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I don't often find myself in agreement with Thomas Friedman and I'm
not sure if I'll end up agreeing with this column, but it did cause me to think of outsourcing in a different way. This will be of little consolation to those whose jobs have disappeared, but it is food for thought. http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/26/opinion/26FRIE.html Also in today's Times, (scary **** this ;-), a front page article on Max Cleland that could have been culled from the pages of roff, well, with a little bit of editing and a whole lot of cleaning up. ;-) http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/26/po...gn/26CLEL.html -- Ken Fortenberry |
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On Thu, 26 Feb 2004 16:06:40 GMT, Ken Fortenberry
wrote: I don't often find myself in agreement with Thomas Friedman and I'm not sure if I'll end up agreeing with this column, but it did cause me to think of outsourcing in a different way. This will be of little consolation to those whose jobs have disappeared, but it is food for thought. http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/26/opinion/26FRIE.html FWIW, the US companies whose goods are used in Indian call centers also outsource the development, production, support, etc,. of those same goods to India, Asia, etc. So yeah, there is a US brand name on the product, but it probably wasn't produced in the US. US companies are, for the most part, managed for their investors not their employees. Wall Street loves a layoff, but they love outsourcing even more. -- Charlie... |
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Ken Fortenberry wrote in news:jQo%
: I don't often find myself in agreement with Thomas Friedman and I'm not sure if I'll end up agreeing with this column, but it did cause me to think of outsourcing in a different way. This will be of little consolation to those whose jobs have disappeared, but it is food for thought. http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/26/opinion/26FRIE.html Also in today's Times, (scary **** this ;-), a front page article on Max Cleland that could have been culled from the pages of roff, well, with a little bit of editing and a whole lot of cleaning up. ;-) http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/26/po...gn/26CLEL.html Ken-- I often find myself in agreement with Friedman (you might have noticed!), but I think he's missing a little bit here. His thoughts on US companies supporting international offices hold only until Carrier and CocaCola move out of the US themselves, and of course the issue of "net" jobs needs to be carefully calculated. If we're losing high paid jobs to be replaced by a lesser number of blue collar jobs, this isn't necessarily good. I can agree with opinions widely expressed to the effect that "something" will come along to replace those lost jobs. However, it seems like when we're talking about something like people's ability to feed their families, we should have a slightly better idea about what that "something" is. Maybe this wouldn't be a big issue if economies moved slowly, but today technology is advancing things faster than economies can keep up. A slightly protectionist attitude aimed towards slowing down labor shifts, along with a steering-committee type plan regarding where our economy should go, so long as there is a timetable for de-protection, might not be the stupidest thing that the US could do. Scott |
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From: Scott Seidman
However, it seems like when we're talking about something like people's ability to feed their families, we should have a slightly better idea about what that "something" is. Yes, indeed. Maybe this wouldn't be a big issue if economies moved slowly, but today technology is advancing things faster than economies can keep up. A slightly protectionist attitude aimed towards slowing down labor shifts, along with a steering-committee type plan regarding where our economy should go, so long as there is a timetable for de-protection, might not be the stupidest thing that the US could do. I agree. The horse is out of the barn, and we can't, (and maybe shouldn't), stop it, but we do need some way to buy time and develop a strategy for the future. It took about ten years before outsourcing really had a major impact on manufacturing jobs, but it only took a very short time to impact call centers, etc. Another thing that worries me: I contually hear people from all over the political spectrum fret over our dependence on foriegn oil....how about our dependence on foriegn manufacturing? George Adams "All good fishermen stay young until they die, for fishing is the only dream of youth that doth not grow stale with age." ---- J.W Muller |
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Thanks Ken
Interesting info........ Bill Kiene (in FL) "Ken Fortenberry" wrote in message m... I don't often find myself in agreement with Thomas Friedman and I'm not sure if I'll end up agreeing with this column, but it did cause me to think of outsourcing in a different way. This will be of little consolation to those whose jobs have disappeared, but it is food for thought. http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/26/opinion/26FRIE.html Also in today's Times, (scary **** this ;-), a front page article on Max Cleland that could have been culled from the pages of roff, well, with a little bit of editing and a whole lot of cleaning up. ;-) http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/26/po...gn/26CLEL.html -- Ken Fortenberry |
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![]() "Ken Fortenberry" wrote in message m... I don't often find myself in agreement with Thomas Friedman and I'm not sure if I'll end up agreeing with this column, but it did cause me to think of outsourcing in a different way. This will be of little consolation to those whose jobs have disappeared, but it is food for thought. http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/26/opinion/26FRIE.html -- Ken Fortenberry Dateline 2012 In an expected move most large US corporations announced that they were following the logical trend and outsourcing all of their customers to Europe and Asia. One source was quoted as saying: "It's a dynamic new business model, since we offshored our jobs to India and the Phillipines there aren't enough US consumers left that can afford our products. Fortunately, Europe protects their worker's jobs so they can still purchase, and now that the incomes of the south and east Asians have increased dramatically, due to Offshoring, we see tham as an exciting new market." |
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Outsourcing assumes that those who produce the product cannot
afford to buy it. Or, put another way, it's goal is to pay wages to build a product lower than it takes to make someone a consumer of the product. There are two major reasons for the current outsourcing mania: 1. The "Wal-Mart" syndrome. As wages in the U.S. drop because the "real" jobs are gone, prices of goods must be reduced so that the average consumer can still afford to buy. This is accomplished by outsourcing and by economy of scale. How much longer before Wal-Mart is the only store left. 2. Return on investments. The pressure is on corporate CEO's not only to show a profit, but to maximize profits, basically to satisfy investors with short attention spans who seek instant gratification from the stock market. Ever notice how a stock climbs after a company announces a layoff? Eventually this bubble, like the hi tech bubble is going to burst. When the manufacturing jobs started going overseas, the word was that all was well, and we would develop a "service economy". Now the service jobs are going too. The momentum is such that it seems unlikely it can be stopped in the foreseeable future, but it somehow has to be slowed down long enough to formulste a strategy to keep work here, and that ain't gonna be easy. Try explaining to the average consumer why the digital camera that used to cost $200 is now $600. George Adams "All good fishermen stay young until they die, for fishing is the only dream of youth that doth not grow stale with age." ---- J.W Muller |
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![]() "Jonathan Cook" wrote in message m... ojunk (George Adams) wrote in message ... a lot of sensible stuff snipped It _will_ fail eventually, the only question is when. And I for one am starting to think sooner rather than later... Jon. I couldn't agree more.. When Teva sandles moved to Indonesia, Teva's averaged around 60 bucks a pair, and production costs at their Portland facility were something like $13,000 per hour**, a few years after the move, production costs had dropped to a couple of thousand an hour, and a pair of sandle put you back $79.95. ** its been a while since i actually looked at these numbers, so if I got it wrong somewhere, mea culpa. |
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![]() "George Adams" wrote... Outsourcing assumes that those who produce the product cannot afford to buy it. Or, put another way, it's goal is to pay wages to build a product lower than it takes to make someone a consumer of the product. There are two major reasons for the current outsourcing mania: 1. The "Wal-Mart" syndrome. As wages in the U.S. drop because the "real" jobs are gone, prices of goods must be reduced so that the average consumer can still afford to buy. This is accomplished by outsourcing and by economy of scale. How much longer before Wal-Mart is the only store left. 2. Return on investments. The pressure is on corporate CEO's not only to show a profit, but to maximize profits, basically to satisfy investors with short attention spans who seek instant gratification from the stock market. Ever notice how a stock climbs after a company announces a layoff? Eventually this bubble, like the hi tech bubble is going to burst. When the manufacturing jobs started going overseas, the word was that all was well, and we would develop a "service economy". Now the service jobs are going too. The momentum is such that it seems unlikely it can be stopped in the foreseeable future, but it somehow has to be slowed down long enough to formulste a strategy to keep work here, and that ain't gonna be easy. Try explaining to the average consumer why the digital camera that used to cost $200 is now $600. Just as a tangent, I just had an *awful* experience with obviously outsourced support. The voice of the person on the other end (three separate phone calls) was muffled, reverberated, and echo-chambered. Couple that with a heavy foreign accent and I had to have the person repeat everything two or three times, then they got mad at *me* for having to do that. If anyone is interested, the company is TracFone. My job revolves around giving quality support to our clients. If we, as consumers, continue to put up with this low quality service we'll get what we deserve - crap. I'd rather pay a bit more and get decent service than to pay a little less for an outsourcer (new word?) to read me the same instructions three times I just read on their website. Two rants in one day. Do I win a prize? -- TL, Tim http://css.sbcma.com/timj |
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