Study Says Outsourcing Tech Jobs Aids U.S.
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, March 30, 2004
SAN JOSE, Calif. Outsourcing white-collar jobs to
low-wage countries such as India and China has thrown some
Americans out of work, but a new report predicts that the trend
will ultimately lower inflation, create jobs and boost productivity
in the United States.
Information Technology Association of America, in a survey
set for release Tuesday, acknowledges that the migration of tech
jobs to low-paid foreigners has eliminated 104,000 American jobs so
far, nearly 3 percent of the positions in the U.S. tech industry.
Software engineers have been particularly hard hit. Researchers
at Global Insight Inc., which prepared the report for ITAA,
predicted that demand for U.S. software engineers would shrink
through 2008.
It's No Clinton Bubble
But ITAA leaders emphasized that outsourcing has damaged the job
market far less than the dot-com meltdown of early 2000, when
Internet startups, telecom companies and other companies eliminated
as many as 268,000 positions.
"The myth is that we've started this long decline into the
midnight of the technology work force," ITAA president Harris
Miller said. "This report shows that, assuming the recovery
continues, the number of IT jobs will actually increase."
Indian programmers earn roughly one-sixth the $60,000 U.S.
average, and Chinese engineers earn even less.
Outsourcing dramatically reduces labor costs, allowing companies
to sell goods ranging from software to tax-preparation services at
lower costs or higher profit margins. Greater profits theoretically
allow companies to buy new equipment, build laboratories and
conduct scientific experiments, even in expensive Silicon Valley
and other U.S. tech hubs.
Savings from outsourcing allowed companies to create 90,000
jobs in 2003, with more than one in 10 of them in Silicon Valley or
elsewhere in California, researchers said. The report predicts that
in 2008, outsourcing will create 317,000 jobs, 34,000 in
California.
Companies spent $10 billion last year to outsource jobs ranging
from medical transcription to nanotechnology research. ITAA
predicted the companies would spend $31 billion in 2008.
Democrat presidential candidate John Kerry introduced economic
proposals Friday that he said would reduce the sting for outsourced
workers. More than two dozen states are considering bans on
outsourcing government contracts.
Such legislation would be "protectionist" and "unwise,"
according to ITAA, whose 500 members include Microsoft Corp.,
Hewlett-Packard Corp. and Amazon.com.
But Cynthia Kroll, senior regional economist at the University
of California, Berkeley, said policy makers could not afford to ignore
outsourcing.
"If R&D is coming out of India, will the next wave of growth
bypass us entirely?" Kroll asked. "We need to pay attention to
what India and China and these other countries are doing to get
these new rounds of investment."
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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