Unlike H-1B visas, which are supposed to receive prevailing wages (but often do not), the L-1 does not oblige employers to pay workers prevailing wages, and there is no cap on the number of these visas that can be awarded foreign workers. With more than 500,000 workers in this country on “temporary” H-1B visas, supposedly meeting a domestic dearth of skills, the L-1 visa workers are supposed to be just transfers between subsidiaries and parent companies. In fact, reports The New York Times, “they are now routinely used by companies based in India and elsewhere to bring their workers into the United States and then contract them out to American companies – in many instances to be replacement for American workers.” The number of workers replaced is unknown, according to the Times. All this upsets the Organization of the Rights of American Workers, a nonprofit group based in Meriden, Conn. Its president, John Bauman, believes that a recovery in this industry will not bring back the American jobs due to both outsourcing and these special visa programs so strongly desired by Silicon Valley companies. When these concerns are raised to international economists, one of their replies is, “Don’t you know what an extraordinary job machine is the U.S. economy?” Well, it has lost 2.6 million jobs since February 2001. Someday the Pollyanna belief that the U.S. economy always replaces the jobs it loses overseas with new jobs here, as we keep racing ahead of other countries with modern technology and new or redundant services, may run into a contrary riptide that no set of spurious statistics can obscure. (Not endorsing the author: Harvey) http://www.springfieldnewssun.com/ne.../2003/08/18/10 61224067.00100.8024.1448.html Subject: It's SO obvious! From: (RHF) Date: 9/5/2003 2:58 AM Eastern Standard Time Message-id: Jimmie James wrote in message ... Again, I'm going to respond via my own message...cuz that little twit in Vermont is a LIAR!!!! I just visited your states website. According to your (Vermont's) July unemployment records, which are the latest available, (Ausgust isn't out yet.) Vermont is sitting at 4.1%!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! JJ, The Good Old 4.1% "UE Rate" is for College Educated White Males ONLY ! So this Translates to: = 8.2% for White Females and Asian-Americans. = 12.3% for those who only made it through High School. = 16.4% for those who did NOT made it through High School. = 20.5% for Hispanic-Americans. = 24.9% for African-Americans. jftfoi ~ RHF . . Now think for a moment if the figure the twit in VT fabricated was actually 15%. The leading candidate on the Democratic ticket is from Vermont. And we're suppose to trust this bast-tard to run the nations economy with his states 15% unemployment????? LOLOLOLOL!!!!!! Jimmie |
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