This was in addition to offshore services for U.S. customers, which grew by $7 billion.
The report shows that labor-intensive production and administrative work has grown in low-cost places, while talent sensitive activities have grown in the United States (Malachuk, 2004). This is a major benefit of outsourcing.
Weidenbaum (2005) argues that many American employees are able to keep their jobs because outsourcing allows their companies to stay competitive. Companies in higher-labor-cost economies can stay competitive and thus preserve jobs that remain (Jones, 2005). Many employees as a result will get new or better jobs because the company's financial strength has been enhanced. For example, when a company outsources upgrades for its software system, the domestic demand for basic programmers may decrease, but there will be an increased need for higher-paid systems integrators (Weidenbaum, 2005).
Because of outsourcing, IT departments are placing more emphasis on managerial experience, business process knowledge, and understanding domestic customers. The result is better jobs for Americans because "these capabilities can rarely be provided effectively from an overseas location" (p. 313). New market opportunities and cost reductions can also lead to more jobs being generated and more money available for training programs and new equipment. Companies that outsource jobs help developing countries to become new markets for goods and services, and newly affluent workers are able to buy American made products. DHL chairman Uwe Doerken, who led globalization efforts for 13 years, says offshoring benefits all consumers who can buy goods and services at more affordable prices.
Unemployed Workers
The downside of outsourcing is very real people whose jobs have been lost as a result. They are truly hurting. When asked if CEOs owe any allegiance to workers in their home country, Doerken replied, "Yes. They owe them fairness when new business practices force layoffs. Social plans, outplacement assistance, transfers to other parts of the same company, etc. The same fairness is owned to all employees these companies employ in all geographies" (Jones, 2005, p. 2).
Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) is a government program that offers free job retraining and other benefits to workers who have lost their jobs because of foreign trade and outsourcing. For example, due to a flood of Chinese goods into the U.S. In the past ten years 827,000 American apparel and textile manufacturing jobs vanished and the remaining 489,500 workers face a bleak future. People like them can go back to school, usually to community colleges, and learn new skills, which will enable them to find rewarding employment.
TAA would help them do this. The problem is that the program is not administered well. "TAA is frequently disbursed ineffectively or not at all to workers forced into early obsolescence due to free trade, and it does nothing to address the vanishing of white-collar...
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