On TechRepublic: 10 dying IT skills
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By Dawn Kawamoto
Posted on ZDNet News: Jan 8, 2004 12:53:00 AM

Feeling political pressure from Congress over the loss of U.S. tech jobs to offshore workers, the Computer Systems Policy Project on Wednesday released a report stressing the need to keep international doors open so that domestic companies can remain competitive.

In its report, the organization included preliminary policy recommendations for Congress to consider. It plans to have its members--which include chief executives from Intel, Dell and Hewlett-Packard--lobby lawmakers next month during the organization's semiannual meeting.

"Economic downturns and security issues spur impulses to protect specific sectors and markets and limit international trade and collaboration," the report stated. "Yet these measures often backfire. Countries that resort to protectionism end up hampering innovation and crippling their industries, which leads to lower economic growth and, ultimately, higher unemployment."

Congress has held several hearings about the outsourcing of IT jobs, and a group of lawmakers is urging India to create jobs for U.S. workers.

Concern has grown, as an increasing number of tech companies lay off domestic workers and move the work to countries such as India. Employees in call center support, manufacturing and software programming have been hit particularly hard.

While helping to cut costs, however, outsourcing is not without problems. Some customers are complaining about the quality and lack of service they receive from overseas call centers, and international operations can also be strained by misunderstandings due to culture and communications, as well as differing time zones.

"I would caution people from becoming too overly excited about offshore sourcing and do things that they may later regret," said Amit Maheshwari, chief executive of i-Vantage, an outsourcing consultancy firm. "I have seen some companies close a full shop in the U.S. and move it offshore, only to find it does not work for their particular situation."

And where the backlash can be particularly painful is when it hurts the quality of a company's product or service, said Maheshwari, noting that Dell recently moved some of its technical call center support for its corporate accounts back to the United States.

Still, the trend shows no sign of reversing, and the IT trade group cautioned politicians against interfering.

"Any trade barriers created by the United States in an attempt to avoid global competition could lead to retaliation from our trading partners and even an all-out trade war--resulting in a drag on the global economy and reduced employment here at home," the report stated.

The group also noted that under the current economic climate, customers of U.S. tech companies are pressuring vendors to reduce costs, offer more products and reduce the time it takes to get products to the market.

"U.S. companies operate abroad to be close to global customers, both geographically and culturally, and to meet round-the-clock expectations for customer service," the report noted.

In its policy proposals, CSPP asked Congress not only to promote the IT industry's "innovation pipeline" but also to improve education and training for U.S. workers.

"A growing number of workers in these foreign countries and companies are highly educated, skilled and talented--a competitive challenge in their own right," the report said. "Americans who think that foreign workers are no match for U.S. workers in knowledge, skills and creativity are mistaken."

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Made in America
I say let the people decide. Do they want their personal information in the hands of someone in India? Or Russia? Or some other third world country? Would they accept US jobs being lost so they ca... (Read the rest)
Posted by: jwschull@... Posted on: 02/03/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
you mean  JWatson77 | 01/07/04
what we need is...  stephen732@... | 01/07/04
This administration IS big business  skeptic tank | 01/08/04
LOL!!!  BitTwiddler | 01/08/04
Not a partisan problem.  ShadeTree | 01/08/04
Not a partisan problem  pcjunkie48 | 01/21/04
Thanks for pointing that out...  gregaw@... | 01/26/04
it's kinda funny...  Joe_Bob | 01/07/04
Hmmm  NemesisNL | 01/09/04
You're Right  gregaw@... | 01/26/04
Intelligence is not the issue here..  FreeBSD | 01/20/04
Big Bite  gregaw@... | 01/26/04
A Modest Proposal  dr praetorius | 01/07/04
Yes, CEOs are the most overpaid.  DonnieBoy | 01/07/04
now that's a plan  JWatson77 | 01/12/04
Be careful what you ask for.  richardpor | 01/07/04
Think it through  ipswitch | 01/11/04
false  dotkayk@... | 01/14/04
Be careful what you ask for  pcjunkie48 | 01/21/04
H1B  gregaw@... | 01/26/04
What a bunch of bullsh*t!  master of illusion | 01/07/04
What an idiot!  DonnieBoy | 01/07/04
Well Donnie, that's your opinion....  master of illusion | 01/08/04
You spew out garbage, what do you expect?  DonnieBoy | 01/08/04
DonnieBoy's Job  cassysue | 01/08/04
This makes no sense...  BitTwiddler | 01/08/04
Companies that Outsource  gregaw@... | 01/26/04
You might have one point here  Taz_z | 01/08/04
Customer Service? What's that?  samp_z | 01/08/04
What an idiot!  pcjunkie48 | 01/21/04
Corporations are disgusting liars  AV . | 01/08/04
Hurah for Carly bashing  ipswitch | 01/11/04
I hope the US goes down the tube.  RobertoSalazar | 01/07/04
We don't have to go that far  master of illusion | 01/07/04
Boycott! I already do  Joe Blow_z | 01/07/04
oh, boy. That will SURE do a lot fo good.  Stewart Cannon | 01/08/04
sorry  JWatson77 | 01/12/04
oh, boy. That will SURE do a lot fo good  pcjunkie48 | 01/21/04
People will boycott by default  skeptic tank | 01/08/04
Don't put Dell and Gates in the same category.  DonnieBoy | 01/07/04
same could of been said for sweat shops  JWatson77 | 01/12/04
That's a red herring  Art Jones2 | 01/21/04
Don't put Dell and Gates in the same category.  pcjunkie48 | 01/21/04
Joys of outsourcing  nite_w0lf | 01/07/04
Some disturbing notions  SpideyWriter | 01/07/04
RE: Some disturbing notions  ZigZag_z | 01/07/04
Experience tells me different  The Breeze_z | 01/07/04
I will compete  ipswitch | 01/11/04
The real problem  richardpor | 01/07/04
The hidden backlash / blackmail  wallyweb@... | 01/08/04
What is good?  richman555 | 01/08/04
Those Who Profit Speak  TMS_z | 01/08/04
You could always do what I do.  Sir_Chancealot | 01/08/04
Those Who Profit - part 2  TMS_z | 01/08/04
What a load of...  BitTwiddler | 01/08/04
Depends on you're political & economic view...  phorvath2110 | 01/08/04
we tried seperate but equal once  JWatson77 | 01/12/04
Globalization: IT is now a McJob.  rbethell | 01/08/04
My response to this BS...  Unicornrider | 01/08/04
I have not found  JoeMama_z | 01/08/04
Can't Boycott - no authoritative list  cactushack76 | 01/08/04
No Authoritative list  Spinteq | 01/09/04
Outsourcing vs. Offshoring  jjworleyeoe | 01/08/04
Made in (fill in country not US or Canada)  wallyweb@... | 01/08/04
IT Manager's REsponse  wizzerking@... | 01/08/04
so true  JWatson77 | 01/12/04
5 yrs ago  JWatson77 | 01/12/04
And they're doing a lousy job, too.  bernstea@... | 01/14/04
The Result of "Free Trade"  Royk | 01/14/04
Who care if there is a backlash  brad.mayes | 01/23/04
God Bless the Virtual USA, Good Bye to an Industry?  thehitman | 01/27/04
Made in America  jwschull@... | 02/03/04

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