Originally posted by: tec699
Originally posted by: SagaLore
Myths and Realities: The False Crisis of Outsourcing
I'll counter that with...
For Michael Melvin and his 23-year-old son, Stephen, working with computers had long seemed the pathway to a more prosperous future, a haven of security in a rapidly changing world. This year, they discovered how wrong they were.
Pineau and other workers who have seen their jobs take flight feel their hands are tied. Thanks to the Internet, tumbling telecommunications costs and more open societies in some developing countries, employers can tap into cheap labor markets around the world.
When Humphreys & Partners Architects needs 3-D, computer-generated drawings of its projects, it turns to a network of firms in Russia, India, Argentina and Uruguay.
The Dallas architectural firm pays a fraction of the $4,000 to $8,000 it would cost to do the drawings in the United States, says chief executive Mark Humphreys. And the process couldn't be any easier. Humphreys employees e-mail their instructions, photos and hand sketches. The information speeds across the ocean in seconds, and the overseas firms can return renderings in three days vs. the minimum of a week in the United States.
Well boohoo.
This wouldn't be such an issue if it weren't for the Dot Coms. A bunch of kids making tons of money with unsharpened skills - when it crashed, we were left with a saturated market. Now it is competitive - those who know what they're doing and can market that to employers, will get hired. In the meantime, the level 1 support jobs usually filled by high school graduates are getting filled by less costly foreigners who can do an okay job at it. In the meantime, the companies are making more money, and can afford to pay us advancted techs more.
It's an evolving market. For those thousands that lose their jobs, the other hundreds of thousands benefit by getting a more affordable product. Then those that lost their jobs that go on to better non-outsourced jobs.
I don't hear anyone complaining that China is making most of the cheap junk that people buy these days. Had those jobs stayed there, the junk would not have been cheap, and employees wouldn't be making much. Instead we'd probably be hiring illegal immigrants to do the work just to get by.
I was laid off once. It sucks. But I got a better job because of it, and so did all of my co-workers. These people need to stop sulking and make better of themselves!